Moving Pictures: A History of American Animation from Gertie to Pixar and Beyond

Author:   Darl Larsen
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
ISBN:  

9781538160374


Pages:   334
Publication Date:   21 May 2024
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained


Our Price $81.99 Quantity:  
Pre-Order

Share |

Moving Pictures: A History of American Animation from Gertie to Pixar and Beyond


Add your own review!

Overview

A deep dive into the history of cinematic animation in the United States. Animated films started with simple sequential drawings photographed one at a time—little bits of comedic fluff to make amateur title scenes or surreal escapist sequences. Today, animation is a worldwide industry valued at nearly $300 billion and still growing in scope and popularity. In Moving Pictures, Darl Larsen playfully lays out the history of American animation as it transitioned from vaudeville sub-feature to craftsman-like artistry to industrial diversion and, ultimately, to theatrical regulars on par with blockbusters. Larsenidentifies and discusses the major figures, movements, and studios across the nearly 120 years of animation in the United States. Progressing chronologically, the book follows animation from stage performance through to its use as wartime propaganda, its seven-minute heyday (1930s-1950s) and decamp to television, and finally the years of struggle as cartoons became feature films. Covering everything from the early days of Mickey Mouse to recent releases such as Super Mario Bros., Moving Pictures is an essential read for movie fans and a nostalgic revisiting of some of America’s favorite films.

Full Product Details

Author:   Darl Larsen
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
Imprint:   Rowman & Littlefield
Dimensions:   Width: 15.90cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 23.70cm
Weight:   0.640kg
ISBN:  

9781538160374


ISBN 10:   1538160374
Pages:   334
Publication Date:   21 May 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained

Table of Contents

Reviews

"Darl Larsen's Moving Pictures is a captivating exploration of American animation. With meticulous research and insightful storytelling, Larsen brings to life the visionaries and innovations that changed animation forever. A must-read for all animation lovers. --Jared Hess, writer and director, ""Napoleon Dynamite"" (feature film and animated series) and Oscar-nominated animated short ""Ninety-Five Senses"" Moving Pictures energetically weaves animation's legal, economic, and aesthetic histories together into a revelatory new study of the competing forces that have shaped the growth and institutionalization of the art form. Larsen's insightful, multi-faceted account widens the cast of players ordinarily found in animation's historical canon, and reveals the intricate interplay of business acumen, skill, and creativity that gave rise to and continue to sustain animation as a vibrant and essential dimension of American cinematic culture. Throughout, Larsen's rich engagement with primary sources brings the story and stakeholders of American theatrical animation to life as vividly as the characters on screen. --Meredith A. Bak, Rutgers University-Camden In Darl Larsen's gripping account, over a century of American animation flickers before our eyes in a lively ensemble including the usual suspects--Mickey Mouse, Snow White, Felix the Cat, Betty Boop, Bambi--alongside such less familiar but still fascinating characters as the Dover Boys, Private Snafu, Colonel Heeza Liar, and Little Nemo (not the clownfish). Lively and compelling, Moving Pictures explores the industry and studios, the audiences, the technologies, the animators and their aesthetics, the characters and narratives that underlie the delightful art and craft of animation. I wouldn't have thought I could enjoy cartoons even more than I already do, but Larsen's big-picture exploration opens up their richly illustrious role in American culture. --Randy Malamud, Regents' Professor of English, Georgia State University and author of ""Reading Zoos"", ""The Importance of Elsewhere"", and ""Strange Bright Blooms"""


"Moving Pictures energetically weaves animation's legal, economic, and aesthetic histories together into a revelatory new study of the competing forces that have shaped the growth and institutionalization of the art form. Larsen's insightful, multi-faceted account widens the cast of players ordinarily found in animation's historical canon, and reveals the intricate interplay of business acumen, skill, and creativity that gave rise to and continue to sustain animation as a vibrant and essential dimension of American cinematic culture. Throughout, Larsen's rich engagement with primary sources brings the story and stakeholders of American theatrical animation to life as vividly as the characters on screen. --Meredith A. Bak, associate professor, Rutgers University-Camden and author of ""Playful Visions: Optical Toys and the Emergence of Media Culture"" As an animation veteran I consider myself a student of the craft. Reading Moving Pictures has increased my appreciation for my vocation and taught me a few things I hadn't known before. (Who knew that William Randolph Hearst had a connection to animation?) Focusing on American cinematic animation and couching his history in the social and economic upheavals of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, Darl Larsen invites a new perspective into the story of the animated film and cements the importance of the art form in American culture. --Randy Haycock, animator and adjunct professor of animation, Art Center College of Design Darl Larsen's Moving Pictures is a captivating exploration of American animation. With meticulous research and insightful storytelling, Larsen brings to life the visionaries and innovations that changed animation forever. A must-read for all animation lovers. --Jared Hess, writer and director, ""Napoleon Dynamite"" (feature film and animated series) and Oscar-nominated animated short ""Ninety-Five Senses"" In Darl Larsen's gripping account, over a century of American animation flickers before our eyes in a lively ensemble including the usual suspects--Mickey Mouse, Snow White, Felix the Cat, Betty Boop, Bambi--alongside such less familiar but still fascinating characters as the Dover Boys, Private Snafu, Colonel Heeza Liar, and Little Nemo (not the clownfish). Lively and compelling, Moving Pictures explores the industry and studios, the audiences, the technologies, the animators and their aesthetics, the characters and narratives that underlie the delightful art and craft of animation. I wouldn't have thought I could enjoy cartoons even more than I already do, but Larsen's big-picture exploration opens up their richly illustrious role in American culture. --Randy Malamud, Regents' Professor of English, Georgia State University and author of ""Reading Zoos"", ""The Importance of Elsewhere"", and ""Strange Bright Blooms"" Larsen presents a robust history of American theatrical animation from its newspaper comics strip roots to the present day.... Larsen energetically traces the remarkable adaptability of the medium from Disney's meteoric success, through the use of animation studios during World War II to produce public service films, to the advent of television, which undermined cinematic shorts yet offered an exciting new avenue for animators, and the growth of such powerhouse studios as Pixar and Dreamworks. The result is a lively chronicle of a perennially evolving medium. -- ""Publishers Weekly"""


"In Darl Larsen's gripping account, over a century of American animation flickers before our eyes in a lively ensemble including the usual suspects--Mickey Mouse, Snow White, Felix the Cat, Betty Boop, Bambi--alongside such less familiar but still fascinating characters as the Dover Boys, Private Snafu, Colonel Heeza Liar, and Little Nemo (not the clownfish). Lively and compelling, Moving Pictures explores the industry and studios, the audiences, the technologies, the animators and their aesthetics, the characters and narratives that underlie the delightful art and craft of animation. I wouldn't have thought I could enjoy cartoons even more than I already do, but Larsen's big-picture exploration opens up their richly illustrious role in American culture. --Randy Malamud, Regents' Professor of English, Georgia State University and author of ""Reading Zoos"", ""The Importance of Elsewhere"", and ""Strange Bright Blooms"""


Author Information

Darl Larsen is professor of film and animation studies at Brigham Young University, Theatre and Media Arts Department, and affiliated with the Center for Animation at BYU. He lives in Orem, Utah.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

wl

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List