
Disney and Pixar veteran story man Floyd Norman (a.k.a. Mr. Fun) has started to blog. I've added Floyd's link to the list on the right and will visit it often.
Reflections on the art and business of animation.


Movie credits were once just a formality. If you look at early film credits, the title card contains an enormous amount of information.
Fans of Dean Yeagle will be happy to know that his new comic, Return of the Gremlins, is now available. Written by Mike Richardson with art by Dean, backgrounds by Nelson Rhodes and colour by Dan Jackson, this is the first of a three issue series. 
I avoid putting personal material on this blog. For one thing, I'm a private person. For another, I assume that readers come here for a discussion relating to animation, not about what I had for breakfast.
I had the pleasure of attending the Frédéric Back screening at the Bloor Cinema on March 15. Back himself was present and was interviewed on stage after a showing of Tout Rien, Crac!, The Mighty River and The Man Who Planted Trees.
Mark Evanier's biography of Jack Kirby, entitled Kirby, King of Comics, has been published by Abrams. The book is a retrospective of Kirby's career as an artist, starting with boyhood drawings and covering his lengthy career in the comic book industry. Evanier's text is a biography of Kirby.

As Frédéric Back will be in Toronto later this week, where his artwork will be exhibited and his films screened, I thought it would be good to reprint this 20-year-old article from The Globe and Mail, written just before The Man Who Planted Trees won the Oscar for Best Animated Short.

I have not read this new book by Don Peri, but the line-up of interview subjects has certainly caught my attention. The interviews include Ken Anderson, Les Clark, Larry Clemmons, Jack Cutting, Don Duckwall, Marcellite Garner, Harper Goff, Floyd Gottfredson, Dick Huemer, Wilfred Jackson, Eric Larson, Clarence Nash, Ken O'Connor, Herb Ryman and Ben Sharpsteen.