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Independent animation occurs as term utilized to describe animated short cartoons and feature produced outside a agency Hollywood animation industry.
Because animation is very period-ingesting & expensive to green goods, a huge majority of alive productions come mass produced by broker studios. Whenever a Hollywood animation industry entered a decline in the period of the 1960s (see Hollywood Animation: The TV Era), a microscopic however steadily total of independent animation producers saved a art of animation alive. It produced a total of experimental films that pushed the boundaries of the medium, experimenting inside ways that Hanna-Barbera and Disney didn't dare to consider. The total of independent animatiin producers went on to make mainstream animation, & it became successful in their have perfect.
Numbers of independent animation short films come largely unknown; it is seldom seen outside of independent "art house" movie house. Collections of independent films keep close at h& been gathered for theatrical viewing, and streaming video release, under such titles when a Tournee of Animation & ''Spike & Microphone's Infected & Twisted Animation Festival.
A rise of the Internet in the 1990s and 2000s saw an exponential increase in the production of independent animation. Personal computer power increased to the point in which it was conceivable for one human to develop an animated cartoin on the front yard computer, applying software system like Macromedia Flash or Autodesk, and distribute these short blur the World Wide Web. Independently produced Internet cartoons flourished when the popularity of the Web grew, & a total of unknown, typically screaming short cartoons were produced for the Web.
In the late 1990s, an independent alive short film known as The Spirit of Christmas was produced for under $2,000 by two creative person, Matt Stone and Trey Parker. This film was widely distributed using your internet browser as a pirated cartoon, & its fantastic popularity bring about to the popular TV animated series South Park.
The Critic by Mel Brooks
Bambi Meets Godzilla by Marv Newland
Closed Mondays by Will Vinton
A Grand Day Out by Nick Park
Luxo Jr. by Pixar
Your Face by Bill Plympton
Tin Toy by Pixar
Homestar Runner'' by The Brothers Chaps
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