1926 film
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65 -Evènementiel et culture du 14 au 21/04/2025 (détails dans podcast)Salon des Peintres et Photographes Cheminots de Tarbes du 7 au 17/4, salle fêtes Hôtel de ville TARBESBiennale Sémé'Art du 12 au 27/4, Centre Culturel Léo Lagrange Séméac« Le Mois Bigourdan » du 29/3 au 30/4/2025 (organisé par Bigorr'Trad et Dahu Collectif) :- Concert « Un air, deux mômes » le 18/4 à 20h30 au Théâtre des Nouveautés« Fête de l'Histoire » les 19 et 20/4 au Château de MontanerConférences :Appel d'air « Le fonds photographique Alix » par Camille VIALA-ROUY le 17/04 à 18h, Palais des Congrès LourdesConférence-projection « Le Pari » le 15/4 à 17h30, Maison du Parc St Lary« Itinérantes d'Arcane 17 » jusqu'au 25 juinAtelier d'écriture le 16/4 à 10h Cité Mouysset« Récits de femmes, récits d'émancipation » : film « Black Box Diaries » et échanges avec Rosemonde CATHALA et Mathilde EYNARD le 17/4 à 20h au ParvisLecture autour de textes de Lydie SALVAYRE le 17/4 à 18h30 au Grand Rio à Lannemezan (Cie des Tréteaux)Saison culturelle Lourdes : « La Terre est dans le Ciel » le 17/4 à 9h15 et 10h30, Espace Robert HosseinSPECTACLESLa Gespe : « Les Vasquez » le 1/4 à 20h30 au PariPARI : « Brasseries » apéro café-théâtre par la Cie Hipotengo le 18/4 à 18h30CAC Séméac : Concert de Pâques par l'Accordéon Club de Séméac et « Muse's Band » de Gardères le 18/4 à 20h30Petit Théâtre Gare Argelès : spectacle impro le 19/4 à 20h30Théâtre Gare Cauterets : concert MUSEUM le 15/4 à 20h30 (Tribute to Muse)Maison du Savoir St Laurent de Neste : ciné-concert « Les Aventures du Prince Achmed » le 19/4 à 20h30Chapelle des Pénitents Monléon-Magnoac : concert Willo le 16/4 à 20h30Abbaye de l'Escaladieu : « Dedans-dehors » le 16/4 à 11h et 16hLac du Tech -Arrens-Marsous : concert piano le 18/4 à 17hCafé-Théâtre le Off Lannemezan : « Gaston Fébus se la raconte » le 17/4 à 15hAutres concerts dans podcastDino Expo World du 16 au 27/4, Parc des Expositions Tarbes - Hall 2Cinéma : Marathon James Bond au Ciné- Parvis le 19/4Expositions (toutes les expositions dans podcast)Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
As the wait for the next Best Picture to reveal itself continues, we discuss Xan's pick, "The Adventures Of Prince Achmed"!!! Twitter : @oscarsgold @hidarknesspod @beatlesblonde @udanax19 Facebook : facebook.com/goldstandardoscars Patreon : patreon.com/goldstandardoscars
The latest archive instalment takes Chris and Alex back to January 2020, and their first live episode recorded in front of an audience of animated fantasy fans in attendance at the Fantasy/Animation screening series in collaboration with the Cinema Museum in Kennington, London. Joining the Q&A to discuss The Adventures of Prince Achmed (Lotte Reiniger, 1926) was special guest Dr Caroline Ruddell (Brunel University London), an expert on Lotte Reiniger who has published work on the filmmaker in Fantasy/Animation: Connections Between Media, Mediums and Genres (2018), and the recent anthology The Crafty Animator: Handmade, Craft-based Animation and Cultural Value (2019). Lots here on Reiniger's signature style of 2D cutout animation and gendered discourses of craft and the politics of the handmade, alongside the film's production during a specific historical moment of upheaval in 1920s Weimar Germany. **Fantasy/Animation theme tune composed by Francisca Araujo** **As featured on Feedspot's 25 Best London Education Podcasts**
Ben Bentele, Cait Pope, David Alderdice and Daniel Be join Taya Jae on Talkin' Music to discuss their upcoming musical accompaniment to the 1926 silent film, The Adventures of Prince Achmed.
Join The Goods as they celebrate "Animonth" by jumping back to the beginning of animation. Dan talks Brian through the various early innovations that led to the art form as we know it, including brief spotlights on eight shorts highlighting technical milestones. Then, they enjoy the distinctive, shadow-puppet style of the oldest surviving animated feature in all its fairytale glory. Check out Dan's movie reviews: http://thegoodsreviews.com/ Subscribe, join the Discord, and find us on Letterboxd: http://thegoodsfilmpodcast.com/ Music credits: RetroFuture Clean by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4277-retrofuture-clean License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
In the second episode of Season 7 (Fantastical Realities) Kyle is joined by fellow podcaster Ben Thelen and fellow cinephile Derek Paranay to discuss the meticulous animation process of lead/paper cutouts and stop motion movement that gave illumination to the grand work of expressionist Lotte Reiniger in The Adventures of Prince Achmed (1926).
