Go to piavpn.com/Doodley to get 83% off Private Internet Access with 4 months free!
@amateurvacuum6 ай бұрын
No
@animation_and_games236 ай бұрын
★ make mostly animation, 3d and 2d and shortly games ★
@jacsonf13416 ай бұрын
Far stretch, but the animation of titanfall 1 and titanfall 2, campaign and multiplay Feel real, you can tell the devs then, cared
@sawyer-m6 ай бұрын
You were 7 days late with this one
@idoitforthebreastmilk6 ай бұрын
Absolute thanks for not showing scary stuff, my cats were watching on my side.
@Mayyde6 ай бұрын
canadian animator here, thank you for speaking about our vibrant culture in animation. canadian animation is great
@Zangeiti6 ай бұрын
CANADIAN ANIMATORS RISE UPP
@Sgt.Crawler11166 ай бұрын
Hello, just dropping by to ask a question. My GF dreams of becoming an animator and Canada is a country we think about migrating to if she ever breaks into the industry. Do you know how the pay is there? I hear it's cheaper than in the US but is it enough to make a living if you get a job at a studio?
@spibow6 ай бұрын
@@Sgt.Crawler1116 You're likely to be living in Vancouver which is quite an expensive city, but you won't have to pay exorbitant healthcare costs for basics (though dental and eyesight isn't covered). I've known several people however who have made a modest living doing animation work, and entry pay is usually decent if you get signed on with a good studio. If she builds up a good portfolio, there's a good chance that she'll get a job that can support herself.
@KwehShiro6 ай бұрын
@@Sgt.Crawler1116 depends where you work, but animation/gaming industry right now is pure chaos, at least in east canada but i think its global in the world right now. my friend who's an animator and went to university for further animation education hates her studio, they pay everyone like shit (gaming/animation industries aren't unionise btw here) and she can't leave because everyone in the industry is getting layed off. So there is no job because companies are cutting off jobs, and everyone who worked in those industries have to find a job unrelated to their profession to keep living.
@eudaemonicc6 ай бұрын
@@KwehShiroI feel like this is common for a lot of the film industry in Canada right now. :/ I went to film school & hardly any of us got a job in our fields, or from my experience & other ppl, it’s often an entry level like a production assistant etc. Canada is kind of a mess for finding any decent job at the moment 😅🥲
@adamisme59396 ай бұрын
Hilda (the *phenomenally* good cartoon aired on Netflix) was one of the huge wins for Canadian art being properly appreciated on a wider scale. Also, it isn't even just animation, Canada facilitates the filming of hundreds of American movies and TV shows every year. Any time you see a show that's not a documentary with scenes set in a "lush, unspoiled wilderness", it was probably filmed somewhere around Vancouver, like Whistler or Squamish.
@wingblitz22166 ай бұрын
Hilda FTW
@headwreak17686 ай бұрын
Honestly the most underrated show i've ever seen, worth a watch too!
@clowneryjohnson52086 ай бұрын
The trees that line my neighbourhood streets are so pretty for the first couple weeks of fall it feels like every hallmark movie
@youssefbencheikh86376 ай бұрын
I am a simple man. I see Hilda mentioned, I like comment
@headwreak17686 ай бұрын
@@youssefbencheikh8637 You are based indeed-
@alexarose8326 ай бұрын
I had a mini heart attack when doodley said “if you’re looking at this footage and thinking ‘wow, those eyes look real’. That’s because they are.” Because I thought that meant they put actual human eyes into a puppet. But actually, amazing video, I should really check out these Canadian short films!
@johannel51926 ай бұрын
I thought he was gonna say they put cow eyes or smth in it
@StoryTeller7966 ай бұрын
I thought to myself "Oh, so they like took out some like spare realistic human eyes? Wait, but won't those eventually decay? Did they put the eyes in something like a jar so that they could be preserved for this very film?" And then when I heard they were edited in I thought "Oh... okay then. That makes sense."
