Volume 1 Number 5
July 14, 1995
Leonard Maltin's Animated Favourites from the National Film Board
of Canada.
Written and hosted by Leonard Maltin.
National Film
Board of Canada, in association with the Arts and Engertainment Network. 95
minutes, $34.95.
Order number: C 9194 096.
(Note: the NFB has a new educational pricing policy in effect; phone
1-800-267-7710 for details.)
Review by Duncan Thornton
All ages
excerpt:
Over the years, animators working for the National Film
Board of Canada have used every technique imaginable to make their films.
And many, no one could have imagined before they gave it a try:
coloured pencil, paper cut-outs, clay figures, moving pins -- the list of
experiments, most of them successful, goes on and on...
Reading the title of this new compilation of NFB animated classics
triggered a nationalistic knee-jerk: do we need a famous American telling
us about Canada's best animated films? And as a reviewer, Maltin, well-known for his annual Movie and Video Guide and spots on
Entertainment Tonight, tends to be chirpy and banal.
But he does know an awful lot about animation, and his choices in
this compilation are excellent. Even if you're familiar with the NFB
catalogue, there are probably a few titles on the list you haven't seen
before:
- Begone Dull Care
- Mindscape
- The Log Driver's Waltz
- The Cat Came Back
- Getting Started
- The Sweater
- The Street
- Pas de Deux
- Anniversary
The films cover a lot of ground, and with Maltin's commentary between
the selections added, they serve as a good overview of the history and
range of the NFB's work. Techniques move from astonishing pin-animation
(``Mindscape") to computer work that rivals Pixar's (``Anniversary"). And
subject matter varies from the folksy and broadly comic (``The Cat Came
Back") to the formally artistic (``Pas de Deux").
Along the way, Maltin makes good points about NFB animation in general
-- that one of its hallmarks is innovation that is wedded to subject,
rather than to mere technical experiment, and that work like this would
never happen were it not for the support of an institution that doesn't
have to worry about making popular hits.
But his commentary never goes on long enough to get tiresome, or to
bore a younger audience, and he has great material. Probably the most
impressive is still the first, ``Begone Dull Care," where Norman McLaren
uses his famous technique of painting directly on film stock to make an
jazzy, abstract interpretation of Oscar Peterson's music. But any of these
shorts would deserve a review in itself.
The Film Board lists Animation Favorites as an ``All Ages"
title; truthfully, Maltin's commentary probably wouldn't interest most
elementary students, though he keeps it brief enough that it doesn't matter
much. Still, early year students might not find enough of the animation sufficiently involving to keep their interest.
Otherwise, it's hard to fault this new collection. It's interesting as
a study of the art of animation, and it's entertaining in wildly varying
ways: by turns, or all at once, comic, moving, and fascinating.
Recommended.
Duncan Thornton is the editor of CM.
Copyright © 1995 the Manitoba Library Association. Reproduction for personal use is permitted only if this copyright notice is maintained. Any other reproduction is prohibited without permission.
Published by
The Manitoba Library Association
ISSN 1201-9364
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