Your 2014 animated Oscar contenders
Thursday, November 6, 2014 at 6:10PM
Tim Brayton in Asian cinema, Big Hero 6, Bill Plympton, How To Train Your Dragon, Oscars (14), animated films, foreign films, sequels, short films

Readers, an apology. Here I am, the Film Experience's resident animation expert, and I'm late with news twice over. First, on Tuesday, the Academy annouced the full list of 20 contenders for Best Animated Feature. Nathaniel prepared a post discussing this development, but wasn't able to publish it before traveling to California. Here are his thoughts on the subject:

As expected we will have a full five-wide Best Animated Feature category this year. It only takes 16 contenders to trigger that and we have 20. This branch is definitely not the most predictable when it comes to nominees -- or even, sometimes winners (remember how competitive the Brave year was?) --  often opting for a few little seen critical and foreign darlings. The internet seems to be rooting for The Lego Movie which is by a significant margin the most popular animated film of the year in the US. What's interesting is that it's uniquely American appeal means that internationally the numbers are much different and How To Train Your Dragon 2 is, globally, the biggest cartoon of the year. It's also probably the frontrunner for Gold but you never know. It's not as undeniable as Toy Story 3 (a universally acclaimed capper to a hugely beloved trilogy that wasn't able to be honored with the competitive Oscar until then since the category hadn't existed).

Disney's Big Hero 6, opening this week, I can't personally see winning the category but it's a likely nominee and, what's more, the short before it called Feast, which tells the tale of a human's love life through his hungry puppy, is a strong contender for the short film Oscar. It was love at first sight for me and I'm not even a dog person.

THE ELIGIBLE 20 (plus 10 eligible animated shorts after the jump)...

That leaves two spots that I'd argue are totally in play. You can see the Oscar chart updates here

I hadn't heard of a few of the titles and of the surprise titles, I'm most eager to get acquainted with Cheatin' by the inimitable animation giant Bill Plympton and the Japanese feature Giovanni's Island which is a post war drama. Here's the Cheatin' trailer and you can see Giovanni's trailer at the official site

 

You really have to respect Japan (and, recently, France). Too few countries seem to understand consistently that animation is a medium rather than a genre. No matter how good English language animated films get, and some of them are very good indeed, they're still always adventure comedies aimed at the whole family. Even the ones that look different (like Laika or Aardman) are still children's adventure comedies. In English language cinema, animation is not a medium but a genre. 

What do you think the five nominees will be and which are you rooting for at this point?

And now, back to Tim. Yesterday, we also got the list of the ten films competing for five slots in the Best Animated Short Film category. Here are those titles:

Some quick facts: Kove (The Danish Poet) and Joyce/Oldenburg (The Fabulous Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore) have previously won in this category. Feast, as Nathaniel noted, is playing in front of Disney's Big Hero 6 starting tomorrow.

the inimitable Bill Plympton

And Bill Plympton, with titles on both submission lists, is the first person who has ever been in the position to potentially win two competitive animation Oscars in one night* and you should absolutely not expect that to end up happening.

Thoughts?

 

*Funny Trivia Note: Walt Disney won nine animation Oscars in one night at Oscars for 1938 but only one was competitive: Ferdinand the Bull took Animated Short but he also received a special Honorary Oscar and 7 mini-statuettes for Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

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