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Beyond the Pitch: Is Supa Strikas an Underrated Catalyst for the Global Rise of Animation from Africa?

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  When conversations around African animation come up today, they increasingly center on cultural identity, mythology, and authentic storytelling. There is a growing excitement around stories that draw from African traditions, spiritual systems, and speculative futures. These stories are often commented upon that they feel rooted, intentional, and distinctly African. In that landscape, a series like Supa Strikas feels almost out of place. It is not mythological nor is it overtly cultural. It does not attempt to retell traditional stories or engage directly with heritage. Yet, its global success raises an important question. Could Supa Strikas , despite its lack of cultural specificity, be one of the most underrated contributors to the global rise of African animation? To answer that, we have to look beyond what it represents on the surface, and instead examine what it made possible.   The Immediate Disconnect: Where Is the Culture? At first glance, Supa Strikas doe...

One half rooted in myth. One half slightly blooming on the red carpet: Are animated mythological stories truly capturing representation or mostly done for entertainment spectacle?

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  Animation has become one of the most powerful storytelling mediums of the modern era. It is visually limitless, globally accessible, and uniquely capable of translating complex ideas into emotionally engaging narratives. Among the many stories it tells, cultural mythologies have found a particularly strong home in animated films and series. From ancient gods to legendary heroes, animation has reintroduced traditional narratives to audiences who might otherwise never encounter them. Despite all of this, it raises an important question, are animated stories preserving cultural mythologies or transforming them into spectacle for mass consumption? The answer is not simple. In many cases, animation does both, but with the added nuances of still needing more representation as per what the audiences want and also on a cultural level, maintaining ethically sound approaches to storytelling. By carrying mythologies into global pop culture while simultaneously reshaping them to fit the ...

From Stylization to Spectacle: How Western Animation and Anime Evolved and the Live-Action remake question

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  A Medium That Outgrew Its Shadow For decades, animation lived in the shadow of live-action. In the West, it was often treated as a stepping stone, and was seen as something for children, from which to “graduate” from. In Japan, however, anime evolved differently, becoming a fully realized storytelling medium capable of handling everything from psychological drama to political commentary. Today, that dynamic is shifting. Live-action is no longer the clear “final form” of storytelling. In fact, with the rise of visually ambitious works like Arcane and Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse, globally dominant anime such as Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba, the relationship has begun to reverse. Increasingly, live-action adaptations feel like they are chasing something animation already perfected. To understand why, we need to look at how Western animation and anime evolved, not only just stylistically, but culturally and economically.   Two Origins, Two Philosophies Weste...

AI, Animation, and the Human Signature: Is AI in animation revealing the strong desire for more human made animation instead?

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“Animation is cinema. Animation is not a genre for kids. It’s a medium.” - Guillermo del Toro “Tonight, we are celebrating people, not AI, because animation, it's more than a prompt. It's an art form and it needs to be protected.” - Will Arnett at the Oscars 2026 For decades, animation has fought a quiet battle for recognition. Not just as entertainment, not just as spectacle, but as an art form. It has lived in the margins of award shows, been boxed into categories, and often treated as a technical novelty rather than a serious creative discipline. Yet, just as animation begins to assert its place within the broader language of cinema, a new challenge emerges, one that doesn’t question its legitimacy, but its very foundation. Artificial intelligence. Not as a tool, but as a creator. Not as assistance, but as authorship. Suddenly, the question is no longer whether animation is art. It’s something far more uncomfortable, if a machine can replicate the craft, what pa...

A Superhero in real life. A Superhero on the screens: Live action or animation? Where are superhero comic books best adapted for kids, teens and adults?

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Superheroes were born in static panels, but their true cultural dominance emerged when they began moving across screens. For decades, both animation and live action have attempted to translate comic book storytelling into visual media, each claiming its own successes and failures. From Saturday morning cartoons to blockbuster cinematic universes, superheroes have proven remarkably adaptable. Yet an important question remains, which medium actually adapts superhero comics better, animation or live action? The answer is not simple. Superhero storytelling evolves differently depending on the audience tier being targeted. What works for children may not resonate with teenagers, and what captivates adult audiences may push beyond the boundaries of either medium’s strengths. To explore this, it is useful to examine how superhero adaptations function across three key audience groups, which include, children, teenagers, and adults, before looking at the broader questions of remakes, reboot...