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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Documentation of Artistic Animation. Not your average animation history book.
It's clear that the author derives the majority of his references from Europe's history of Animation, which might explain why many people have not heard of the animators he talks about. But considering that these artists did take part in the history behind animation, it is good that Bendazzi made the effort to bring their names to light. He makes some remarks and does...
Published on July 6, 2008 by Terri Yang

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17 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Better with some revisions.
As a brazilian animator I tried to start to read this book by the Latin american section, and comprehensively, by the one that shows the status of animation in my country, Brazil, a reality that I know very well.I don't know where Mr. Bendazzi got his informations for this part of the book.What I know is that it's full of strange or, at least unknown names of people for...
Published on May 11, 1998


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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Documentation of Artistic Animation. Not your average animation history book., July 6, 2008
It's clear that the author derives the majority of his references from Europe's history of Animation, which might explain why many people have not heard of the animators he talks about. But considering that these artists did take part in the history behind animation, it is good that Bendazzi made the effort to bring their names to light. He makes some remarks and does look at other countries, such as America's infamous Walt Disney and Japan's rising anime films, but for the most part, he concentrates on the growth within Europe's artistic groups.

This book is less about the big names in cinematic animation and more about the independent artists and studios who worked in animation during a time when the animator's names and the dates their works were created weren't exactly recorded and copyrighted properly. Many of the animators here can also be identified as fine artists, often working experimentally within the media. This is how animation as cinema started (way before the time of Walt Disney and his overshadowing fame) and is continuing to be produced on the other side of Hollywood.

This book definitely has a text-book feel, but as far as a text book goes, it's not too terribly dry. It's informative and gives a very in-depth look at animation, from its beginning as optical illusions to the cinematic phenomena it has become today.

Also, as a final personal comment, this book is like a documentation of the independent films (as well as mainstream films) of the animation industry. Most people will not have seen them (unless they have access to an animation/video library), but that doesn't mean the films aren't important to history.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars As a fan of cinema history I found this book enlightening!, November 13, 1998
By A Customer
I found this book filled in many gaps I had of my early cinema knowledge. Often making references to many little known events, it set the stage for what was to become mainstream animation.
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17 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Better with some revisions., May 11, 1998
By A Customer
As a brazilian animator I tried to start to read this book by the Latin american section, and comprehensively, by the one that shows the status of animation in my country, Brazil, a reality that I know very well.I don't know where Mr. Bendazzi got his informations for this part of the book.What I know is that it's full of strange or, at least unknown names of people for most of the brazilian animators, illustrators figuring as animators, besides the absence of five or six of the really most important animators in my country.Because of all that,I'm affraid the rest of the book, at least in those sections telling about the animation in Latin America still needs to be revised.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A excellent resource, December 3, 2010
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I love and I am actually studying animation, and this book is excellent and very interesting, not only for us the animators, but for everyone who likes history. My mother was an professor of History, tells me how interesting is this book every time she takes a look. The book has a enormous resource about the animation, since the first toys that made animation in our eyes while moving it, until actual animation. I admire all those who made animation, because for a short or long animation, of whichever method, we need to be crazy enough to be able to make one! I recommend it to everyone, this book is not only made for studying, it is also entertaining, until the point that I want to carry it everywhere I go and take a little read each time.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Knowledgable Overview of the History of Animation, May 11, 2009
This book is a must for serious fans of animation. It is a solid consideration of the work of animators from all over the world by someone who knows about animation. This is not like the lightweight, superficial dicussions that movie reviewers do when writing about Disney or Pixar; it's a well-researched, inclusive overview. Yet the writing style is not stodgy or academic; it's reader friendly. Animators from all countries and from all eras are included -- Alexandre Alexeieff, Jiri Trnka, Norman McLaren, Chuck Jones, Walter Lantz, and many others.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Homework, November 7, 2010
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Melton E. Cartes (San Francisco,, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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I needed to get this book for my Language of Animation and Film class. I personally prefer to keep books, rather than resell or get rid of them when I'm done. So, i prefer to have books that are in good condition. Conversely, I'm currently a student, so I can't afford to pay cover prices on some of my books. So, I'm very happy to with my purchase of this used copy of CARTOONS: ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF CINEMA ANIMATION. I don't think I could have asked for a better deal...not realistically, that is. Thanks!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Criticisms aside; this is one of the few great international animation overviews., February 28, 2009
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David (Sanford, FL) - See all my reviews
The American sections of this book are lighter than Maltin's "Of Mice And Magic" and Barrier's "Hollywood Animation" (and Japan is also weakly represented), but the balance is made with independent animators and many other countries you wouldn't think were animation-oriented. Figures as diverse as Ladislaw Starewicz and Will Vinton get more attention here than in other books.

This is not something you read from cover to cover... instead you seek out the areas you're most interested in first. However, skimming through it chronologically gives interesting insight on the effects of both politics and technology on cartoon-making. For example, sound was slower reaching Asian animation and had interesting consequences, while post-war Communism may have actually boosted eastern Europe's "golden age". Fittingly, the story ends in 1991-92, just as digital animation began replacing the more personal, time-consuming methods of cell and paper animation, puppetoon stop-motion and claymation, making it more difficult to distinguish cartoons made in different countries.

As with all film-related texts, it is easy to gripe about errors and unequal emphasis placed on different artists. Of course, some countries may be less well-documented for their animators than others. Nonetheless, this is one of those books you find yourself referencing frequently.
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2 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Full of the obscure, Sparse on the meaningful, January 17, 2008
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I purchased this book for a university History of Animation course. I was excited to study the history and development of such a wonderful art form.

Unfortunately, this book has a rather encyclopedic tone. By that I mean broad in subject, but extremely shallow. It hardly covers things that are very important, giving them just a passing mention (the Mickey Mouse on the cover is extremely misleading). Instead, it gives massive amounts of space to movements and people that are nearly meaningless. Indeed, it seems skewed towards the obscure. And unlike a true encyclopedia, the author interjects his own views regularly. It is not a useful compendium of dates, names, and other facts.

Needless to say, I got very little out of it. I sold it as soon as I was able following the class.
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Cartoons: One Hundred Years of Cinema Animation
Cartoons: One Hundred Years of Cinema Animation by Giannalberto Bendazzi (Hardcover - Feb. 1995)
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