Foo - Your favourite animated movie

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Alfster
11-15-09, 02:53 PM
Just saw "Up". My new favourite. The first 10 minutes is pretty intense for kids. Great story for an animiation.

What's your favourite?


Luddite
11-15-09, 02:54 PM
Wall-E

Alfster
11-15-09, 03:01 PM
Wall-E

That's a good one too. You'd think at 43 years old I'd out-grow animations. Hope not :)


Luddite
11-15-09, 03:05 PM
I was blown away by Wall-E. What a kickass movie. I liked Up, too, but not as much as Wall-E. I've seen a buttload of animated movies over the past year and a half, ex boyfriend is an animation student. I have Wall-E on blu-ray, alas I does not has blu-ray player. :(

Pamestique
11-15-09, 04:44 PM
I like both Up and Wall-E... my favorite is Spirited Away...

coffeecake
11-15-09, 04:58 PM
A part of me still really likes Fantasia (the original one, not the re-released 2000...thing.) I saw it when I was very young, and it was just so different from everything else.

I also like The Last Unicorn.

LesMcLuffAlot
11-15-09, 05:07 PM
Heavy Metal

http://www.fotos.org/galeria/data/576/Movie-Poster-Heavy-Metal.jpg

chewybrian
11-15-09, 05:11 PM
Les, have you been "cheesing off"?

tinman143
11-15-09, 05:12 PM
Ninja Scroll: awesome story, sub plots, characters, art, fight scenes, creativeness...on and on...

Ka_Jun
11-15-09, 08:54 PM
Akira. Maybe Ghost in the Shell.

gitarzan
11-15-09, 09:19 PM
Latest one was Wall-E and it was very good.

My all time favorite is Watership Down. It's pretty much the Odyssey with rabbits. Beautifully done.

I also have a tape of the Plague Dogs. It's a dark depressing animation about Laboratory animals who escape.

coffeecake
11-15-09, 09:52 PM
I haven't seen the animated Watership Down because I loved the book so much. Maybe I'll have to check it out.

ilikebikes
11-15-09, 10:16 PM
wall-e

+100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000

ilikebikes
11-15-09, 10:18 PM
Just saw "Up". My new favourite. The first 10 minutes is pretty intense for kids. Great story for an animiation.

What's your favourite?

How can real life situations be to intense for kids?

c0urt
11-15-09, 10:21 PM
evangelion.

ilikebikes
11-15-09, 10:29 PM
evangelion.

you know I liked it a lot, read the books too, waited a looooooong time for book ten to come out! :mad: but it was no where near my favorite. ;)

midschool22
11-15-09, 10:30 PM
Blue Harvest.

http://i307.photobucket.com/albums/nn284/g6773a/Misc/BlueHarvest.jpg

c0urt
11-15-09, 10:33 PM
watership down gave me nightmares.

and while flcl is made of awesome and a good sound track, it isn't a movie.
Akira is great, but if you read the manga first, it ruins it.

I really like the incredibles, there are a lot of small adult jokes you hopefully wouldnt pick up are a kid.

msincredible
11-15-09, 11:03 PM
I really like the incredibles, there are a lot of small adult jokes you hopefully wouldnt pick up are a kid.

Me too! :D

and a +1 to the original Fantasia and Watership Down.

And my Christmas favorite, the 1966 animated How the Grinch Stole Christmas.

Oh, and Who Framed Roger Rabbit.

DataJunkie
11-15-09, 11:23 PM
Transformers The Movie!

Seriously, Wall-E

Sixty Fiver
11-15-09, 11:35 PM
Hoe The Grinch Stole Christmas rates way up there for me as does Bakshi's Wizards and Heavy Metal.

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/cover/WIZARDS.jpg

YouTube- Wizards Trailer - Ralph Bakshi

Rumpled
11-15-09, 11:40 PM
I've always liked Heavy Metal.
Animated but not for kids.

Wordbiker
11-15-09, 11:55 PM
Fritz the Cat. :innocent:

mikewille
11-16-09, 01:13 AM
Wall-E's awesome, i want to live in the back of a giant truck too.
I can watch it over and over and still find new little details and still be amazed
that it's computer generated and not live film.

Anyone see A Scanner Darkly? Any "Dickheads" here?

