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Russian animation

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Russian animation. Cartoons are almost equally loved by children and adults alike. For many Russians, Russian cartoons are still associated with Soviet animation, because most of Russia's production of animation for film|cinema and television were created during Soviet times. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Russian animation

Russian animation

Page 2: Russian animation

Cartoons are almost equally loved by children and adults alike. For many Russians, Russian cartoons are still associated with Soviet animation, because most of

Russia's production of animation for film|cinema and television were created during Soviet times

Page 3: Russian animation

The first animator in Russia was Aleksander Shiryayev, who was a principal dancer at the Imperial Russian Ballet, as

well as a teacher and choreographer. He made a number of pioneering puppet-animated ballet films between 1906 and 1909. He only showed them to a few people, and they were

forgotten until their re-discovery in 1995.

Page 4: Russian animation

   The second person in Russia to independently discover animation was Ladislas Starevich, who was of Polish descent and is therefore also known by the

name of Wladyslaw Starewicz. Being a trained biologist, he started to make animation with

embalmed insects for educational purposes, but soon realized the possibilities of his medium to become

one of the undisputed masters of stop motion later in his life. His first few films, made in 1910, were dark comedies on the family lives of cockroaches, and were so revolutionary that they earned Starevich a

decoration from the Tsar. Starevich's 41-minute 1913 film The Night Before Christmas was the first example of the use of stop motion and live action in the same

scene.

Page 5: Russian animation
Page 6: Russian animation

   

After the October Revolution, only by the mid-to-late-1920s could Soviet authorities be convinced to

finance experimental studios.These were typically part of a bigger film studio and were in the beginning

most often used to produce short animated clips for propaganda purposes

Page 7: Russian animation

Cartoon: Katok

Page 8: Russian animation

     

In 1934, Walt Disney sent a film reel with some shorts of Mickey Mouse to the Moscow Film

Festival. Fyodor Khitruk, then only an animator, recalls his impressions of that screening in an

interview in Otto Alder's film The Spirit of Genius. He was absolutely overwhelmed by the fluidity of the films' images and enthusiastic about the new

possibilities for animation that Disney's ways seemed to offer.

Higher officials shared this impression, too, and in 1935, the Soyuzdetmultfilm-Studio was created

from the small and relatively independent trickfilm units of Mosfilm, Sovkino and Mezhrabpromfilm in

order to focus on the creation of Disney-style animation, exclusively using cel technique.

Page 9: Russian animation

Chasovye.poley

Page 10: Russian animation

From Khrushchev Thaw to PerestroikaKhitruk changed the animation style to something that

resembled what the United Productions of America was doing, and for the first time since the avantgarde years, he was able to tackle a contemporary story.He's revolutionary approach paved the way for a vast number of young animation directors that in the following years developed their own distinctive styles and

approaches.The 1970s saw the birth of the Soviet Union's most popular animation series, Nu, Pogodi! (Just you wait!), directed by

Vyacheslav Kotyonochkin. These seemingly simple miniatures about a wolf chasing a hare through Soviet-style cartoon worlds owe a great deal of their popularity to the cunning subtexts built

into their parts.

Page 11: Russian animation

Cartoon: Nu, pogodi!

Page 12: Russian animation

Plastilinovaja vorona

Page 13: Russian animation

       One of the most famous Russian animators is Yuriy

Norshteyn. His films Little Hedgehog in the Fog (1975) and Tale of Tales (1979) show not only technical mastery

(although not smooth animation), but also an unrivaled magic beauty. Tale of Tales was elected best animation film of all time during the 1984 Olympic Arts Festival in

Los Angeles, and again in 2002.

Page 14: Russian animation

Film: Little Hedgehog in the Fog

Page 15: Russian animation

In the Soviet Union, three Winnie-the-Pooh, (transcribed in Russian as "Vinni Pukh") (Russian language: Винни-Пух) stories

were made into a celebrated trilogy[28] of short films by Soyuzmultfilm (directed by Fyodor Khitruk) from 1969 to 1972.

Винни-Пух (Winnie-the-Pooh, 1969) – based on chapter 1Винни-Пух идёт в гости (Winnie-the-Pooh Pays a Visit, 1971) –

based on chapter 2Винни-Пух и день забот (Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day,

1972) – based on chapters 4 and 6.Films use Boris Zakhoder's translation of the book. Pooh was

voiced by Yevgeny Leonov. Unlike the Disney adaptations, the animators did not base their depictions of the characters on Shepard's illustrations, creating a different look. The Soviet

adaptations make extensive use of Milne's original text, and often bring out aspects of Milne's characters' personalities not used in

the Disney adaptations.

Page 16: Russian animation

Winnie-the-Pooh

Page 17: Russian animation

Cheburashka , also known as Topple in earlier English translations, is a character in children's literature, from a 1966

story by Soviet writer Eduard Uspensky. He is also the protagonist of the stop-motion animated films by Roman

Kachanov (Soyuzmultfilm studio), the first film of which was made in 1969

Cheburashka (Russian: Чебурашка) is an iconic Russian classic cartoon character, that later also became a popular character in

Russian anecdotes (along with his side-kick, Krokodil Gena). According to the creator of the character, Eduard Uspensky (1965), Cheburashka is a funny little creature, unknown to

science, who lives in a tropical forest. Cheburashka accidentally gets into a crate of oranges, eats his fill, and falls asleep. The crate is eventually delivered to a grocery store in an unnamed Russian city (hinted to be Moscow), where the rest of the main

story unfolds.

Page 18: Russian animation

Cheburashka

Page 19: Russian animation

The kid and Carlson: cartoon Collection (1957-1970)

Based On the tale of Astrid Lindgren film Director Boris Stepantsev took dilogy about the adventures of «the best in the world» Carlson

and his friend's kid, who for many years to come down with screens, continuing to

fascinate young spectators and their parents...

Page 20: Russian animation

The kid and Carlson

Page 21: Russian animation

     After the end of the Soviet Union, the situation for Russian

animators changed dramatically. On one hand, State subsidies diminished significantly. On the other hand, the number of studios competing for that amount of money rose a good deal. Most of the studios during the 1990s lived on animation for advertisement and

on doing commissioned works for big studios from America and elsewhere. Nevertheless, there were a few very successful

international co-productions, e.g. Aleksandr Petrov's (former Sverdlovsk Film Studio animator) Oscar-winning The Old Man and

the Sea (1999, from Ernest Hemingway's novel) or Stanislav Sokolov's The Winter's Tale (1999, from William Shakespeare's

play) that earned the director an Emmy.

Page 22: Russian animation

The Old Man and the Sea

Page 23: Russian animation

As Russia's economic situation became increasingly stable, so did the market for animation, and during the last three years a number of feature-length animation films from Russian studios

have emerged (e.g. Melnitsa Animation Studio's Little Longnose, 2003, from Wilhelm Hauff's fairy tale, and Solnechny Dom

Studio's 2006 Prince Vladimir, based on early history of Rus' – the highest-grossing Russian animated film to date). While the

Russian animation community is yet far from reaching the splendor it possessed before the end of the Soviet Union, a

significant recovery is being made and it is becoming more and more clear that the revived Russian animation industry will be very different from what it was in the late 1980s. According to Andrei Dobrunov, head of Solnechny Dom, several Russian

studios are currently working on some ten animated feature films.

Page 24: Russian animation

Prince Vladimir

Page 25: Russian animation

Dobrynya nikitich i zmey gorynych

Page 26: Russian animation

Read more:http://www.russia-ic.com/culture_art/theatre/1529/#.U46o0PnV_Cdhttp://www.pilot-film.com/index.php