Amazing compilation of works! Can't wait for a video of argentinian animation.
@HashbrownMashupКүн бұрын
MY POWER IS MAXIDOG
@usefulaccount1835Күн бұрын
Thanks for this, I think you forgot to mention adolf born since he made alot of cartoons during this era. You can discuss him again when you make another video of this one. Such as the zofka cartoon and his mach and sebestova cartoon
@CrisisMoon7Күн бұрын
May 2 24 Thursdays
@quadzxyКүн бұрын
might watch some of these
@husky11191993Күн бұрын
Fantastic Planet being a French-Czechoslovak collaboration is perfect because the novel it is based on was written by a French author and both the novel and film took inspiration from the Prague Spring!
@littlereubyКүн бұрын
I love this channel... Always discovering new filmmakers
@kubricklynchКүн бұрын
Thank you!!
@castrot2701Күн бұрын
La Planète sauvage is an extremely disturbing film in my eyes. Odd and off putting would be an understatement for this film.
@NickAndriadzeКүн бұрын
I *LOVE* your breakdown/guide videos about the wonderful world of Soviet (And eastern European in general) animation a lot, it's such an underappreciated side of the medium of Animation, as most of the viewing world is apparently only aware about American and Japanese animated media, as if other countries have never made any... On this topic, I would love to see a similar video about Georgian animation. I am from Georgia myself and I have to say, despite there not being a single Georgian animated feature film, most, if not all of the short-length films that have come out of the country are amazing. It might be a personal bias and everything, but they're genuinely really good. All of the films have something to say, they're funny, charming as all hell and have that wonderfully phsychedellic wacky imagery that Soviet animation is known for. Too bad that even though they can be found on KZbin, most of them don't have any subtitles available.....
@irayetzinhernandez8744Күн бұрын
Hungary my forever love and I am Mexican
@THICCTHICCTHICCКүн бұрын
Honestly crazy how much of a powerhouse Czechoslovakia was in cinema.
@dojee8993Күн бұрын
Hey thanks! Something like this is actually exactly what I've been looking for lately:)
@chrisbtender5992Күн бұрын
I don't comment often but I get a lot of value out of these videos so I'm gonna start making pointless comments like this to up your engagement
@kubricklynchКүн бұрын
Haha thank you!
@holydissolution85Күн бұрын
A Je To !!!!!!! My childhood !!!!
@jaiiskii2262Күн бұрын
🍿🎞️ Thanks !
@DonnyKirkMusicКүн бұрын
There is actually a Japanese Blu-ray release of many of his works but it was limited-edition and is highly sought after right now...really sad that it was such a limited release. Also have no idea if they come with Eng subs. But I have the Amazon listing if you want to see.
@GaditooКүн бұрын
Great video! Much of the information was pretty interesting! I'll have to give it a try to one of those besides Fantastic Planet since I already watched it.
@michelhvКүн бұрын
Growing up in Canada but with only access to public TV, I realize in my adult time how much of the materials I watched came from beyond the Iron Curtain. Jiri Trnka was a staple, there would be weird wordless shorts between shows, and every Saturday I would watch Colargol the bear! The NFB and the CBC were eminently multicultural organizations for the time, and were hiring a lot of refugees and immigrants. It would be interesting for you to delve into experimental work at the NFB, which was always at the forefront of animation and shorts. Start with Arthur Lipsett, he came from a Russian Jewish family and George Lucas got the idea of The Force from his movie 21-87.
@watermelon5521Күн бұрын
A je to! Is very entertaining, i recommend it to everyone who wants something silly.
@insetoaquaticoКүн бұрын
amazing video!! love Viktor Kubal's films!
@WendizКүн бұрын
Thank you as always for these amazing videos! They're great for spreading the love of animation to others! The "Where the Wild Things Are" adaptation is very nostalgic to me, it really felt like the book itself coming to life, I loved it a lot as a kid.
@axelpalfy7597Күн бұрын
hello, how do you like Czechoslovak art? I see that you summarized it nicely:-)) as a child I saw the Zemen film when they scare the dinosaurs with pots:-) it stayed in my head but only now I found out what it was, thank you:-))
@avestavsdanteКүн бұрын
Pat & Mat was a hit show in Iran!!!
@JC-yr5byКүн бұрын
Thank you so much❤ This came in perfect time. Id been appreciating Czech cinema for a while but never got into the for real
@justhere4637Күн бұрын
I remember the center one in the thumbnail was the subject of a youtube video. It was lost media for years until it was found.
@bornana269Күн бұрын
Pat i Mat mentioned 🗣️🗣️🔥🔥🇵🇱🇵🇱 (I know it’s not polish but I grew up watching it in Poland xD)
@ScentedXylitolКүн бұрын
Fantastic planet is such a phenomenal film
@rachel_sjКүн бұрын
Fantastic Planet (La Planete Sauvage) is one of my favorite movies ever made! It’s a shame so few people know about it and the work of its director, Rene Laloux…
@Noname-ok4tfКүн бұрын
It’s my favorite movie ever! There’s no more beautiful movie in my eyes.
@nathangibbons9492Күн бұрын
People are justified in their appreciation for Japanese animation, but I think that Czech animation is critically underrated. I used to watch a lot of Jiri Trnka and even Fantastic Planet when I was a teenager, without realizing they were made in Czechoslovakia
@TheLugiaSongКүн бұрын
Honestly it's the case for many Eastern European country's animation, I suppose because most of it are shorts and there's not a lot of serial stuff... But for most of it to be so unknown is a real shame.
@kubricklynchКүн бұрын
If you'd like to support the channel you can donate here: Venmo @Evan-Chester Or www.paypal.me/EvanChester The invite code for my discord server is below: discord.gg/3BaCu3PM
@mune47855 күн бұрын
Hi, love your videos, will there ever be a guide to Polish cinema?
@kubricklynch5 күн бұрын
I’m definitely doing a Polish animation video soon, and I’d love to do more on Polish cinema in general!
@bendeguzszabo25836 күн бұрын
I think the Tales of Pompom; Hungarian folk tales; and The Mézga family should have been included too, but over all great video😁
@kubricklynch6 күн бұрын
Thanks, I didn’t include those but I was just focusing on film, not TV
@morganpaulree5578 күн бұрын
russian anime used to look like south park xd
@chrishouseholder19519 күн бұрын
I love art film I make a film called midnight to 7am and it a 6 and half hour movie what a tine to make anything you want
@CLSP-ix6tc9 күн бұрын
Ok so guys I've been looking for one special cartoon and I still cannot find it.. Maybe someone can help,It is Soviet Union cartoon about poor man that used to carry water and give it to people for free and once he saved the city's main enemy and he gave him a box with paper and secret words and he found a cave full of gold.. That's all I remember please is someone know the name of the cartoon or a story tell me.
@TheOfficialChainge9 күн бұрын
What about cinema panettone?
@Pontius8889 күн бұрын
The Apu trilogy by Satyajit Ray is a masterpiece.
@mihajlopetkovic38811 күн бұрын
I'm from Serbia but I only knew Balthazar from this list. I'm going to watch some of these movies for sure
@balbutik186111 күн бұрын
I need more! Would love to see Japan, Zahreb, Britain, Poland even! Great work :)
@kubricklynch11 күн бұрын
Thanks! I did Hungary and Yugoslavia videos, working on Czech now