Sixty Fiver
11-16-09, 01:17 AM
Wall-E is an awesome film.

c0urt
11-16-09, 01:22 AM
I loved a scanner darkly.

ooga-booga
11-16-09, 02:23 AM
jungle book, spirited away, grinch who stole christmas (with the voice of boris karloff!),
the old winnie the pooh stuff (blustery day, honey tree & tigger too), the iron giant,
nightmare before christmas and lots of the old schoolhouse rock shorts!
tough to pick just one.

botto
11-16-09, 03:12 AM
recently? waltz with bashir.

trsidn
11-16-09, 10:02 AM
Hoe The Grinch Stole Christmas rates way up there for me as does Bakshi's Wizards and Heavy Metal.

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/cover/WIZARDS.jpg

YouTube- Wizards Trailer - Ralph Bakshi (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YjSFujG6Uhg)

Wizards was awesome:)

CyLowe97
11-16-09, 10:19 AM
The first ten minutes of UP was incredible. The rest of it left a lot to be desired, especially given it's a Pixar story.

WALL-E was incredible, but my favorite of the Pixar lot is Ratatouille. Great story, excellent transition from Remy's opening plot to the restaurant into the Remy/Linguini/Colette v Skinner plot and bringing it all back around to the Remy/Linguini storyline.

I love this exchange between Linguini and the awesome food critic Anton Ego (voiced by Peter O'Toole):

Ego: Pardon me for interrupting your premature celebration, but I thought it only fair to give you a sporting chance as you are new to this game.
Linguini: Uh... game?
Ego: Yes, and you've been playing without an opponent, which is, as you may have guessed... against the rules.
Linguini: You're Anton Ego.
Ego: [chuckles] You're slow for someone in the fast lane.
Linguini: And you're thin for someone who likes food.
Ego: I don't LIKE food. I LOVE it. If I don't love it, I don't SWALLOW.

Shifty
11-16-09, 10:52 AM
Triplets of Belleville was good!

KrisPistofferson
11-16-09, 11:11 AM
Ninja Scroll: awesome story, sub plots, characters, art, fight scenes, creativeness...on and on...

+1 Best anime ever.

kknh3
11-16-09, 11:31 AM
I'm 45 and love Monsters, Inc.

Bikernator
11-16-09, 01:23 PM
Emperor's New Groove tops my list.. Haven't seen Wall-E. Nemo rocked it, too..

banerjek
11-16-09, 01:49 PM
My favorite depends on my mood.

I've never quite understood the appeal of Wall-E and I'm a Pixar fan. I thought they'd been slipping since Monsters Inc but Ratatouille was decent. The early Disney flicks are also excellent as is the Tim Burton stuff. Dreamworks has some good stuff. I particularly liked the original Shrek.

I'm surprised that none of the Wallace and Gromit films have earned any mention yet.

I enjoyed Heavy Metal, but the animation in it was total crap. It looks like they ran out of money early and couldn't actually afford to animate it. If the soundtrack was taken from the movie, few would want to watch it.

Pamestique
11-16-09, 02:08 PM
I'm surprised that none of the Wallace and Gromit films have earned any mention yet.

.

My best bud is a Wallace and Grommit's fan... I must not be hip enough cause they don't appeal to me.

I do appreciate great animated films more so because they can push the envelope - do things real actors and props can't do. I don't see good animation really for kids anymore... most movies have several layers of messages, many of which kids don't get.

Keep in mind there is a real difference between cartoons, animated shorts and animated films which run at least 90 minutes or more. Although not really animated - I love Nightmare Before Christmas. Visually stunning movie with great, unforgettable music.

If you all have not seen Spirited Away - it is worth the looksee.:

