6:15pm - Friday, Apr 26, 2019
The 20th Annual Animation Show of Shows
Returning to The Rio Theatre for its fourth year, The Animation Show of Shows will present 15 thought-provoking, poignant, and very funny animated shorts from around the world. In a year when the best and worst of human nature has been on constant display, the works in this year’s show remind us of both the universality of shared ideals, as well as the diverse challenges we face.
THE 20th ANNUAL ANIMATION SHOW OF SHOWS represents the work of artists from six countries and includes six student films. Funny, moving, engaging, and thought-provoking, THE ANIMATION SHOW OF SHOWS not only has something for everyone, but is a remarkable and insightful microcosm of our world.
For 20 years, The ANIMATION SHOW OF SHOWS has been presenting new and innovative short films to appreciative audiences at animation studios, schools and, since 2015, theaters around the world. Over the years, 38 of the films showcased in The ANIMATION SHOW OF SHOWS went on to receive Academy Award® nominations, with 11 films winning the Oscar®.
Founded and curated by producer Ron Diamond, THE ANIMATION SHOW OF SHOWS is funded through private benefactors, including a successfully funded Kickstarter campaign and animation studios. THE ANIMATION SHOW OF SHOWS, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization founded in 2015 for the express purposes of increasing public awareness of exemplary international animated shorts and restoring and preserving important short animations from the past.
“Animation is such a flexible and open-ended medium that it lends itself to exploring the innumerable aspects of what it means to be human,” says founder and curator Ron Diamond. “And this year’s program, as much as any of our past presentations, really illuminates human strengths and foibles, and the bonds that unite us across cultures and generations.”
Friday, April 26
Doors 5:45 pm | Show 6:15 pm
Advance tickets (children under 13) $10.50 | $12.50 at the door
Advance tickets $14.50 | $16.50 at the door
*For this screening, minors permitted in the balcony. Must be 19+ w/ID for bar service and balcony seating. Sorry, Rio Theatre Groupons and passes not accepted for this event.
"In my view, at least, the best short-form animation — like the most memorable short stories — is daring in perspective and malleable in interpretation." highlights include films that are "...wonderfully original... dazzling... provocative... sticks a dagger in conformity…" (The New York Times)
"The styles and subjects of the 15 films from six countries in the 20th edition demonstrate that in the right hands, animation can be a vehicle for personal expression as powerful and intimate as drawing, painting or sculpture. (Los Angeles Times)
"If you are like me and wish to escape the madness unfolding in our current daily news, then I prescribe a healthy dose of animation and urge you to leave your bunker and get yourself into a cinema this weekend to check out the Animation Show of Shows. Now in its 20th year, the Animation Show of Shows continues its ongoing mission to seek out and share a carefully chosen crop of new animation from around the globe." (Movie Magazine International)
The show has a running time of 98 minutes and includes 15 films, four of which qualified for Academy Award® consideration *. The complete lineup, in order of appearance, is:
The Green Bird * - Maximilien Bougeois, Quentin Dubois,
Marine Goalard, Irina Nguyen, Pierre Perveyrie, France
One Small Step * - Andrew Chesworth, Bobby Pontillas, U.S.
Grands Canons - Alain Biet, France
Barry - Anchi Shen, U.S.
Super Girl - Nancy Kangas, Josh Kun, U.S.
Love Me, Fear Me - Veronica Solomon, Germany
Business Meeting - Guy Charnaux, Brazil
Flower Found! - Jorn Leeuwerink, The Netherlands
Bullets - Nancy Kangas, Josh Kun, U.S.
A Table Game - Nicolás Petelski, Spain
Carlotta's Face - Valentin Riedl, Frédéric Schuld, Germany
Age of Sail * - John Kahrs, U.S.
Polaris - Hikari Toriumi, U.S.
My Moon - Eusong Lee, U.S.
Weekends * - Trevor Jimenez, U.S.
The power of family ties, and specifically the enduring connection between parents and children, are sensitively evoked in Hikari Toriumi’s deeply affecting “Polaris,” about a young polar bear leaving home for the first time. “One Small Step,” Bobby Pontillas and Andrew Chesworth’s inspiring story of a Chinese-American girl’s dream of being an astronaut, centers on her evolving relationship with her father. The beautifully designed “Weekend,” by Trevor Jimenez, explores the complex emotional landscape of a young boy and his recently divorced parents, as he shuttles between their very different homes and lives.The darker side of relationships is forcefully explored in Veronica Solomon’s “Love Me, Fear Me,” a tour de force of claymation that uses dance to delve into the lengths people go to to deceive each other and try to pass for something they’re not. Eusong Lee’s “My Moon” takes a more cosmic and lighthearted approach to a troubled relationship, limning a celestial love triangle played out by the sun, the moon, and the earth.
“Carlotta’s Face,” by Valentin Riedl and Frédéric Schuld, illuminates a different kind of relationship dysfunction in its sensitive portrayal of a woman who suffers from prosopagnosia, the inability to recognize faces, and her salvation through art.
Among the other program highlights are the very funny computer animation “The Green Bird,” winner of a 2018 Gold Student Academy Award® International Animation, which harks back to classic cartoons of the mid-20th century. Oscar-winning director John Kahrs’ “Age of Sail,” the latest in Google’s series of Spotlight Stories, chronicles the adventures of an old sailor who rescues a teenaged girl after she falls overboard. Alain Biet’s jaw-dropping “Grand Canons” is a dizzying symphonic celebration of everyday objects that uses finely detailed drawings created by the filmmaker. And two very short films, “Supergirl” and “Bullets,” take their inspiration from poems composed by surprisingly eloquent preschoolers.
Please note: The producers of The 20th Annual Animation Show of Shows advise parental discretion, as one of the 15 animated short films has a chicken getting it’s head chopped off, and the last film has two dramatic dream scenes (shot of a TV has an accidental propellor beheading and another shot with a stumbling man ablaze). May not be suitable for very young children.
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