"This is all your fault, Jafar." In our final week of Aladdin Month, Drew and Cassie are joined by Cassie's younger brother, Jeffrey, to discuss the 2013 musical Twisted: The Untold Story of a Royal Vizier from StarKid Productions. This parody of Disney's Aladdin is inspired by Wicked and retells the tale from Jafar's point of view, reimagining him as a well-intentioned advisor to the king who is trying to fix all of the kingdom's problems, but finds himself blamed for them instead. Aladdin himself is a greedy 33-year-old orphan who seeks to take advantage of the optimistic Princess, and all this is happening while Prince Achmed - yes, that Prince Achmed - seeks revenge for being attacked by a tiger. We discuss Jim Povolo's voice, dodging copyright laws, Jasmine as a Social Justice Warrior, Dylan Saunders' extraordinary performance, the inclusion of Scheherazade, Michael Caine in The Muppet Christmas Carol, the many references and allusions to Disney movies and Disney history, and more! Join our community! View all of the benefits of joining our Patreon including the Official Of Slippers and Spindles Book Club, exclusive polls, monthly bookmarks, Zoom hangouts, and more! https://patreon.com/ofslippersandspindles Visit our our new merch store, Facebook group, Instagram, and more! https://linktr.ee/ofslippersandspindles We love to hear from you! You can reach us at ofslippersandspindles@gmail.com Music: Through The Woods by Shane Ivers - https://www.silvermansound.com
On Episode #14 of Floating Through Film, we take another break before starting our next series. The idea behind this episode is that each one of us picked a SILENT movie we wanted to talk about. The plan is to use this format for future break episodes as well, for different kinds of subjects we can think of. We start with Dany's pick, 1926's The Adventures of Prince Achmed (1:26), then Blake's pick, 1926's A Page of Madness (17:03), before concluding with Luke's pick, 1928's The Cameraman (35:43). We hope you enjoy! *We say on the episode that Keaton's film was just titled "Cameraman", but it is in fact actually titled "The Cameraman". Movies We're Reviewing Next Week: Red Beard (1965) and Titane (2021) Music: - Intro from Early Summer - Outro from (Monsieur Hulot's Holiday) Hosts: Luke Seay (https://letterboxd.com/seayluke/), Blake Tourville (https://letterboxd.com/blaketourville/), and Dany Joshuva (https://letterboxd.com/djoshuva/)
The Brothers Odom dive into the oldest surviving animated feature film: The Adventures of Prince Achmed, the 1926 masterpiece from early animation pioneer Lotte Reiniger. Find us at: Twitter: SilenceGoldPod Find Brice and his works at: Website: jbriceodom.com YouTube: jbriceodom_author Instagram: jbriceodom_author Amazon: J. Brice Odom
Será que antes do 'Army of the Dead' há alguma história importante? É isso que descobrimos esta semana com a nossa review. Neste episódio falamos de notícias, o que andamos a ver, fazemos a review de 'Army of Thieves' e terminamos com spoilers. NOTÍCIAS Erick fala sobre a chegada da Globoplay na Europa (URL); Barreto fala sobre novidades de ‘Stranger Things', sobre o filme ‘Lightyear' e sobre alguns prémios do Doclisboa. O QUE ANDAMOS A VER? Lázaro Acapulco Space Sweepers Barreto The Adventures of Prince Achmed (1926) Luis Army of the Dead Hypnotic Ghosts (US) The Chestnut Man Erick The Platform (2019) The Stronghold (2020) Para a semana vamos fazer review do filme 'Finch'. Até lá, bons filmes. ** Música Original produzida por António Capelo (https://capelo.me) Sigam-nos em: https://twitter.com/peliculapodcast https://instagram.com/peliculapodcast https://facebook.com/peliculapodcast
The Swedish psych-prog rock band Dungen has been making records since 2001, but 2016's Häxan, ("The Witch,") is their first all-instrumental record. It's full of vignettes from their original score to the 1926 silent film The Adventures of Prince Achmed (said to be the oldest surviving animated film.) Swirling and fuzzed-out walls of reverbed guitar sounds, crisp with drums, at times replete with organ, are meant to conjure and accompany animated silhouettes from the Prince's journey on a flying horse. Dungen joined us in the studio to play some of these instrumentals back in 2017.