@H.A.Sproductions6 ай бұрын
i thought the same thing
@pokeglict01286 ай бұрын
No, yea yea. The total exact thing over here
@lianoid9185 ай бұрын
Yeah, I thought they were just super dedicated to the craft, lol. 😅
@nfb6 ай бұрын
Great video, Doodley! Thanks for sharing your appreciation for our animated content and showcasing the importance of publicly funded art. 🥰 We hope your fans and followers enjoy our films and discover new gems in our ever-growing collection!
@Ithoughtthiswasamerica6 ай бұрын
You guys are the legends of my childhood, “The Cat Came Back” and “Blackfly” were universal hits with everyone at my school.
@doodley3d6 ай бұрын
Hey, thanks so much!! I wasn't expecting a comment, glad you liked it!
@nmm_016 ай бұрын
it's real
@nfb6 ай бұрын
@@doodley3d It's the least we could do! Keep up the amazing work.
@nfb6 ай бұрын
Aw shucks, @@Ithoughtthiswasamerica! We're happy to hear it.
@uninvincibleete6 ай бұрын
Omg THANK you for this. I'm from the US but I work as an animator in Canada (both film and tv), and it can be so frustrating hearing people talk smack about Canadian animation, then immediately talk about their favorite movies or shows... that they have no idea are animated in Canada. The reality is even if a Candian studio does 95%+ of the animation on a tv show or movie, animation is still credited to the LA studio (which sometimes only has an artist or two in each department to make last minutes changes). I've even worked on projects with no LA artists at all that are still attributed to the US company. I'd also push back on the idea that Canadian animation is taking over: we've been here pretty much the whole time. I think the difference is that the rise in streaming has allowed for longer end credits, which in turn has allowed for more studios to get proper credit for their work! I can't tell you how many beautiful shows and films are credited to Netflix, Hulu, Amazon, Disney, etc. when they're animated almost entirely in Canada. It's not just short films, either. The Monkey King (2023) is one of my favorite animated movies in the last 10 years. It's listed as "Netflix Animation", but if you dig you'll find the bulk of the work was completed in Canada (mostly Reel FX). Vancouver's Sony Imageworks is responsible for stunning animation in Spiderverse, and Wind Sun Sky Entertainment is behind the breakout Amazon hit Invincible, but no one thinks of these as "Canadian animation". Even for older tv franchises like MLP, Rick and Morty, Animaniacs, Peanuts, etc. I've found most American fans have no clue that these are largely Canadian work. Canada has produced award-winning animation for decades now; it's just that credit is finally starting to be searchable. I also love that you showed the short Bao as one of your examples: Bao was made by Domee Shi, who grew up and went to art school in Canada. She went on to write and direct Turning Red for Disney, a fantastic film based on her childhood up north. Turning Red is "American animation" even though it's the story of Canadian protagonists, set in Canada, written and directed by a Canadian citizen who studied animation in Canada. Doesn't that seem a little odd? I feel that modern animation productions can't really be defined as the work of a single country. I think there's a subconscious understanding for some (not all) LA animators that anything made or worked on outside LA originally belonged to LA, and thus the work is viewed as being 'taken over'. I think we as an industry need to analyze that mindset with a more critical eye, especially given how few animators are born where they work. Thanks again for covering this! If you ever want to talk about the topic more I'd love to chat.
@runa_70226 ай бұрын
yes to all this! i went to art school here and it was amazing to learn so much about our vastly overlooked history in modern media. hell, even outside animation, so many films "set" in america are filmed in canada but nobody even knows.
@sedonaparnham29335 ай бұрын
Jumping onto this: There's a lot of really beloved American animated shows that are produced in Canada, and experience ranges from only the studio being credited to animators flat out not being allowed to say they worked on a show that they worked on. One of these most notable studios is Mercury Filmworks in Ottawa, which has produced series such as Star Vs the Forces of Evil, Hilda, and those beloved Mickey Mouse Shorts. Maya and the Three was animated by the late Tangent Animation (That was initially supposed to animate the Monkey King movie before they were shuttered), and Bluesky's Nimona was also completed in Montreal. That's also not even counting all the "live action" animation taken on up here. I myself, during my brief stint in TV, worked on two separate Disney IP's that I never got named credit for, and the only named credit off the top of my head was from Dreamworks. I really do hope more Canadian studios can work on their own IP's again, and get the credit they rightly deserve.