The 10 Greatest Animated Films of Alltime

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
25. 'The Simpsons Movie' (2007)
There are some who complain that this long-awaited feature is not much more than three TV episodes of 'The Simpsons' strung together and livened up with widescreen picture and some fancy effects. And their point is? We don't know. The movie, with its entirely nude Bart, Springfield-under-a-dome, and President Ahnuld, rules.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
24. 'Dumbo' (1941)
This Disney classic has it all -- a story line to tug at the heartstrings (try not to cry when the big-eared pachyderm is rocked to sleep by his mom), surreal humor that's ahead of its time (it doesn't get any more bizarre than the 'Pink Elephants on Parade' bit) and a rousingly redemptive climax. Not to mention the most improbably cute young hero in all of cartoons.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
23. 'The Triplets of Belleville' (2003)
An innovative, eerie, almost all visuals-and-music tale of bicyclists, washed-up singing sisters, and chronically farting pooches, this French-produced 2003 Oscar nominee is one of the most curious animated features ever produced. The kids might not get it -- in fact, 'Belleville' may flat-out weird them out -- but adult fans with a taste for the outré will want to lap it up three times.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
22. 'Lady and the Tramp' (1955)
Sometimes a simple love story of a well-brought-up maiden and an incorrigible but good-hearted ne'er-do-well is just the romance you want to watch on a Friday night. There are plenty of live-action options, but rare is the endearing cartoon version. This 1955 Disney perennial, with its enchanting bow-wow interaction and fabulous Italian restaurant scene, is, as they say, the pup of the walk.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
21. 'The Nightmare Before Christmas' (1993)
Stop-motion animation was never as creepily hilarious as it is here. Cinematic misfit Tim Burton concocted this twisted tale of a Halloween maven who wants to expand the holiday franchise and knock over old St. Nick. With the help of animator/director Henry Selick and prodigious composer Danny Elfman, this 'Nightmare' dazzles and delights, making the macabre seem, well, kind of cozy.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
20. 'The Jungle Book' (1967)
Walt Disney wanted to up the hip quotient on the last animated film he oversaw -- even asking the Beatles to voice four mop-topped orangautans. The Fabs said no, but Louis Prima, among others, said yes, and the result is one of Disney's swinging-est animated musicals. The fabulous story and engaging creatures aside, how can you resist Phil Harris and his 'Bear Necessities'?

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
19. 'Princess Mononoke' (1999)
Japanese animation master Hiyao Miyazaki resists digital and insists that his increasingly complex tales, often drawn from Japanese folklore, be drawn by hand. This offering (released in Asia in 1997, in the U.S. in '99) is about more than a heroic princess -- it's an ecological parable in which a forest battles a mining operation. It takes animation into an epic realm that few even thought possible before.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
18. 'Pinocchio' (1940)
Disney's fable introduced us to conscientious cricket Jiminy -- and a people-and-puppet swallowing whale, a cat and goldfish living in tense détente, a con-man fox, a lonely puppet master, and an impossibly good fairy. It's packed not just with incident and visual beauty, but with character -- we haven't even mentioned the title puppet-who-wants-to-be-a-real-boy ... but never met a truth he didn't bend.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
17. 'Toy Story 2' (1999)
Sequels are generally always inferior to originals, if not just crass cash-ins. But this follow-up came from -- as did the original -- Pixar, the computer-animation wizards who would sooner crash all their servers than put out second-rate work. Hence, this second excursion into the realm of Woody, Buzz and their playroom pals was as wondrous and funny as the first.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
16. 'Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit' (2005)
The eye-rolling dog and his hapless master got their long-awaited feature in this tale of a creature rooting in the gardens of an English village. The duo's rabbit trap makes Elmer Fudd seem barbaric, and the monster is a vegetarian. With dry and subtle Brit humor, this Claymation romp is wickedly funny, and sweetly engaging.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
15. 'South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut' (1999)
The jaw-dropping obscenity of the opening musical number of this TV-series spinoff was made more surreal by the fact that it sounded like a tune from the best Broadway show you haven't seen. In this hysteria-inducing cardboard-cutout work of genius, Kyle, Stan, Cartman and Kenny get involved with, among other things, a war with Canada.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
14. 'The Iron Giant' (1999)
Before 'The Incredibles' and 'Ratatouille,' director Brad Bird made this heartfelt adaptation of a poetic saga that tells the story of a gentle alien robot and the child friend he makes on Earth. With a mix of retro design and old-fashioned, sometimes devastating feeling, the movie brings out the lonely and then hopeful child in all of us. Still Vin Diesel's best role (he voices the title character, remember?).