Veronica thinks Thor was better than expected. Jon just wants it to be more like Enchanted. Recommendations: Jon - Nomadland and Another Round Veronica - The Adventures of Prince Achmed and Our Boys
Fed Square is partnering with ACMI, Melbourne's home of gaming, films and screen culture to bring you the outdoor cinema silent film series free on our big screen. But wait, there's more – each of these films is accompanied by musicians performing live to create a new, original and fantastical soundtrack. Wrap ya ears around that one. From Bluegrass thrumming to rhythmic drumming, Fed Square x ACMI are your pals for a free outdoor cinematic extravaganza this summer. On this week's episode, Phillip Brophy hosts a conversation with musician Phillip Johnston about his process of creating a new score for "The Adventures of Prince Achmed". Phillip Johnston is an American-born saxophonist and composer whose extensive work includes jazz and contemporary composition, and music for film, theatre, and a variety of ensembles. Johnston has composed scores for some classic films from the silent era including Faust (1926), Page of Madness (1926) and short films by Georges Méliès. Philip Brophy is a respected academic, filmmaker, writer and musician. He writes for Frieze, The Wire, Film Comment, and Real Time. After a series of Super 8 shorts with Tsk-Tsk-Tsk in the early ‘80s, and the experimental short feature Salt, Saliva, Sperm & Sweat in 1988, Philip Brophy made his feature directorial debut with Body Melt in 1993, funded by the Australian Film Commission and Film Victoria. He has scored and sound-designed most of his films, and designed the sound and composed music for numerous shorts. In this field Brophy specializes in Dolby Surround applications and contemporary soundscapes. SUBSCRIBE to Fed Square: https://bit.ly/3ioxRjr World-class art galleries and installations. A diverse range of food and drink. Thrilling, extraordinary events that capture the hearts of Melburnians year after year. Fed Square is anything but square. Since opening in 2002, Fed Square has seen more than 100 million visits and been named the 6th Best Public Square in the World. Frankly, we're slaying out here and it's nice to be recognised. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FedSquare/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/FedSquare Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fed.square/ What's On at Fed Square: https://fedsquare.com/
Phantom Galaxy proudly presents the first episode in a brand new series called 'The Illustrated Fan', a podcast dedicated to animation and the fine arts that inspire it. Dave Becker and Nathan Bartlebaugh, occasionally joined by Bill Van Veghel and other guests, will explore different shorts tv shows and films in the world of animation, covering all variety of styles including hand-drawn, stop motion, computer generated, and everything in between. On our first episode we are joined by Bill to discuss the short films 'The Mysterious Geographic Explorations of Jasper Morello' and 'Neko Jiro So, or Cat Soup'. Then we dive into one of the oldest existing animated films, 'The Adventures of Prince Achmed' by Lotte Reiniger. Our second feature is the trippy science fiction epic 'Fantastic Planet' by Rene Laloux. Then we share the listener messages and our first honorary voice mail from Greg Bensch. So, strap in and get ready for a trip through animation history with The Illustrated Fan! The Shorts and Features: Jasper Morello: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0VfOyomcrrs Cat Soup: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XlLBX4EIlJY The Adventures of Prince Achmed: https://vimeo.com/502591429 Video of Reiniger's animation process: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4jTOGSzBlTo Fantastic Planet: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lFAj_0_KnDU Dave's other places on the internet:Film blog: DVD Infatuation.comOn Twitter: @DVDinfatuationOn Facebook: DVDinfatuationOn Instagram: @dbjb6972On Letterboxd: @dcoshockhmpYouTube Channel: Visit W3Schools Dave Becker's Podcasts:Horror Movie PodcastLand of the Creeps horror podcast Bill Van Veghel: Other places to find Bill: https://www.facebook.com/bvanveghel https://letterboxd.com/billhorrorguy/ https://landofthecreeps.blogspot.com/ Don't miss this episode, and check us out at all the places below: www.phantomgalaxy.podbean.com Twitter: @fantomgalaxy You can also find us on Facebook at: The Phantom Galaxy Podcast You can also contact us and share your recommendations for show topics and stuff to review (books, beer, movies, whatever!) or leave us a Phantom Rant at Phantomcasts@gmail.com
The oldest surviving animated feature film is actually the third one known to have been made, and even still it is over ten years older than Walt Disney's Snow White. It also does not use traditional animation, but instead a cutout and silhouette animation style hybrid. It's also German, while the story itself is based on the 1001 Nights. So all that said... is it any fun to watch? And does something that is nearing 100 years old still hold up all these years later in like ANY regard? Listen to find out! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/howsitholdup/support
Nu ska vi titta på tecknat! 91 år skiljer veckans två filmer åt, men ändå går det att dra flertalet paraleller mellan Lotte Reinigers THE ADVENTURES OF PRINCE ACHMED och Nora Twomeys THE BREADWINNER.
This week Chip Oscarson hosts special guests to analyze the films playing at BYU’s IC during the week 25-28 March including: Part 1: Varda by Agnès (1:20), a documentary by and about...