@alexandranash39475 ай бұрын
As a fellow canadian animator, I am so glad to read a comment that reflects my thoughts exactly!!! rock on
@melskunk5 ай бұрын
Exactly what I was thinking "We always HAVE been here", I went to school for it in 2000 because it was and arguably still is our biggest artistic export, it's just not credited or when it is, people don't recognize that the studios are Canadian, or they work as the 'north' branch of an American studio, like a friend of mine who's been on a lot of modern Disney tv stuff like their tangled series
@U1TR4F0RCE5 ай бұрын
@@melskunk As a Canadian kid who grew up in the 2000s some of the older cartoons I remember seeing even were 80s and 90s Nelvana and other Canadian studio co-productions.
@BrodyAnimates6 ай бұрын
this video got the maple syrup in my blood pumping
@JackKnots6 ай бұрын
the blood in the canadians body was a trick and twas only maple syrup
@julieroy71566 ай бұрын
Brau
@carscientist6 ай бұрын
well if it isnt canadian animator brody animates.......................... well well well...........
@t1tanic4966 ай бұрын
Don’t you mean the blood in your maple syrup system?
@sidbutreal6 ай бұрын
YOOO
@redshyguynumber55676 ай бұрын
Native Leaf Man here, please allow me to speak on behalf of all Canadians watching: "WOOOOO, OUR COUNTRY WAS MENTIONED! LET"S GOOOOOOOO!!!!"
@BluShiGuy6 ай бұрын
True
@ADSGaming77816 ай бұрын
dude your getting way to real
@Chaosbean-14436 ай бұрын
Thank you leaf man ambassador sir
@god0faxolotls46 ай бұрын
My country being mentioned? pfft Impossible!
@_thesusnugget6 ай бұрын
as a fellow Leaf Man, ABSOLUTELY.
@Aussie_Core6 ай бұрын
As an Australian, I remember basically all good tv shows were made in Canada. Detentionaire was one of their best.
@Axiasart6 ай бұрын
Ohhhh i remember that one I love it
@ZoulStar6 ай бұрын
AYYYYYYY I WAS GONNA MENTION IT TIL I SAW YOUR COMMENT! LET’S GOOOO
@screenedat0m6 ай бұрын
Knowing people around the world also loved my favourite animated show makes me so happy 😭
@easter-man6 ай бұрын
The full series is now on KZbin actually
@louised28186 ай бұрын
I remember that one! It was great!
@elevemoyen8866 ай бұрын
Man, I love the ONF/NFB. When I was young, we had a school trip where we got to visit their offices in Montréal. It got me hooked on animation for so many years. In the end, as I found new hobbies, I did not pursue a career in the arts, but I've always kept a niche interest for animation and I think the organisation can be credited for that. Beyond enabling the development of our talent pool, I think the ONF/NFB serves a huge cultural role here. Cultural exports from Canada are hard to get out, or hard to be seriously marketed. This may be biased from my perspective as a french canadian, but much of Anglo Canada's cultural content is kind of amalgamated to that of the U.S, and it makes it seem as if the region, although full of talent, consumes more content from outside than it seems to be producing its own. Québec, from its language barrier, has had a vested interest in being a culture generator, which I believe has enabled it to portray itself favorably compared to other provinces. Surrounded by majority english territory, however, I see much of Québec culture nowadays aimed at saving itself by supplying a lesser array of "cultural ventures" and ensuring traditional forms of content remain french in practice. I think this has the opposite effect it wants to have, as those who dare to innovate with their art or those who would consume more stimulating forms of content are forced to go elsewhere, but i digress. As much as french and anglo canadians can hate each other (lol) I think the ONF/NFB kinda serves a purpose for the both of these groups in enabling artists to make great stuff and enabling all canadians to be proud of their cultural exports. Way to go ONF/NFB! I hope they never stop what they are doing.
@SecretIdentityStudio6 ай бұрын
Canadian animation mention that isn't Care Bears, 6teen, Cybersix, Total Drama, or Paw Patrol is SO rare because so few people think about what else we produce!