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
13. 'Beauty and the Beast' (1991)
The de Beaumont fairy tale had been reimagined and retold many times, but never with such gusto as in this Disney 'toon version. From the rollicking characterizations to the stunning visuals -- an early mix of hand-drawn and computer animation -- to the spectacular songs to the flawless voice casting -- this movie had critics exalting that it was like a Broadway musical the sort of which aren't made anymore.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
12. 'Ratatouille' (2007)
You will believe a rat can cook. The Pixar maestros take on the most challenging of their self-imposed tasks, making you wanna root for a rodent as said rodent demonstrates his mastery of a Parisian kitchen. Great visuals (every vermin hair is detectable on screen), great humor and a smartly unpredictable story make it go down like the greatest cartoon meal you've ever had.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
11. 'Finding Nemo' (2003)
Okay, no "roe, roe, roe your whatever" jokes here. After his one surviving child is caught by a fisherman, a pilot fish dad goes in search of the son he fears he'll never see again. Here the Pixar team dealt with some pretty grim implications, but still managed to wrench a lot of laughs, and the computer-animated visualization of the undersea kingdom still takes your breath away.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
10. 'Fantasia' (1941)
Did Uncle Walt honestly not realize just how trippy his classical-music-and-animation omnibus was -- with its topless centaur gals, Stravinsky-dancing dinosaurs, and abstracted visual soundtrack (bouncing to Bach)? Oh, well; the rest of us can take endless, awe-inspiring pleasure in this wild ride -- whether sober or, heaven forefend, not so much.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
9. 'Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs'
Disney's first animated feature has plenty of elements that seem quaint today, not least being the very proper and very-high-singing heroine. But the old crone with the apple, the conflicted hunter, and of course, those kooky dwarves, still have an uncanny power to trouble and charm us. And who can finally resist the lure of its fairy-tale spell?

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
8. 'Spirited Away' (2002)
It's Hiyao Miyazaki's most cryptic -- and virtuosic -- display of drawn cinematic art, a tale in which an ordinary suburban yard leads to a supernatural world whose inhabitants soon start dogging the daily lives of those mortals who have wandered into the ancient realm. Hard to follow? That's the point. The dream logic here is unlike anything in Miyazaki, or for that matter, any other animated film.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
7. 'Cinderella' (1950)
A deceptively simple Disney masterpiece -- how could it miss, after all, with such a venerable story to tell? That said, it's easy to miss the perfect balance of comic and fantasy elements with emotionally realistic drama and nail-biting suspense. Disney's craftspeople did everything they knew how to do and worked at the peak of their powers when they crafted this flawless animated picture.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
6. 'The Little Mermaid' (1989)
A latter-day regime at Disney pumped fresh creative blood into the studio for this rendering of the Hans Christian Andersen tale; most notably, the songwriting team of Alan Menken and Howard Ashman, who brought old-school Broadway pizzazz and wit to the tunes. We were given the enchanting fin-tailed Ariel -- the mermaid young girls wanted to be and young boys wanted to jump in the ocean to be with.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
5. 'Bambi' (1942)
To some, this is the ultimate child-traumatizing machine, to be avoided at all costs. It sorta makes you wonder -- who are the bigger wusses, parents or their kids? OK, the climactic blaze really does make you appreciate the value of preventing forest fires. But between various life lessons endured by the title deer, there's also a lot of fun, and some of the most amazing animated characterizations ever put on film.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
4. 'The Incredibles' (2004)
This Pixar epic about a superhero family forced underground by a society that worships mediocrity -- only to be summoned again when that society needs them -- has a somewhat contentious philosophy behind it. But it's also got a high quotient of wit, action, amusing characterizations and fantastic visual design. Director Brad Bird's action adventure is, in a word, incredible.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
3. 'Shrek' (2001)
It makes sense that DreamWorks, with an animation division headed by deposed Disney reinventor Jeffrey Katzenberg, should make a movie that would have Walt spinning in his grave. And so came this rudely inventive fractured fairy tale, with a flatulant ogre as the hero and a jackass (okay, donkey) as his sidekick. Packed with gags that burst the bubble on happily-ever-after.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
2. 'The Lion King' (1994)
Hakuna ma-what-a? This circle-of-life story, basically a 'Hamlet' in which the deposed prince is not insane or pretending to be insane, and is nice and noble, and is also a lion, is one of Disney's most inspiring and heart-tugging. And the songs -- by Elton John and Tim Rice -- are some of the catchiest in 'toon-movie history.