On the April 1, 2020 Episode of /Film Daily, /Film editor-in-chief Peter Sciretta is joined by /Film managing editor Jacob Hall, weekend editor Brad Oman, senior writer Ben Pearson and writers Hoai-Tran Bui and Chris Evangelista to discuss what they’ve been up to at the Water Cooler. Opening Banter: We did it! We finally conquered the month of March! Or did it conquer us? At The Water Cooler: What we’ve been Doing:Jacob wants to know which stores and shops near you are taking the pandemic seriously. Brad participated in a Google Hangout trivia night with friends, played Pictionary with his parents through Skype. HT sat on her fire escape and got drunk singing Cats songs because there’s NOWHERE ELSE TO GO. What we’ve been Reading:Peter has been reading (or looking at) The Art of The Rise of Skywalker by Phil Szostak. Ben read The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs What we’ve been Watching:Brad, HT and Jacob watched Tiger King. Peter watched Castaway with Kitra who had never seen it, binge-watched Ozark season 3, and the two-part season 2 opening of Darkside of the Ring on Vice, and is still enjoying Westworld even though it’s inching back towards the mystery box. Brad watched The Talented Mr. Ripley, The Ringer, the second season of A.P. Bio. Jacob is binge-watching New Girl. He also watched The Gift, Black Panther, Doctor Strange, Kill Bill Vol. 1, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, and The Furies. Chris watched Little Women. Ben rewatched Portrait of a Lady on Fire and watched The Long Good Friday, The Adventures of Prince Achmed, Happy Death Day, Never Rarely Sometimes Always, and the first two episodes of AppleTV+’s Home Before Dark. Hoai-Tran watched Little Fires Everywhere, Tower of God, the new Amazon series Tales from the Loop, Space Jam, The Rocketeer, West Side Story, rewatched Mask of Zorro. What we’ve been Eating:Brad tried Mountain Dew Frost Bite and Canada Dry Bold Ginger Ale What we’ve been Playing:Brad tried the trial preview demo for Predator: Hunting Grounds Jacob is all-in and fully obsessed with The Legend of Zelda: The Breath of the Wild. He also participated in his first online game night. Other Articles Mentioned: Twitter Q&A from the producer of the Tiger King podcast All the other stuff you need to know: You can find more about all the stories we mentioned on today’s show at slashfilm.com, and linked inside the show notes. /Film Daily is published every weekday, bringing you the most exciting news from the world of movies and television as well as deeper dives into the great features from slashfilm.com. You can subscribe to /Film Daily on iTunes, Google Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify and all the popular podcast apps (RSS). Send your feedback, questions, comments and concerns to us at peter@slashfilm.com. Please leave your name and general geographic location in case we mention the e-mail on the air. Please rate and review the podcast on iTunes, tell your friends and spread the word! Thanks to Sam Hume for our logo.
In this episode we preview the IC films for 25-28 March including: Varda by Agnès (1:55) the last film written and directed by the great French filmmaker Agnès Varda before she passed...
Connor & Riley take a look at a film unlike any other: Waltz with Bashir. This one of a kind animated/documentary/autobiographical pic has both an intriguing storytelling style and animation style. Listen in as they discuss what it takes to make an animated film like this and how a movie like this would be almost impossible to make in the U.S.WARNING: Major spoilers for Waltz with Bashir & James and the Giant PeachFollow us:Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rulesoftheframe/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rulesoftheframeTwitter: https://twitter.com/RulesOfTheFrameFilms mentioned in this episode:--------------------------------Waltz with Bashir (2008) | Dir. Ari FolmanThey Shall Not Grow Old (2018) | Dir. Peter JacksonA Scanner Darkly (2006) | Dir. Richard LinklaterThe Congress (2013)| Dir. Ari FolmanThe Princess Bride (1987) | Dir. Rob ReinerThe Triplets of Belleville (2003) | Dir. Sylvain ChometThe Adventures of Prince Achmed (1926) | Dir. Lotte Reiniger, Carl KochThe Lord of the Rings Trilogy (2001-2003) | Dir. Peter JacksonBlacKkKlansman (2018) | Dir. Spike LeeToy Story 3 (2010) | Dir. Lee UnkrichBeauty and the Beast (1991) | Dir. Gary Trousdale, Kirk WiseUp (2009) | Dir. Pete DocterWALL-E (2008)| Dir. Andrew StantonKung Fu Panda (2008) | Dir. Mark Osborne, John StevensonBolt (2008) | Dir. Byron Howard, Chris WilliamsChicken Little (2005) | Dir. Mark DindalMeet the Robinsons (2007)| Dir. Stephen J. AndersonTangled (2010) | Dir. Nathan Greno, Byron HowardFrozen II (2019)| Dir. Chris Buck, Jennifer LeeToy Story 4 (2019)| Dir. Josh CooleyI Lost My Body (2019)| Dir. Jeremy ClapinThe Missing Link (2019)| Dir. Chris ButlerParaNorman (2012)| Dir. Chris Butler, Sam FellCoraline (2009) | Dir. Henry SelickBoxtrolls (2014) | Dir. Graham Annable, Anthony StacchiKubo and the Two Strings (2016) | Dir. Travis KnightJames and the Giant Peach (1996) } Dir. Henry Selick
Episode 38 comes to you live from the Cinema Museum in Kennington, London, as Chris and Alex take to the stage to discuss the craft and creativity of silhouette animated feature The Adventures of Prince Achmed (Lotte Reiniger, 1926). Recorded in front of a lively audience of animated fantasy fans back in October 2019, the conversation featured very special guest Caroline Ruddell (Programme Lead and Senior Lecturer in Film and Television at Brunel University London), an expert on Reiniger who has published work on the filmmaker in Fantasy/Animation: Connections Between Media, Mediums and Genres (2018), and the recent anthology The Crafty Animator: Handmade, Craft-based Animation and Cultural Value (2019), of which she is also the collection’s co-editor. Listen as they trace The Adventures of Prince Achmed through a multitude of critical and cultural contexts, including Reiniger’s signature style of 2D cutout animation; gendered discourses of craft and the politics of the handmade; Reiniger’s own ‘forgotten’ status and position at the margins of animated film history; the film’s production during a specific historical moment of upheaval in 1920s Weimar Germany; and how The Adventures of Prince Achmed sits within the traditions of abstract cinema, avant-garde animation, German Expressionism and fantasy storytelling.