@markeyiszra6 ай бұрын
Let's never forget that Canada Animation were dominated during our childhood. DKC animated series,Jane and The Dragon,6Teen,TDI,Miss Spider,Rolie Polie Olie,Tintin,Ruby Gloom,Wayside,Franklin,Max & Ruby those show were memorable. Which is really sad that nowadays most people remember from Canada animated series is the non stop Fart jokes.
@zanthar_H6 ай бұрын
Man, reading some of those names hit me like a brick. Good memories.
@ricardoberrios61376 ай бұрын
Don’t forget slugterra I was obsessed with it
@j897j6 ай бұрын
Cybersix too
@Kartanaunfolded6 ай бұрын
Did they do Little Bear too?
@Jerdifier6 ай бұрын
Reboot and Detentionaire are also great
@tealmuchwow6 ай бұрын
Fun fact: The creator (and animator) of Pizza Tower is Canadian.
@jaysmasterpiece6 ай бұрын
Crazy
@Ujulahipobaka1216 ай бұрын
Thought he was french....how about that?
@tealmuchwow6 ай бұрын
@@Ujulahipobaka121 French-canadian.
@willo90li6 ай бұрын
so we invented pineapple pizza and Pizza Tower we’re redeemed
@ssg-eggunner6 ай бұрын
there's probaly a reason why both a cat came back and a big snit looks so similar to the game's style
@Micha-Hil6 ай бұрын
Shoutout to Canada for being where I grew up. Treehouse is the GOAT
@Ghoully-p0sts-stuff6 ай бұрын
Same
@lesleygoodall53456 ай бұрын
I'm from canada and I feel this vid and comment.
@BasicallyBonked6 ай бұрын
always has been
@rilorz76766 ай бұрын
real
@sauces74656 ай бұрын
hell yeah
@cavinesmithsonian23896 ай бұрын
Fun fact. The Vancouver film school is directly across the street from the national film board of Canada.
@wheatart42746 ай бұрын
The Cat Came Back is ICONIC. I remember it playing frequently between other TV shows. Also, we had Canadian PSAs, and one of the ones that was probably my favourite was the house hippo. If you've never seen it, please look it up!
@42seven5 ай бұрын
the house hippo! that and the one with the girls chasing the boy and the one with the words beating up the girl i saw a lot growing up (nick and cn were banned from my house for a long time, so i grew up on mostly shows from canada/the uk, i believe that made me a better artist/media enjoyer in the long run lol)
@mrshmuga94 ай бұрын
It would technically be considered “Canadian Propaganda” (I guess), but the Log Driver’s Waltz is also a classic, and came from NFB.
@dgthe32 ай бұрын
Ah the House Hippo. Such a tiny yet majestic creature. I make sure to scrape off some crumbs from my toast every morning for them.
@yoshido86 ай бұрын
As a Canadian, I am so happy to see at least someone with a bigger social presence talk about the positive that our animation has done instead of the negative. It is really nice to see more ppl know about our gouvermnet funded shorts and know about it. Side note: I loved Johnny Test and find it nostalgic. I will die on this hill. I know it's bad but I love it.
@thecaledoniansleeper26486 ай бұрын
Me too, it is a shame most American animation fans just see Canadian animation as nothing but a bunch of flash animation junk or low quality shows, or the infamous Johnny Test bullcrap, when they can never think about better Canadian animated shows (outside Ed Edd N Eddy or Inspector Gadget) like The Raccoons, NFB or other Canadian animated gems from the 80’s or 90’s. But what do you expect, most Americans are insular.
@Nobodyshere11056 ай бұрын
@@thecaledoniansleeper2648 Inspector Gadget's CANADIAN?!?! The OG or the 3D cartoon?
@thecaledoniansleeper26486 ай бұрын
@@Nobodyshere1105 Half Canadian, Half French, Half American and Half Japanese for the DiC Entertainment 1983 series And fully Canadian for the 2015 series made by DHX Media
@richardbell76786 ай бұрын
Leonard Maltin (the "Entertainment Tonight" film critic from 1982 to 2010) put together a special of his favorite NFB animated shorts, so it is not that the NFB animation studio is ignored by American pop culture.
@Jediah-s6p6 ай бұрын
@@thecaledoniansleeper2648ttte fan yes!
