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The Chinese Animated Shorts Oscars!

Aggregated Source: Virtual China
June 14, 2007|

Cnanishortsoscars

Was poking around Chinese video-sharing website 6rooms today and discovered a link (shown above) to the Chinese Animated Shorts Oscars!

I hunkered down and watched quite a few of them, which I'll highlight before moving onto my conclusion:

Animated1

生活原来是这样的 (Life is Actually Like This), by students at the Beijing Film Academy, is one of the most popular and highly-rated shorts. It cuts between animation and live action a few times, features some pretty slick swerving camera shots, and is subtitled in both English and Chinese. The plot follows a chain-effect story, which is somewhat common within animated shorts.

Animated2

花鞋子 Colorful Shoes, by the TianJin Academy of Fine Art, is my favorite pick. It's a nicely produced claymation set in a village, and despite a threadbare plot, is incredibly evocative of a mood + scene/setting.

Animated3

And then, screencapped above, a couple of shorts that didn't really stick for me: A 3D bad guy plotting stuff; the Empress meets the first animators; and daddy loves his daughter. As you can see the production values were also quite a bit lower than the first two films. (In the animation world, that translates to a lack of time, a smaller team, smaller budgets, or less experienced artists.)

My conclusion? It's looking up for animation in China -- there are positive signs in terms of production values, plots and an air of experimentation. However, the work here still lags behind that of the top art schools, say, in the US.

The catch is which factor causes this lag: time spent, access to technology, technical skill, or "creativity"?



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The Chinese Animated Shorts Oscars!

Aggregated Source: Virtual China
June 14, 2007|

Cnanishortsoscars

Was poking around Chinese video-sharing website 6rooms today and discovered a link (shown above) to the Chinese Animated Shorts Oscars!

I hunkered down and watched quite a few of them, which I'll highlight before moving onto my conclusion:

Animated1

生活原来是这样的 (Life is Actually Like This), by students at the Beijing Film Academy, is one of the most popular and highly-rated shorts. It cuts between animation and live action a few times, features some pretty slick swerving camera shots, and is subtitled in both English and Chinese. The plot follows a chain-effect story, which is somewhat common within animated shorts.

Animated2

花鞋子 Colorful Shoes, by the TianJin Academy of Fine Art, is my favorite pick. It's a nicely produced claymation set in a village, and despite a threadbare plot, is incredibly evocative of a mood + scene/setting.

Animated3

And then, screencapped above, a couple of shorts that didn't really stick for me: A 3D bad guy plotting stuff; the Empress meets the first animators; and daddy loves his daughter. As you can see the production values were also quite a bit lower than the first two films. (In the animation world, that translates to a lack of time, a smaller team, smaller budgets, or less experienced artists.)

My conclusion? It's looking up for animation in China -- there are positive signs in terms of production values, plots and an air of experimentation. However, the work here still lags behind that of the top art schools, say, in the US.

The catch is which factor causes this lag: time spent, access to technology, technical skill, or "creativity"?



Original URL: Click here to visit original article
Copyright Virtual China
Print This Post Print This Post | Email To Friend

1 Stars2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars6 Stars7 Stars8 Stars9 Stars10 Stars

62 Votes | Average: 5.35 out of 1062 Votes | Average: 5.35 out of 1062 Votes | Average: 5.35 out of 1062 Votes | Average: 5.35 out of 1062 Votes | Average: 5.35 out of 1062 Votes | Average: 5.35 out of 1062 Votes | Average: 5.35 out of 1062 Votes | Average: 5.35 out of 1062 Votes | Average: 5.35 out of 1062 Votes | Average: 5.35 out of 10 (62 votes, average: 5.35 out of 10)


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