Conrado and Rachel both love animation so they were thrilled to talk about the oldest existing animated film, 'The Adventures of Prince Achmed' by animator Lotte Reiniger from 1926 Please follow us on itunes and leave you ratings and reviews https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-criterion-project/id1479953904 For Rachel's Obscure Animation review of 'The Adventures of Prince Achmed' https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oQit4qs5RUY For Rachel's blog review of 'The Adventures of Prince Achmed' https://rachelsreviews.net/2015/06/21/adventures-of-prince-achmed-review/ Follow us on anchor https://anchor.fm/criterionproject Please follow our twitter at https://twitter.com/criterionpod Our intro is written by Michael Lloret. Please use him for all your music needs https://www.michael-lloret.com/ Listen to Rachel's Reviews on Itunes https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/rachels-reviews/id1278536301?mt=2 Follow Conrado's blog cocohitsny.wordpress.com/ Follow Conrado on twitter @CocoHitsNewYork Follow Rache's blog at rachelsreviews.net Follow Rachel on twitter twitter.com/rachel_reviews Follow Rachel on facebook www.facebook.com/smilingldsgirlreviews Listen to Hallmarkies Podcast at https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/hallmarkies-podcast/id1296728288 --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/criterionproject/support
Heigh-ho! It's off through history we go! In the first episode of Retroscoping, Alexa and Nathan take a look at Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. They discuss other contenders for "first animated film," the original fairy tale, and break down the delights this film still offers more than 80 years after it's premiere. So whether you're new school or old school -- navigate to Disney+, crack open your DVD collection, or cue up the VCR and get watching the classic masterpiece that changed the world of animation forever after. MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE "The Apostle" by Quirino Cristiani "The Adventures of Prince Achmed" by Lotte Reiniger "The Old Mill" Disney short "Walt Disney Introduces the Multiplane Camera" The Hobbit House in Culver City
The P - no, wait. The ach....nah. The Adventures of A-dammit. Achmed THE PRINCE IT IS. Next week - a double episode of Pink Floyd's The Wall and Svankmajer's Alice. Just have that Home Alone reboot for Disney+ in your head and see if your mind syncs with ours on this one. RECOMMENDATIONS: -Giant Days - John Allison (https://www.boom-studios.com/series/giant-days/) -Fire Emblem: Three Houses (https://fireemblem.nintendo.com/three-houses/) -The Kingdom of Dreams and Madness (https://vapld.kanopy.com/video/kingdom-dreams-and-madness)
Musician Jason Smeltzer, Artistic Director for a special film event at the Olde Brick Theatre, 126 W. Market Street (Rear) in Scranton, on Sunday, August 18, 2019 at 7:00 pm. There will be a screening of the classic 1926 animated silent film, "The Adventures of Prince Achmed" with original musical accompaniment, featuring narrator Jason Smeltzer on santoor, theremin and gong, with an ensemble of regional performers. On Facebook, Diva-Theater
Cameron and Chad take a look at some of Batman's newest...and most unlikely...new friends.
Ahead of the release of Walt Disney’s new live-action Aladdin, we discuss the Bollywood version alongside Disney’s own animated Hindi-language fantasy, Arjun: The Warrior Prince. Show Notes: * Thank you Anshita Makwana! 10 BiFL points! * Guy Ritchie’s [Aladdin](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aladdin_(2019_film)) * Disney loves [Alan Tudyk](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Tudyk) * [Comparisons to Bollywood](https://twitter.com/search?q=aladdin%20bollywood&src=typd) & [Naomi Scott in Entertainment Weekly](https://ew.com/movies/2019/04/27/aladdin-jasmine-new-wardrobe/) * Fancasting Disney with Matt * [Will Smith will be in Student of The Year 2](https://www.hindustantimes.com/bollywood/will-smith-to-make-a-cameo-in-student-of-the-year-2-here-s-what-karan-johar-has-said/story-4cAz32i61h8Af9rfEAueKN.html) * [One Thousand and One Nights](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One_Thousand_and_One_Nights) * “[Aladdin](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aladdin)” * Brief digression on [Aladdin the animated series](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aladdin_(animated_TV_series)) and [Mozenrath](https://villains.fandom.com/wiki/Mozenrath) * [The Adventures of Prince Achmed](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Adventures_of_Prince_Achmed) and [The Thief of Bagdad (1940)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Thief_of_Bagdad_(1940_film)) * [Aladin](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aladin_(film)) * [Sahil Khan](https://isahilkhan.com/assets/images/39310-still-scene-from-the-movie-aladin-1400x1426-27.jpg), India’s Rob Lowe? * [Ringmaster and his dark circus](https://static-koimoi.akamaized.net/wp-content/new-galleries/2011/04/Sanjay-Dutt-Hot-Aladin-Movie-Hot-Images-Stills-Gallery-Pictures-Photos.jpg) * Aladin’s birthday party: “[Tak Dhina Din](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=95FKrShPXW4&feature=youtu.be)” * Genius grants Aloo’s first wish: “[O Re Saawariya](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e_s8pcAnDVY&feature=youtu.be)” * Genius sings for Aladin, Cyrano style: “[You May Be](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eSuuEmAUbz8&feature=youtu.be)” * The school’s costume party: “[Bachke O Bachke](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h8zcg8rR3kQ&feature=youtu.be)” * [Not enough parkour](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/fd/e9/29/fde92914c79e8a89e07b42434d74ab72.jpg?fbclid=IwAR3RWn12giJfzk4LsFCogqWevVnkgXm9IerBApiysgCLmwcJSys-5Zx9WgA) * [Ratna Pathak](https://stat1.bollywoodhungama.in/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/50551559.jpg) (INTERVAL ( “[Genie Rap](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LnYR6LrJlf8&feature=youtu.be)” from Aladin) * Disney’s most violent movie? * [Walt Disney India](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Walt_Disney_Company_India) * [Arjun: The Warrior Prince](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arjun:_The_Warrior_Prince) * [El Capitan Theatre](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Capitan_Theatre) * The [Mahabharata](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahabharata) * Grant Morrison’s [18 Days](https://www.amazon.ca/Grant-Morrisons-18-Days-Morrison/dp/1606901745) * Too simple and yet too complicated * [Indian mythological television series](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Indian_mythological_television_series) * Animated Rajinikanth: [Kochadaiiyaan](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kochadaiiyaan#Cast) * Please tell us about the best animated films from India! * “[Sanjay’s Super Team](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanjay%27s_Super_Team)” and [Sita Sings the Blues](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sita_Sings_the_Blues) * We are out of our depth and we know it NEXT TIME: Manish Mathur drops by to school us on Yash Chopra Bollywood is For Lovers is a member of the [Alberta Podcast Network](https://www.albertapodcastnetwork.com) powered by [ATB](https://www.atb.com/listen/Pages/default.aspx). Check out [The Well Endowed Podcast](https://www.thewellendowedpodcast.com...