@Raziel3126 ай бұрын
It was a Canadian studio, Mainframe Entertainment, that created the first fully CGI TV series. "Reboot". Mainframe Enterainment would later go on to work on Beast Wars.
@spaceboyctstudios29346 ай бұрын
Not to sound rude or anything, but “Reboot” isn’t even the first fully CGI TV series of all time. If anything, “Veggietales” is. Yes, “Veggietales” was more VHS than TV, but they’re still considered the first nonetheless, first releasing in 1993. “Reboot” didn’t even come out until 1994. But I will admit: At least Mainframe Entertainment (Mainframe Studios nowadays) have improved their animation throughout the years, especially with their 2 theatrical films: “Escape From Planet Earth” from 2013 and the “Ratchet & Clank” movie from 2016. The cancelled “Sly Cooper” movie would’ve been their 3rd, but there are MULTIPLE reasons why it got cancelled. Also, fun fact: “Ratchet & Clank (2016)” shares a couple animators with “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem” from 2023.👍🏻
@Raziel3126 ай бұрын
@spaceboyctstudios2934 I guess that depends how nit-picky you want to get. Reboot premiered in 1994 on television. Veggitales began in 1993, but as a direct-to-VHS series.
@spaceboyctstudios29346 ай бұрын
@@Raziel312 True. But at least “Veggietales” beat “Reboot” nonetheless, right?
@Nobodyshere11056 ай бұрын
Wait wait wait, "Reboot"? The show on Netflix where four teen kids find a hidden basement room and are able to be transported into the internet? I know there's an OG one, but I'm not sure where it is.
@MaronaNunya6 ай бұрын
@@spaceboyctstudios2934 1. Just going to gloss over the fact that Mainframe made all those VHS Barbie Movies / pretty much every animated Barbie movie/project which is part of why they've gotten so good at what they do, eh? & 2. Part of why Veggietales "beat" Reboot as you put it is they were working on making sure they had enough buffer episodes before putting it out, due to how difficult it was to make, it took them roughly 3 years to produce enough to where they felt comfortable it was enough. from 1991-1994 when it premiered. Whereas with Veggietales it was the one VHS OVA produced at the time and then more that followed afterward. Entirely different set of circumstances and standards to follow let alone protocols for production itself and distrbution where one would be for a DTV market for Ye Olde Christian Households and the other would be for Broadcast TV. Like, it's neat that it happened, they're both cool parts of history but they're honestly not really in competition with each other directly either more sideways than anything. Both were part of my childhood, being Canadian & growing up in a relatively religious household so there's fondness for each property in their own nostaglic way. I don't see a point in pitting them against each other really when like I said both were great achievements for their time and with the same software too.
@bennycaustic51026 ай бұрын
I think both Canada and France have created some of the best animation of all time.
@shaebullen18786 ай бұрын
Quebec on its way to suddenly start creating the best animations of all time via being both French and Canadian
@nassimguellati63116 ай бұрын
The both Subsidize culture, how weird
@RothAnim6 ай бұрын
@@shaebullen1878 Hah, perhaps not the best, but they certainly had a busy period in the 80's and 90's.
@Nobodyshere11056 ай бұрын
Really? France? I would like some examples.
@xboxpenguin87056 ай бұрын
@@Nobodyshere1105 The studio that animated Arcane (Fortiche Productions )is french and so is Wakfu
@sniffitysnorty6 ай бұрын
As a Canadian studying animation, I'd like to say that the NFB is a very important part of both our study and (in my opinion) our culture as Canadians. I've both lived in Canada my whole life and loved animation since I was a kid but I didn't know about the NFB's existence prior to going to art school and i wish i did because there is so much cool stuff to watch, I remember in my second year of uni our professor would show us stuff from the NFB for our lessons like "Neighbours" and explain some principles, techniques, and types of animation using the videos as reference before giving us our assignments lol. Also love your stuff Doodley, you're such an inspiration :]
@Atharkas6 ай бұрын
I'm lucky, one of my teacher (who, alas, passed away now) was one of the animator / voice in «L'homme qui plantait des arbres». Also, it's nice he mentionned Vancouver for the studios, but here, in Montréal, we produce a LOT of shows from the US and Europe. Per instance, I had the chance to work on the last four seasons of Arthur.
