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OIAF 2008 Kids Competition - TV

September 24th, 2008

Yo Gabba Gabba -

 Yo Gabba Gabba - “The Train Ride”

Okay. Thursday afternoon’s Short Competition #5 ends and I head over to some theater in a mall to take in the next screening, Kids Competition – TV. I’d say there were around 200 folks in attendance, with maybe a dozen kids under the age of thirteen. With a 5:00 p.m. screening on a Friday, you’d kind of expect that, I guess. I don’t know how many kids turned out for the competition’s repeat on Saturday afternoon.

Sixteen cartoons were shown, a full eleven of which were music videos from Yo Gabba Gabba! That’s fine, I guess. They were all good (you’ve probably seen a bunch) and they deserved to be there. And, since I wasn’t going to make the Yo Gabba Gabba! presentation Saturday morning (’There’s a Party in My Tummy”), this was another way for me to get in on the Gabbapalooza. The YGG! filmmakers included Kangaroo Alliance, [Read more…]

OIAF 2008 Short Competition #5

September 23rd, 2008

The Control Master

“The Control Master”

On Thursday, after the Canadian Showcase at the Ottawa International Animation Festival, I stuck around the ByTowne Cinema for Short Competition #5, the second of five shorts screenings, again with fifteen films of various media (ex. cut-outs, ink on paper, CG, and, for the first time this year, a pair of Flash films) in a range of categories (ads, narrative shorts, experimental, student work, etc.) with a bunch of countries represented (Japan, Scandanavia, France, the USA, and so forth).

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OIAF 2008 Canadian Showcase

September 22nd, 2008

“Wanted”

Thursday morning’s screening at Ottawa’s ByTowne Cinema showcased fifteen Canadian shorts, hence the title Canadian Showcase.

You know, often when I’m at a festival, or watching a cartoon pitch here in Burbank, or even a DVD of shorts at home, I’ll use a “morning after” test. Sure, the films could be a lot terribly interesting as you’re watching them, but, more often than not, when you try to remember them the next morning, they start to blur around the edges. So today, four days after the Canadian Showcase, I’m not surprised I need to go back through the festival catalog to remind myself what I watched. This says less about the specific films and their filmmakers, but more about how difficult it is to create a memorable pieces of work, ones that will leave lasting impressions, like “The House of Small Cubes” and the festival’s winner of the Grand Prize for Best Student [Read more…]