Genius or jerk? In this episode we give a few anecdotes from the work and business practices of seminal Walt Disney that only begin to touch on this complicated question. There's a reason why Walt holds a record for the most Academy Awards, and why Mickey Mouse is one of the most globally recognized figures. We talk about Walt Disney the man's vision and insane attention to detail, and Walt Disney the company's theme parks and copyright practices. • It all started with Snow White, which was not only the first full-length cel animated feature film, it was also the first Disney animated feature film. So yeah, Soo Zee was right. Technically, it's the first of the 15 official "Walt Disney Classics" home videos. • Before Snow White, Lotte Reiniger had already made a full-length animated feature called The Adventures of Prince Achmed. Disney didn't just know about it, he studied it, and even adopted her pioneering multi-plane camera setup. He then of course patented it https://patents.google.com/patent/US2201689A/en Her work is incredible. Watch it if you have some time, and try to remember her first feature came out a full decade before Disney's first did. • Disney's pre-Mickey character's full name was Oswald the Lucky Rabbit. Universal snatched the rights for Oswald. Mickey Mouse was intended to be a replacement character for Disney. • An old behind-the-scenes look at the cel animation for Snow White https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OebUzEhSLBI • Leigh said Toy Story was the first 3D animation film. To be more specific, Toy Story was the first feature-length film to be entirely computer-animated. • Dustin Curtis originally broke down the amazing speaker work at Disney World in an article titled "How Mr. Q Manufactured Emotion," but the article has since been removed from his site. You can read a snippet here https://boingboing.net/2009/11/08/how-the-ambient-soun.html Ramit Sethi shares even more details from Disney World https://growthlab.com/behind-scenes-disney-world-w-ramit-sethi • Speaking of Disney World, Max Krieger has a great take on why the 1994 version of Tomorrowland is the greatest https://twitter.com/maxkriegervg/status/951497989381656576 • Here's a quick little primer on Disney's copyright law practices from Adam Ruins Everything https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SiEXgpp37No • It's not just me that's not sure this is a great practice for cultural development! There are tons of angry people who are clearly rankled by Disney's copyright policies https://twitter.com/eevee/status/1064327801908555776?s=20 • The Lion King bears some unmistakable resemblances to Kimba the White Lion. Here's a side-by-side comparison of the two https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vHps2iC8W3o • The copyright infringement case about murals in schools was actually for Mickey, Minnie, and Goofy and not Snow White. https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/daycare-center-murals/ • In case you're curious, here's an article about Zara stealing indie pin designers' work https://jezebel.com/zara-appears-to-have-stolen-over-40-pin-and-patch-desig-1784271292
La fama del sassofonista Phillip Johnston, uno dei protagonista della nuova scena di avanguardia newyorkese emersa negli anni ottanta, è legata soprattutto al brillante gruppo Microscopic Septet di cui è stato co-fondatore (all'inizio ne ha fatto parte anche John Zorn). Nel 2005 Johnston si è trasferito a Sidney, dove lavora con diversi dei migliori musicisti australiani. Con alcuni di loro ha dato vita a Phillip Johnston and the Coolerators, di cui Diggin' Bones è l'album di esordio. Johnston ha una lunga esperienza come autore di musica da film e di musiche per film muti (e sul tema dei film muti ha scrito anche saggi ed è intervenuto a convegni). The Adventures of Prince Achmed è una brillante e godibilissima colonna sonora realizzata per dare una veste musicale contemporanea (quella originale era di carattere sinfonico) al film dallo stesso titolo, un pionieristico esempio di cinema di animazione creato nel 1926 in Germania dalla regista Lotte Reiniger con una tecnica che si rifaceva a quella delle ombre cinesi.
