It was a big night for Disney animation at the Oscars tonight with Disney short Paperman taking home Best Animated Short, and Disney/PIXAR’s Brave grabbing the statuette for Best Animated Feature. Paperman had previously won the Annie for Best Short, while Disney’s Wreck-It Ralph had won the Annie for Best Feature Film… so not so much on the Annies predicting the Oscars anymore.
Brave is a fresh fairy tale that takes place in rugged and mythic Scotland. The impetuous, tangle-haired Merida, though a daughter of royalty, would prefer to make her mark as a great archer. A clash of wills with her mother compels Merida to make a reckless choice, which unleashes unintended peril on her father’s kingdom and her mother’s life. Merida struggles with the unpredictable forces of nature, magic and a dark, ancient curse to set things right.
Brave is directed by Mark Andrews, written by Mark Andrews, Steve Purcell, Brenda Chapman and Irene Mecchi and produced by Katherine Sarafian.
Paperman is a relatively simple tale of a boy meets girl chance encounter leads to the hero desperately attempting to re-introduce himself to a pretty girl via the medium of paper planes from his office skyscraper to hers. His failed attempts and passion for his original goal manifest in the hundreds of discarded planes as they try to guide, prod, poke and shove him towards his destination whilst gently persuading the goal of his affections along to a possible reconciliation too.
Paperman is directed by John Kahrs and produced by Kristina Reed.
Had Wreck-It Ralph won the Oscar, it would have made for an interesting Jeopardy question… as both Wreck-It Ralph and Paperman released together.
And I was the only other forum member here who knew the Oscars were going on tonight and posted about it! Nobody else here seems to care about the Academy Awards anymore...
The presentation of the animation Oscars was terrible, too. I thought with Seth MacFarlane hosting, he would've livened it up, but no!
You forgot to mention that Paul Rudd and Melissa McCarthy presented the animation awards, and they were terrible. What do THEY know about animation?
But then again, it seems most people here now just see the Oscars as "just another award ceremony" compared to five years ago, and don't bother to talk about them (I say this because I'm a long-time forum member now, and I am still a bit ticked off by losing the Oscar back in 1962 to "Ersatz, the Substitute.")