@sniffitysnorty6 ай бұрын
OMG thats epic i LOVE arthur!!! i appreciate your contributions
@melskunk5 ай бұрын
NFB animation used to be on TV all the time, we need to bring that back
@sniffitysnorty5 ай бұрын
REAL!!!
@SirBlackReeds5 ай бұрын
What culture? From what I hear, Canada's in the same position as the US where there's no culture left because it's stagnated, which has been exacerbated by the unrestricted entry of migrants.
@berengerdietiker22Ай бұрын
I'm Canadian, and I've never heard of any of this before. Thank you, Doodley!
@GiggaByte6 ай бұрын
12:20 seeing the cat came back was such a sudden feeling of nostalgia one of my favourite animations when I was little
@clunkster6 ай бұрын
Same Has to go in the Canada hall of fame fr
@Bad_pun6 ай бұрын
Fr
@GoldenVulpes6 ай бұрын
Right! sent me wayyy back
@jackeroni2166 ай бұрын
i literally did a spit take when i heard it!!
@Autumchild6 ай бұрын
The amazing thing about every Canadian Short you showed off today is that I have seen them all. They all aired on either YTV or Teletoon when I was a kid. I'm very glad you talked about them as they really are hidden gems on television today.
@mack_r-s29 күн бұрын
Huh... well that's strange. I don't actually remember seeing any short films on either of those two channels as a kid. And keep in mind, I used to watch them a LOT after school and on weekends (YTV especially). Might I ask what year range we're talking when you watched these short films? 90s, early 2000s, etc.
@kiricappuchin6 ай бұрын
The NFB is amazing. I remember watching a few short films for various classes throughout school-my favourite being Log Driver's Waltz lol. It's cool to see Canadian animation getting more love!!
@chobies53836 ай бұрын
"Go to the church and ask God to forgive you!! "
@2MKcreations6 ай бұрын
So do I. Those shorts inspired me to make films on my own!
@munsterlandr16446 ай бұрын
hell yea Log Driver's Waltz! so much nostalgia from that name alone lol
@chrisbodley89586 ай бұрын
Thank you for saying it so I don't have to repeat myself
@uninvincibleete6 ай бұрын
The Log Drivers Waltz is the first thing I show all my non-Canadian friends haha I love it so much
@stuiwoodside55556 ай бұрын
Interestingly enough, a lot of the shows I grew up with on Australian tv were Canadian animated shows. I never understood why they the Canadian government symbol at the end till now.
@stuiwoodside55556 ай бұрын
Not sure if they were from importing or government funded but they were good nonetheless
@kepstin6 ай бұрын
@@stuiwoodside5555 even commercially produced shows that are exported can take advantage of some of the tax credits or funding that the canadian government provides for the arts, which is why you'll often see that in the credits.
@dgthe32 ай бұрын
@@kepstin Yep. There will often be Canadian federal tax credits as well as provincial credits. I think Quebec was a major hub for animation, while live-action productions commonly use Ontario (Toronto & Hamilton) and BC (Vancouver).
@l_Tazi_l6 ай бұрын
As a Canadian animator myself, I am so happy to see this video! I got the immense pleasure of getting taught by one of the animators for the partly founded NFB movie “The man who planted trees”, her name was Lina Gagnon (may she rest in peace). It is in my opinion one of the most impactful animated Canadian movie culture wise and I highly recommend the watch. Thanks for showing light on Canadian animation culture!
@Rowan-gt3ik6 ай бұрын
Most of our animated shows here in canada def do not get enough recognition. we've made some incredible stuff with rigged animation, cgi, and flash ones, like 6teen, hilda, detentionnaire, league of super evil, clone high, and more. I wish more people knew about our studios and animation culture, as we've helped produce some pretty awesome shows. If you ever wanna make a video exploring specific animation styles and techniques, I reccomend looking at Nerd Corp Entertainment's lineup of shows. Despite them being early 2000s cg shows, they're some of the best tv 3d animated shows ive ever seen, and they even helped animate some of the Monster High films!
@mintyreview67946 ай бұрын
HOLD UP- we made Hilda? The Luke Pearson Hilda? How could I not know this?
