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Pages in category "Japanese computer-animated films" The following 38 pages are in this category, out of 38 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
A computer-animated film is an animated film that was created using computer software to appear three-dimensional.While traditional 2D animated films are now [when?] made primarily with the help of computers, the technique to render realistic 3D computer graphics (CG) or 3D computer-generated imagery (CGI), is unique to computer animation.
Despicable Me is the most represented franchise with all six films (including the Minions films) in the top 50 highest-grossing animated films. The top 11 films on this list, each having grossed in excess of $1 billion worldwide, are also ranked among the top 50 highest-grossing films of all time .
First CGI feature-length movie made using off-the-shelf hardware and software. Shrek: First CGI-animated movie to win an Academy Award for the Best Animated Feature Film. The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring: First use of AI for digital actors (using the Massive software developed by Weta Digital). The Lord of the Rings: The Two ...
List of best-selling video game franchises; Lists of multimedia franchises; Lists of highest-grossing films. List of best-selling films in the United States; List of films by box office admissions; List of highest-grossing films; List of highest-grossing animated films; List of highest-grossing Japanese films; List of highest-grossing non ...
The lists include both anime and live-action films produced by Japanese studios, but do not include English-language international co-productions between Japanese and Hollywood studios. For example, many Hollywood films based on Japanese source material, were co‑produced with Japanese production companies.
Vexille (ベクシル 2077日本鎖国, Bekushiru 2077 Nihon sakoku, lit. "Vexille: 2077 Japanese Isolation") is a 2007 Japanese CGI anime film, written, directed, and edited by Fumihiko Sori, and features the voices of Meisa Kuroki, Yasuko Matsuyuki, and Shosuke Tanihara.
Beginning with Animerama, the first Japanese animated film trilogy or series to be rated X by the MPAA established in the United States, begins the first film of the trilogy is A Thousand and One Nights (1969), was a success in Japan with distribution box-office revenue of ¥290 million, [2] it fails at the box-office revenue in the United States until Fritz the Cat, the first animated film ...