World's Greatest Animation

Category: DVD

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Product Description

A whirlwind tour of first-class animated shorts, "The World's Greatest Animation" assembles, for the first time, an eye-popping assortment of Academy Award winners and nominees from the years 1978-1991. Includes: Creature Comforts (directed by "Wallace & Gromit's" Nick Park), Balance, Technological Threat, The Cat Came Back, Your Face (directed by Bill Plympton), A Greek Tragedy, Anna & Bella, The Big Snit, Charade, Sundae in New York, The Great Incognito (directed by Will Vinton), Tango, The Fly, Crac!, Every Child, Special Delivery.


Product Details

Publisher Image Entertainment
UPC 014381453027
Number Of Discs 1
ISBN 6305131023
Original Release Date 1994-01-01
EAN 9786305131021
Region Code 0
Format
  • DVD
  • Animated
  • Color
  • DVD
  • NTSC
Directed By Bill Kroyer,Bill Plympton,Børge Ring,Christoph Lauenstein,Cordell Barker
Release Date 1998-10-21
Label Image Entertainment
Title World's Greatest Animation
Studio Image Entertainment
Starring Jay Brazeau,Ida Osler,Richard Condie,Julie Sedgewick,John Minnis
Running Time 105 minutes
Theatrical Release Date 1994
MPAA Rating NR (Not Rated)
Aspect Ratio 1.33:1
Manufacturer Image Entertainment

Customer Reviews

A Relic of Excellence

Review by Lucas Nishimoto, 2007-08-07

About 10-12 years ago, this movie was in virtually every college campus store that had a decent animation department. Then on VHS, this collection of shorts has inspired nearly every current Academy Award-winning animator in the entertainment industry. I highly recommend it for anyone who has a serious and open mind towards animated shorts.


PLEASE re-release or reprint this!!

Review by Danny M. Hobbs, 2006-09-26

I have not seen this DVD, but I have seen almost all of the animated films it contains, and assuming decent video quality, for once, a title with the word "greatest" would live up to its name. Balance, Tango, Charade, The Big Snit, Your Face, Technological Threat, and A Greek Tragedy are some of the most eloquent and funny animated films I have ever seen. But at the date of this review, the DVD is unavailable and used copies *start* at $200!

Image Entertainment, ***PLEASE*** re-release this disk!!


Hardly the worldýs greatest ý but it has some real gems

Review by Itamar Katz, 2004-04-25

The Film Board of Canada picked a pretentious title for this DVD; quite often it justifies itself, but of course not at all times. This is, of course, not `the world's greatest animation'; it's a collection of animation shorts that were nominated for an Academy Award between 1978 and 1990 - predominantly Canadian. Many of the films are Oscar winners, but from some years only a nominee was included, which makes you wonder who exactly made the selection.

Still, `The World's Greatest Animation' does indeed boast some masterpiece works. The first one that comes to mind is the celebrated `Creature Comforts' (1990), a fantastic, hilarious masterpiece of claymotion that set Nick Park (of Wallace & Gromit and Chicken Run fame) on the road to success. It's not, however, the only creation worthy of notice on the DVD. `The Cat Came Back' (Cordell Barker, 1988) is a personal favorite of mine; it has a wonderfully stylish, nervous animation style, and great, creative character design (though only two active characters), not to mention hilarious slapstick and a brilliantly catchy title tune. `Your Face' (1987) is a great musical number by the grand master Bill Plympton (`I Married A Strange Person', `The Tune' and many others, as well as many of MTV's wonderful animation sequences of the late 80's), and like all of Plympton's work it's devilishly inventive and gloriously naughty; though I wouldn't call it Bill's best (I liked '25 Ways To Quit Smoking'), his animation is always a pleasure and `Your Face' is a great showcase of his unique talent for those who are not familiar. And `Charade' (MinVintonis, 1984) is hardly an animation masterpiece, but it's brilliantly, brilliantly funny.

Then, there's the grim, serious stuff. `Tango' (Rybczynski, 1982) is absolutely ingenious; it put me in a complete trance for a full eight minutes. It's a stroke of creative genius that has to be seen to believed. Then there's `Balance' (Lauenstein, 1989), which, like many other reviewers noted, can be seen either as an important statement or as pretentious pseudo-philosophy. Whichever way you look at it, it's still visually stunning and very original; and even if you'll find it superficial and pretentious, you won't be able to resist a little smile of amusement at the end of it. Other interesting, thought-provoking works include `Crac!' (Back, 1981) and `The Fly' (Rofuscz, 1980).

The collection weakness is that so many of the others seem like fillers. Most of them are amusing and enjoyable, many are very well-made visually, or well written; but in the end, they are very forgettable, and hardly unique. `A Greek Tragedy' (Van Goethem, 1986), `Special Delivery' (Wheldon and Macaulay, 1978), `Sundae In New York' (Picker, 1983), `Every Child' (Fedorenco and Lamb, 1979) and `The Big Snit' (Condie, 1985) all fall into that category. On the other hand, `Anna & Bella' (Ring, 1985) and `The Great Cognito' (Vinton, 1985) are delightfully original and beautiful, but have absolutely nothing to say. `Technological Threat' (Koyer, 1988) is so mediocre I can't understand how it made its way into the collection.

For the art and animation student or simply enthusiast, `The World's Greatest Animation' does contain some must-see material (although many of the best ones can be obtained elsewhere: `Creature Comforts' can be found on its own self-titled collection of Nick Park shorts, and `Your Face' can be found on Plympton's collection DVD titled `Plymptoons'), and is well worth owning. Much of the material, though is not essential, and is good for one watch.


Ideal for the Art/Film Student

Review by C. A. Yount, 2003-11-20

Allot of people are confused by the title "The World's Greatest Animation" and think that it is suitible for children or familiy audiences. It is, infact, a collection of astounding and award winning peices filmed world wide. Scenes like "Creature Comforts", "Balance" and "Tango" are visually thrilling and wonderful and those alone are worth the purchase of the DVD/VHS. I would recomend this for any aspiring artist, film maker and professional as it is an ecclectic visual wonder. Again, for those looking for good clean family entertainment...enter in a Disney title or something...


Very disappointing

Review by Jammer, 2003-07-02

Other than Creature Comforts and Balance the items in this collection are instantly forgettable. This is definitely NOT the world's greatest animation - far from it. I watched many Canadian Film Board animations a long time ago when I was a child, and I still remember being impressed by their creativity and originality. That isn't reflected in this DVD.

Also, with a title of The World's Greatest Animation, I'd expect maybe just one piece from a music video or a TV commercial, something technologically dazzling, something that makes you go wow and call someone else into the room to see it, or maybe some internet-available stuff like L'Amour by Don Hertzfeldt or Video Computer System by Golden Shower. What I got instead was mostly tedious, unimpressive and uninspiring cartoons.

I'd suggest you don't waste your money on this one.


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