Saturday Morning Cartoons XXXIX: Oh Canada (Mostly)
Posted by Ross Rosenberg
Ah, Canada, that frozen wonderland to the north, with its lush, rolling fields of moose, beer waterfalls, and socialized medicine. Truly, it is a snow covered Eden. This week’s Saturday Morning Cartoons is (mostly) presented by Canada, featuring animators (mostly) from Canada, or films distributed (mostly) by The National Film Board of Canada. If you are so inclined (and you should be) all of these videos, with the exception of the first, can be viewed in a higher resolution on YouTube.
• The Cat Came Back: From Cordell Barker. Mr. Johnson has a yellow cat, which he is desperately trying to rid himself of. His efforts prove…unsuccessful.
• Last Time in Clerkenwell: Russian animator Alex Budovsky’s follow-up to Bathtime in Clerkenwell featuring more mind bending flash animation and infectious music.
• The Danish Poet: Torill Kove’s 2007 Oscar winning mediation on her birth, and the serendipitous events which led to it. Simple, clean lines lend this one a children’s book aesthetic which works perfectly.
• Ryan: Directed by Chris Landreth, Ryan is an animated tribute to Canadian animator Ryan Larkin. Thirty years ago, at the National Film Board of Canada, Ryan produced some of the most influential animated films of his time. Winner of an Oscar in 2005, it’s a film whose visuals tell just as much of its story as its dialogue does.
• How Wings Are Attached to the Backs of Angels: Craig Welch’s fantastic, creepy, surreal, Gorey-esque little film about a scientist’s quest for knowledge that is, perhaps, reserved for beings other than mere mortals. Cross hatching should be used more often in animation.
• Yellow Sticky Notes: Nine years worth of Jeff Chiba Stearns’s To-Do lists, written on sticky notes, animated with, well, sticky notes. Trust me, it works.
• Harvey Krumpet: I’m a big fan of Australian animator Adam Elliot’s work, having first seen his shorts Brother, Uncle, and Cousin through The Animation Show. Harvey Krumpet, narrated by Geoffrey Rush, continues the tradition of Elliot’s intimate storytelling; detailing the life of Harvey Krumpet, from his birth in Poland to the end of his life in Australia.
Saturday Morning Cartoons XXXIX: Oh Canada (Mostly) [YouTube]
Categories: Short Film, Interview, Australia, Canada, Denmark, Angels, Rail, Death, Animation, Ephemera, Russia, Surrealism, Documentaries, Saturday Morning Cartoons, Music
Posted at 11:24 am on August 16, 2008
7 Comments -










what!? no log driver’s waltz? its a classic!
Comment by allan — August 16, 2008 @ 12:26 pm
Wow, great list today Ross!
Comment by Matt — August 16, 2008 @ 1:32 pm
@allan
I’ve always been partial to “Little Black Flies” myself.
Comment by Citybeatnik — August 16, 2008 @ 3:29 pm
I loved every one of these, but especially The Danish Poet and Harvey Krumpet. Best list in ages! :c)
Comment by Torenheksje — August 16, 2008 @ 4:18 pm
All together now everybody!
“But the cat came back, the very next day…”
Comment by Mordred — August 16, 2008 @ 6:31 pm
I hate to point out an error, but the drawing style in “How Wings Are Attached to the Backs of Angels” is in fact pointillism, not cross hatching.
Aside from that it’s an amazing list. bravo.
Comment by Aelix E. — August 18, 2008 @ 9:24 pm
That was fantastic, though I agree with allan- the Log Driver’s Waltz is essential in any Canadian short list.
Comment by January — August 19, 2008 @ 3:01 pm