mavrach wrote:The Triplets of Belleville springs to mind - Essentailly no dialogue at all used to tell the story.
Tinderbox wrote:mavrach wrote:The Triplets of Belleville springs to mind - Essentailly no dialogue at all used to tell the story.
I tried watching this and was really put off by its grotesquerie. The thing was grim and the characters were all so unpleasant to look at. I found it dreary and depressing and turned it off after a while.


Steve T Power wrote:Tinderbox wrote:mavrach wrote:The Triplets of Belleville springs to mind - Essentailly no dialogue at all used to tell the story.
I tried watching this and was really put off by its grotesquerie. The thing was grim and the characters were all so unpleasant to look at. I found it dreary and depressing and turned it off after a while.
I felt exactly the same, and the plot was preposterous - but at the same time, it shows some artistic skill, and was the other film i had in mind when i started this thread.
molly1216 wrote:Steve T Power wrote:Tinderbox wrote:mavrach wrote:The Triplets of Belleville springs to mind - Essentailly no dialogue at all used to tell the story.
I tried watching this and was really put off by its grotesquerie. The thing was grim and the characters were all so unpleasant to look at. I found it dreary and depressing and turned it off after a while.
I felt exactly the same, and the plot was preposterous - but at the same time, it shows some artistic skill, and was the other film i had in mind when i started this thread.
completely different response....i adored it. every frame. it was engravings come to life...i am waiting impatiently for more from this guy.
molly1216 wrote:Steve T Power wrote:Tinderbox wrote:mavrach wrote:The Triplets of Belleville springs to mind - Essentailly no dialogue at all used to tell the story.
I tried watching this and was really put off by its grotesquerie. The thing was grim and the characters were all so unpleasant to look at. I found it dreary and depressing and turned it off after a while.
I felt exactly the same, and the plot was preposterous - but at the same time, it shows some artistic skill, and was the other film i had in mind when i started this thread.
completely different response....i adored it. every frame. it was engravings come to life...i am waiting impatiently for more from this guy.
Tinderbox wrote:Not to disparage French animation in my post above, so I'll mention Fantastic Planet (La Planète sauvage). The story and imagery is so far out and otherworldy, it's a real trip. Won the special jury prize at the 1973 Cannes Film Festival. It's also the movie that Jennifer Lopez character watches as she chills out at her house in The Cell.

Alice (1988) or any other film by Jan Svankmajer who is a stop-motion surrealist!
Sara wrote:Molly and I are big fans of The Adventures of Prince Achmed. It's actually the first animated feature film. It pre-dates Snow-White by 11 years. Plus, it was made by a woman! Amazing.
Thanks for mentioning Watership Down, I meant to do that. I find the animation quite beautifully done. The watercolor backgrounds in particular and the abstract aboriginal-style bookend/folk-storytelling scenes.BrettCullum wrote:One that always comes to my mind was the movie adaptation of Watership Down. Not that any of it was particularly groundbreaking in the way it was drawn, but the savage tale of rabbits looking for a new warren worked well on the screen. It's nowhere near as good as the book, but then what ever is? They also did an adaptation of The Plague Dogs which is even more of a downer and somber as it is about laboratory dogs that just want to be normal. I say these are non-traditional because they are both aimed at adults, and refuse to be cute even in the slightest.

BrettCullum wrote:One that always comes to my mind was the movie adaptation of Watership Down. Not that any of it was particularly groundbreaking in the way it was drawn, but the savage tale of rabbits looking for a new warren worked well on the screen. It's nowhere near as good as the book, but then what ever is? They also did an adaptation of The Plague Dogs which is even more of a downer and somber as it is about laboratory dogs that just want to be normal. I say these are non-traditional because they are both aimed at adults, and refuse to be cute even in the slightest. I wish Disney would go this route now and then - imagine a really brutal mature version of Mulan.
Heavy Metal should be in here as well as American Pop - both films are well worth looking into as a great marriage of rock and roll coupled with mature material. Parts of The Wall fall in here as well... the plants, the hammers, the trial are brilliant stuff!

Zappakub wrote:Alice (1988) or any other film by Jan Svankmajer who is a stop-motion surrealist!
Tinderbox wrote:Also Tron. Great production design by comic artist Moebius, Syd Meade (Bladerunner), and Peter Lloyd (What Dreams May Come). Along with the clean and colorful computer graphics depicting the world inside a computer system, note in particular the handmade animation treatment of the live-action characters which lended it a rather retro feel. Director Steve Lisberger's backlit animation was quite a unique process. I wish animators would use it again. The extras on the Tron disc document the technique quite well. Lisnerger claims that the Academy refused to nominate Tron for special effects that year because they felt that the use of computer effects was "cheating"!
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