La fama del sassofonista Phillip Johnston, uno dei protagonista della nuova scena di avanguardia newyorkese emersa negli anni ottanta, è legata soprattutto al brillante gruppo Microscopic Septet di cui è stato co-fondatore (all'inizio ne ha fatto parte anche John Zorn). Nel 2005 Johnston si è trasferito a Sidney, dove lavora con diversi dei migliori musicisti australiani. Con alcuni di loro ha dato vita a Phillip Johnston and the Coolerators, di cui Diggin' Bones è l'album di esordio. Johnston ha una lunga esperienza come autore di musica da film e di musiche per film muti (e sul tema dei film muti ha scrito anche saggi ed è intervenuto a convegni). The Adventures of Prince Achmed è una brillante e godibilissima colonna sonora realizzata per dare una veste musicale contemporanea (quella originale era di carattere sinfonico) al film dallo stesso titolo, un pionieristico esempio di cinema di animazione creato nel 1926 in Germania dalla regista Lotte Reiniger con una tecnica che si rifaceva a quella delle ombre cinesi.
La fama del sassofonista Phillip Johnston, uno dei protagonista della nuova scena di avanguardia newyorkese emersa negli anni ottanta, è legata soprattutto al brillante gruppo Microscopic Septet di cui è stato co-fondatore (all'inizio ne ha fatto parte anche John Zorn). Nel 2005 Johnston si è trasferito a Sidney, dove lavora con diversi dei migliori musicisti australiani. Con alcuni di loro ha dato vita a Phillip Johnston and the Coolerators, di cui Diggin' Bones è l'album di esordio. Johnston ha una lunga esperienza come autore di musica da film e di musiche per film muti (e sul tema dei film muti ha scrito anche saggi ed è intervenuto a convegni). The Adventures of Prince Achmed è una brillante e godibilissima colonna sonora realizzata per dare una veste musicale contemporanea (quella originale era di carattere sinfonico) al film dallo stesso titolo, un pionieristico esempio di cinema di animazione creato nel 1926 in Germania dalla regista Lotte Reiniger con una tecnica che si rifaceva a quella delle ombre cinesi.
The Dead Ladies Show is a series of entertaining and inspiring talks about women who achieved amazing things against all odds, presented live in Berlin. This podcast is based on that series. Because women's history is everyone's history. In this episode, DLS co-founders Katy Derbyshire and Florian Duijsens take over for your regular host Susan Stone, so she can tell you all about Lotte Reiniger. As a girl in Berlin, Lotte started cutting intricate paper silhouettes; her talent and dedication led her to become a pioneer of animation and film starting at a very young age. Her 1926 film The Adventures of Prince Achmed is the first full-length feature animated film — take that Walt Disney! Disney claimed the honor for his 1937 Snow White, and also patented one of Lotte's inventions, but she persevered to become a resepcted favorite who has inspired generations. Her signature style can be seen in everything from Bjork videos to Harry Potter films. Plus, we reveal some exciting DLS news, and Susan gives a shout-out to the ShoutOut Live! Radical Women podcast festival and some of the rad women she met there. See clips and pix of Lotte's work at: deadladiesshow.com/2018/07/25/podcast-11-lotte-reiniger Follow us on social media @deadladiesshow and please share, rate, and review the show as it helps others to find our feminist women's history podcast The Dead Ladies Show was founded by Florian Duijsens and Katy Derbyshire. The podcast is created, produced, edited, and presented by Susan Stone. We now have a Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/deadladiesshowpodcast
Novelist, critic and cultural historian Marina Werner and Peter Bloom (Film and Media Studies, UCSB) engage Lotte Reiniger’s The Adventures of Prince Achmed (1926) from several angles. They discuss the film’s astounding technical craft, Reiniger’s addition of feminist perspectives to the narrative, and the film’s relation to both the Arabian classic 1001 Nights and the French translation/adaptation of that work. Werner and Bloom discuss Reiniger’s relationship to the source material and provide rich historical details about early-twentieth century relations between Europe and what was then called “the Orient.” Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 33756]
Novelist, critic and cultural historian Marina Werner and Peter Bloom (Film and Media Studies, UCSB) engage Lotte Reiniger’s The Adventures of Prince Achmed (1926) from several angles. They discuss the film’s astounding technical craft, Reiniger’s addition of feminist perspectives to the narrative, and the film’s relation to both the Arabian classic 1001 Nights and the French translation/adaptation of that work. Werner and Bloom discuss Reiniger’s relationship to the source material and provide rich historical details about early-twentieth century relations between Europe and what was then called “the Orient.” Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 33756]
Novelist, critic and cultural historian Marina Werner and Peter Bloom (Film and Media Studies, UCSB) engage Lotte Reiniger’s The Adventures of Prince Achmed (1926) from several angles. They discuss the film’s astounding technical craft, Reiniger’s addition of feminist perspectives to the narrative, and the film’s relation to both the Arabian classic 1001 Nights and the French translation/adaptation of that work. Werner and Bloom discuss Reiniger’s relationship to the source material and provide rich historical details about early-twentieth century relations between Europe and what was then called “the Orient.” Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 33756]
Novelist, critic and cultural historian Marina Werner and Peter Bloom (Film and Media Studies, UCSB) engage Lotte Reiniger’s The Adventures of Prince Achmed (1926) from several angles. They discuss the film’s astounding technical craft, Reiniger’s addition of feminist perspectives to the narrative, and the film’s relation to both the Arabian classic 1001 Nights and the French translation/adaptation of that work. Werner and Bloom discuss Reiniger’s relationship to the source material and provide rich historical details about early-twentieth century relations between Europe and what was then called “the Orient.” Series: "Carsey-Wolf Center" [Humanities] [Show ID: 33756]
Etihad Stadium will be Marvel Stadium but, more importantly, Dave amd Tom talk a lot of Han Solo stuff (in non-spoiler and spoiler sections). Also: The Rachel Divide, Gringo: The Dangerous Life of John McAfee, Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale, The Edge of the World, The Lion Has Wings, The Spy in Black, Contraband, The Adventures of Prince Achmed, En Chambre En Ville.
