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Story, style and the search for new voices: Is story still king in modern animation?

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For generations, one phrase has echoed through the animation industry like an unwritten commandment, the phrase, “story is king ” . It has become a mantra repeated in studio halls, filmmaking masterclasses, and countless interviews with directors and animators. The philosophy is easy to understand. Audiences may be captivated by stunning visuals, but it is compelling stories and memorable characters that endure long after the credits roll. The emotional legacy of films from Pixar, Disney, and Studio Ghibli is often cited as proof that great animation begins not with spectacle, but with narrative. Yet the animation landscape of the 2020s looks markedly different from the one that shaped this philosophy. For much of the twentieth century, audiences could identify a studio almost instantly from a single frame. Disney's rounded elegance, Pixar's polished realism, DreamWorks' expressive characters, and the graphic sensibilities of Cartoon Network's golden era each cultivat...

Animation education versus audiences’ expectations in the Age of AI: What skills will shape the next generation of talent in a production pipeline?

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  For as long as animation has existed as an art form and an industry, education has been one of its most important foundations. Every generation of animators has inherited knowledge from the artists that came before them, whether through apprenticeships, art schools, studio training programs, mentorships, or increasingly through online communities and digital learning platforms. Historically, animation education was rooted in traditional artistic disciplines. Students were expected to learn drawing, observation, perspective, anatomy, color theory, acting, storytelling, and the principles of movement before they could effectively bring characters and worlds to life. Regardless of whether an artist pursued hand-drawn animation, stop motion, visual development, or computer animation, the underlying philosophy remained largely the same: understand the fundamentals first, then learn the tools. Over time, however, technology transformed both animation production and the way artists ...

The family as a storytelling engine: Why adult animation keeps coming home

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  When discussions about adult animation emerge, they often focus on humor, satire, or cultural influence. People talk about how The Simpsons predicted future events, how Family Guy transformed cutaway comedy, or how The Boondocks delivered some of the sharpest political commentary ever seen in animation. Yet beneath these conversations lies a less discussed question: why do so many influential adult animated series revolve around families? The answer has less to do with genre and more to do with storytelling design. For decades, adult animation has repeatedly returned to the family unit as its primary storytelling engine. Whether it is the Simpsons in Springfield, the Hills in Arlen, the Smiths in Langley Falls, or the Freemans in Woodcrest, these shows use families as a framework through which they can explore politics, economics, culture, race, religion, education, and generational change. At the same time, a different branch of animation has chosen another path. Series s...