Oscar-nominated list of shorts showcases old, new cartooning methods

Posted: 8:31am on Feb 9, 2012; Modified: 8:57am on Feb 9, 2012

la luna. Photo by Pixar — © Disney/Pixar. All Rights Reserved. Titles: La Luna La Luna

  • MOVIE REVIEW

    2012 Oscar-Nominated Short Films: Animation

    4 stars out of 5

    No MPAA rating. Shorts International/Magnolia Pictures. 80 min. Kentucky.

    Schedule: The Kentucky Theatre will show the Oscar-nominated shorts on this schedule. Read the reviews of the other collections at LexGo.com.

    ■ Documentary: 5 p.m. Feb. 10-12, 15; 9:40 p.m. Feb. 13.

    ■ Animated: 7:40 p.m. Feb. 10, 15; 3 and 7:40 p.m. Feb. 11, 12; 9:45 p.m. Feb. 16.

    ■ Live action: 9:45 p.m. Feb. 10; 1 and 9:45 p.m. Feb. 11, 12; 9:45 p.m. Feb. 15.

The moon is made of twinkling gold stars — and you can reach it by climbing a ladder.

Old books soar aloft like flocks of birds — and they settle on people's shoulders, perching with spindly legs.

A chicken is right at home walking down a city sidewalk — and it seems able to survive a zombie apocalypse, too.

An Englishman heads to the wide plains of early 20th-century Alberta to start a ranch — but he starts daydreaming instead.

And the Sunday routines of a small-town family include church and a big meal — and bracing for the train that shakes the house when it trundles by.

Magic, whimsy, a fair amount of darkness (loneliness, aging, death, zombie apocalypses) and a wonderful mix of old-school cartooning and digital animation are on tap as the five 2012 Academy Award nominees for animated shorts are available for viewing on the big screen.

They will screen at The Kentucky Theater in Lexington starting Friday as part of a rotating package of Oscar-nominated shorts, which includes separate shows of the live-action and documentary nominees. (Read the reviews for live-action and documentary at LexGo.com.)

Pixar might have broken its feature nominations streak this year — its 2011 release, Cars 2, is the first of its titles not to land in the best animated feature category — but La Luna, Enrico Casaroasa's dreamy short, shows the CG studio in fine form. Accompanied by his father and grandfather, a boy goes out to sea, then climbs a ladder from his boat to the moon. Pixar's Casaroasa, who grew up in the port city of Genoa, Italy, was inspired by an Italo Calvino story and by the work of Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki. (Who isn't?)

La Luna is delightful, even as it forgoes the crazy sight gags that typically define Pixar work, but the real standout in this strong lineup of nominees is The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore. The work of children's book artist/author William Joyce and animator Brandon Oldenburg, this 15-minute gem borrows from The Wizard of Oz, from Buster Keaton (its title character is Keatonesque, to say the least) and from old nursery rhymes (Humpty Dumpty is featured prominently). But along with its gentle surrealist tone, there's a note of melancholy, and of danger. Made in Louisiana, Morris Lessmore summons up memories of the Hurricane Katrina disaster, too.

Interestingly, just as many of this year's nominated features (The Artist, Hugo, Midnight in Paris) hark back to old times and old cinema, so too do these animated shorts: A Morning Stroll (the one with the chicken) uses title cards and iris effects; A Comet (the Brit out west) incorporates archival footage.

In addition to the five Oscar- nominated shorts, the program includes four other new animated titles. A great opportunity not only to hone your Oscar pool chops but to see some of the finest animation out there.

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