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animetudes.com
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| | | | I've mentioned that the sudden wave of Kanada-style animators in the first half of the 80s is as much due to Kanada as to one of his most notable students, Masahito Yamashita. To show this, I will focus not on Yamashita himself, but on one of the most important animators of the period, who largely... | |
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animetudes.com
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| | | | Cover image: a tribute to Yoshinori Kanada by Hiroyuki Imaishi Yoshinori Kanada is widely considered to be the most influential animator in Japan, if not one of the most important in the whole world. Something rare for anime staff, his influence even extends beyond the world of animation, as some, like contemporary artist Takashi Murakami,... | |
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animetudes.com
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| | | | As I mentioned in the previous article about Graviton, the OVA boom was very much carried by small structures and the overlapping nets of connections made by their members. It appears that the two most important places where all these people met and first exchanged their ideas were Urusei Yatsura, starting in 1981, and Macross,... | |
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katecarruthers.com
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| | Another reminder that personal websites are not of date. |