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Davey and Goliath is a Christian clay-animated children's television series, whose central characters were created by Art Clokey, Ruth Clokey, and Dick Sutcliffe, [2] and which was produced first by the United Lutheran Church in America and later by the Lutheran Church in America.
The Animated Haggadah: 1985 Rony Oren: C: The Apostle: 2012: Fernando Cortizo: H: Baby Snakes: 1979: Frank Zappa: The clay animation sequences were created by Bruce Bickford. H: Better Off Dead: 1985 Savage Steve Holland: The film is a mix between claymation, drawing, and live action. Claymation was by Jimmy Picker. C: Break! 1985: Garri Bardin ...
Throughout the 1980s, Family Home Entertainment released a majority of the 1950s and 1960s Gumby episodes on various VHS collections (the only episodes that didn't get a release were "This Little Piggy", "Tricky Train", and "Foxy Box"). These all retained their original audio tracks as they were released prior to the 1987 revival series, in ...
1960-1961 Stop-motion Courageous Cat and Minute Mouse: 130 US: 1960-1962 Popeye the Sailor: 220 The Flintstones: 166 1960-1966 King Leonardo and His Short Subjects: 104 1960-1963 The Hunter: 65 King Leonardo and His Short Subjects segment Tooter Turtle: 39 Twinkles: 48 Q.T. Hush: 100 1960-1961 The Bugs Bunny Show: 684 1960-2000 Compilation Show
Gumby was created by Art Clokey in the early 1950s after he finished film school at the University of Southern California (USC). [1]Clokey's first animated film was a 1953 three-minute student film, titled Gumbasia, a surreal montage of moving and expanding lumps of clay set to music in a parody of Disney's Fantasia. [10]
This is a list of children's animated television series (including internet television series); that is, animated programs originally targeted towards audiences aged 12 and under in mind. This list does not include Japanese, Chinese, or Korean series, as children's animation is much more common in these regions.
Modeling included animated clay in eight shots, a novel integration of the technique into an existing cartoon series and one of the rare uses of claymation in a theatrical short from the 1920s. [16] The oldest known extant claymation film (with claymation as its main production method) is Long Live the Bull (1926) [18] by Joseph Sunn. [19]
First Australian animated feature and the first American collaboration with another nation for an animated feature; later originally aired on December 13, 1970 as the third installment of the CBS anthology television series Famous Classic Tales (1970-1984). November 20, 1969 45 minutes Flying Phantom Ship 空飛ぶゆうれい船 (Soratobu ...