The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen
1. 'Toy Story' (1995)
From the eye-popping beauty of its then-novel computer animation, to the perfect setup of the rivalry between Woody and Buzz, to the pitch-perfect array of eccentric characters surrounding the battling duo, this 1995 breakthrough from Pixar was as perfect an animated entertainment, and parable about friendship, as one could ever hope for. And it still is.
The Top 'Toons to Hit the Big Screen

banerjek
11-16-09, 02:23 PM
Actually, since Xmas season will soon be upon us, I must say I'll never tire of Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0066327/) and Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0058536/)

I'm sure I've seen the first of those every year since it came out, and I've been watching Rudolph equally as long. Now I enjoy them on DVD rather than on network TV

HardyWeinberg
11-16-09, 02:42 PM
Beatles-Yellow Submarine (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OSIgC1GWC38&feature=related)

botto
11-16-09, 02:57 PM
My favorite depends on my mood.

I've never quite understood the appeal of Wall-E and I'm a Pixar fan. I thought they'd been slipping since Monsters Inc but Ratatouille was decent. The early Disney flicks are also excellent as is the Tim Burton stuff. Dreamworks has some good stuff. I particularly liked the original Shrek.

I'm surprised that none of the Wallace and Gromit films have earned any mention yet.

I enjoyed Heavy Metal, but the animation in it was total crap. It looks like they ran out of money early and couldn't actually afford to animate it. If the soundtrack was taken from the movie, few would want to watch it.

that's because the OP asked about animation, not claymation. duh.

bluevelo
11-16-09, 03:00 PM
The Incredibles. Someone needs to tie Brad Bird up and torture him until he agrees to start work on a sequel IMMEDIATELY.

mustang1
11-16-09, 03:01 PM
I like most of the stuff done by Pixar apart from the older short movies. I pretty much like most of their feature length animations: Cars, Monsters Inc, Incredibles, Ratatouille, Finding Nemo, not seen Up yet and so on.

banerjek
11-16-09, 03:03 PM
that's because the OP asked about animation, not claymation. duh.
How is claymation not animation? If it doesn't count, the question should have been about cartoons (though apparently computer animation is kosher here).

Connell
11-16-09, 03:09 PM
My all time favorite is Watership Down. It's pretty much the Odyssey with rabbits. Beautifully done.

I haven't seen that movie although I did listen to the Book on Tape several years ago. It was really a little disturbing just how much I got into it. As in "I can't believe I'm making myself late for work because I'm driving round and round the block in order to learn the result of a fight between two rabbits." :lol:

As for the original question - loved "Up" and have just bought the DVD, and thought "Ratatouille" was great. "Wall-E"...not so much.

gitarzan
11-16-09, 04:30 PM
First time I saw Watership Down, I was in a theater tripping. I saw it twice that night. :innocent:

Lamplight
11-16-09, 05:52 PM
Either "An American Tail" or "The Secret of NIMH" Actually, "An American Tail", while I do love it, seems a little silly after watching "The Secret of NIMH", which may almost be a bit much for some children.

botto
11-16-09, 05:56 PM
How is claymation not animation? If it doesn't count, the question should have been about cartoons (though apparently computer animation is kosher here).

one is a two dimensional medium, the other stop motion filming of three dimensional objects.

Alfster
11-16-09, 05:57 PM
Fritz the Cat. :innocent:

Hah, I was wondering when someone would say that one.

coffeecake
11-16-09, 06:06 PM
Either "An American Tail" or "The Secret of NIMH" Actually, "An American Tail", while I do love it, seems a little silly after watching "The Secret of NIMH", which may almost be a bit much for some children.

I watched NIMH a little too young. Had nightmares for yonks. Same with Princess Bride. I actually hated it until I read the book a couple years ago.

Lamplight
11-16-09, 06:09 PM
I watched NIMH a little too young. Had nightmares for yonks. Same with Princess Bride. I actually hated it until I read the book a couple years ago.

NIMH didn't bother me, but I had nightmares for YEARS after just seeing a movie poster for "The Dark Crystal". Actually, the two main characters (I can't remember what they're called) still bother me a little.

I know it's not animation. I think that's what bothered me so much.

http://www.gamingangels.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/dark-crystal.jpg

surfrider
11-16-09, 07:39 PM
Fritz the Cat. :innocent:

And don't forget Bakshi's follow-up: "Heavy Traffic". His "Heavy Metal" was OK, "Wizards" sucked IMO.

+1's for "Princess Mononoke" and "Spirted Away"; Miyasaki's animation and storytelling is always great.

+1 for "Wall-E", especially the first 15-20 minute segment that literally breaks all the rules of movie dialogue (there was none!).