To celebrate Into Film's Women in Animation film screenings taking place from 5 - 9 March 2018 across the UK, we discuss the oldest surviving animated film in the world. Created by director Lotte Reiniger in 1926, this cut out animation is a magical fantasy adventure which will delight young children everywhere and inspire them to use this simple storytelling technique to make their own animations. Film: https://www.intofilm.org/films/4433 Cut Out Animation Film List https://www.intofilm.org/films/filmlist/92 Lotte Reiniger https://www.bbc.com/ideas/videos/the-animation-genius-youve-probably-never-heard-of/p05t9bsn?playlist=unsung-heroines Women in Animation free film screenings https://www.intofilm.org/news-and-views/articles/spring-screenings-2018 International Women’s Day (8 March 2018) https://www.intofilm.org/news-and-views/articles/spring-screenings-2018 Anim18 https://twitter.com/anim18uk?lang=en-gb
In which we tell that OTHER story besides Aladdin. In this animation Podcast, Tiffany, Hope and Ben discuss the Adventures of Prince Achmed, a classic animated film and the oldest surviving animated film (no, it's not Snow White)! YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz1LRxF57uRMiO8Y0YKY9IA PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/couchblab
In GBA 93 we get better acquainted with Alastair. He talks about putting on shows, creativity, filmmaking, The Adventures of Prince Achmed, Doctor Who, activism, hugging and more. This episode was recorded at the Hackney Attic (where he works), just before the last Spark London Hackney Open Mic of 2012 (which I run.) The episode will also feature two Spark London true stories recorded at the attic, both touching on sibling relationships. Al told his story at the first ever Spark Hackney Night when the theme was "Back to School". I told my story on the evening after we recorded the episode when the theme was "Family". The next Hackney Open Mic and first Spark London event of 2013 is on Monday 14th January: http://www.picturehouses.co.uk/cinema/Hackney_Picturehouse/film/Spark_London_Story_Telling_Theme_Open_Heart/ http://sparklondon.com/ We also mention the upcoming Stand Up Tragedy which is also at the Hackney Attic on Friday 18th January: http://www.standuptragedy.co.uk/ http://www.standuptragedy.co.uk/show-1-18th-january-2013/ http://www.picturehouses.co.uk/cinema/Hackney_Picturehouse/film/Stand_Up_Tragedy/ https://www.facebook.com/events/232685033529087/ Alastair plugs: The Hackney Attic: http://www.picturehouses.co.uk/cinema/Hackney_Picturehouse/Attic/ The Hackney Picture House: http://www.picturehouses.co.uk/cinema/Hackney_Picturehouse/ Autumn Shift: http://autumnshift.co.uk/ http://www.picturehouses.co.uk/cinema/Hackney_Picturehouse/film/Autumn_Sessions_Poetry_Special/ TeaFuelled: http://www.teafuelled.co.uk/ Once Upon A Console: http://www.picturehouses.co.uk/cinema/Hackney_Picturehouse/film/Once_Upon_A_Console_Marvel_Vs_Capcom/ Filmphonics: http://www.picturehouses.co.uk/cinema/Hackney_Picturehouse/film/Filmphonics_The_General_Live_Score_By_Costas_Fotopoulos/ Mentioned: The Adventures of Prince Achmed: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Adventures_of_Prince_Achmed The Story of the Best Movie Ever Told (Hitler 2): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=enKnQ8AoBWI Superbard: http://www.superbard.co.uk/ http://soundcloud.com/gettingbetteracquainted/gba-70-superbard BBC Question Time Tweetalong: http://www.picturehouses.co.uk/cinema/Hackney_Picturehouse/film/Bbc_Question_Time_Tweetalong/ Unfortunatalie: http://twitter.com/unfortunatalie http://nothingbutawordbag.wordpress.com/ Everyday Sexism: http://twitter.com/EverydaySexism http://www.everydaysexism.com/ MA'AM: http://menagainstassholesandmisogyny.tumblr.com/ http://menagainstassholesandmisogyny.tumblr.com/post/36955802825/dave-pickering-is-a-maam You can hear Getting Better Acquainted on Stitcher SmartRadio, Stitcher allows you to listen to your favourite shows directly from your iPhone, Android Phone, Kindle Fire and beyond. On-demand and on the go! Don’t have Stitcher? Download it for free today at http://www.stitcher.com or in the app stores. Help more people get better acquainted. If you like what you hear why not write an iTunes review? Follow @GBApodcast on Twitter. Like Getting Better Acquainted on facebook. Tell your friends. Spread the word!