@42seven5 ай бұрын
@@mintyreview6794 mercury filmworks!
@Rowan-gt3ik5 ай бұрын
@@mintyreview6794 yep! ottowa based studio mercury filmworks is behind Hilda's animation! They also do a lot of outsourced animation for Disney TVA, Warner Bros, Netflix, and Amazon, along with working on shows like The Wonderful World of Mickey Mouse, The Ghost and Molly Mcgee, Centaurworld, Kid Cosmic. They've also produced short films and helped in films like the Bob's Burgers movie and Curious George.
@Artkatie6 ай бұрын
"oh canada" is a great way to start your video
@That-guy-named-Henry6 ай бұрын
“Our home and native land” 🎶
@the_fishmael6 ай бұрын
@@That-guy-named-Henry”🎶True patriot love in all us command🎶”
@BlueBatboy6 ай бұрын
@@the_fishmael "🎶With glowing hearts we see thee rise🎶"
@setriza46496 ай бұрын
"🎶Our true north strong and free🎶"
@TripartitePact6 ай бұрын
@@setriza4649 "Ton histoire est une epopee"🎶
@JayTheDevGuy6 ай бұрын
I absolutely love this and your children's animation video where you dive deeper into the systems that create the art we know and love (or I guess in this case, DON'T know and SHOULD love). So many people like to isolate art from the complex and often crushing systems that dictate every day of our lives (and like, I get the appeal...) It'd be easy for your channel to focus only on the craftsmanship and keep art separate from all that. But learning the systems that fund, create, and publish great stuff is so important to truly love it, and certainly gives me a deeper appreciation for the folks that actually roll up their sleeves and make cool things. Besides, the best art usually isn't shy about the messy world that it comes from. Keep up the stellar work ✌
@nutbutter886 ай бұрын
YOOO I love your channel
@Lord_eBatts6 ай бұрын
I feel like the Canadian government realized decades ago that we can fund things other than our military, and now look what cool stuff has come out of it! 13,000 unique short films is awesome. You, or some other animatuber, should make a series putting a spotlight (for the first time) on *some of* their favourite of these short films. Ive grown up in Canada and never knew about any of this so I feel like its important to highlight them.
@SmilingVillains526 ай бұрын
Bro this was a fucking AMAZING analysis. I knew of some of the shows that came out being an American kid (ex. Ed, Edd, & Eddy, Total Drama Island, 6teen) and the concept of REALLY good shows that aired in America not being created here but I genuinely didn’t know anything about the Canadian government funding all these short films and how rich and heavy they fucked with animation up there. Hell I didn’t even know there was a concept of people making quality animated shows that didn’t sounds like torture to the animators producing the series like what we hear from WB and Disney. I say that to say thank you man I’m really going to do some research on that and find out more of what’s happening
@Mr.Scrible6 ай бұрын
As a Canadian, I did not know Johnny test was Canadian
@BlueBatboy6 ай бұрын
neither did I
@jason2211456 ай бұрын
same
@Gabarasolostheverse6 ай бұрын
Me neither
@chickadeestevenson54406 ай бұрын
It started out in the USA and moved to Canada.
@ExtremeWreck6 ай бұрын
80% of Johnny Test is American. Only the animation was outsourced to Canada.
@tundra43316 ай бұрын
i so learnt this in film studies (from canada). they will literally fund any indie project as long as you send it in and its just, cool. ive loved so many canada funded short films and im so happy someones bringing attention to it!!! we certainly have very talented artists here and i hope one day ill become one of those!
@mikeuniturtle37226 ай бұрын
The same programs that helped fund animation in canada also have one for videogames. Thats why a lot of the big studios had studios set up in Montreal
@Game_Hero6 ай бұрын
It also had a lot to do with the funding of the government of Québec and its ties to France to get Ubisoft here instead of New Brunswick.
@jeffbrady27576 ай бұрын
I believe The Long Dark was funded in part by such a program
@thefabulouskitten72046 ай бұрын
Video games are pretty big cultural export from Canada too. Mass Effect, Dragon Age, Celeste, Pizza Tower, Cuphead, etc. Glad to see our little frozen wasteland getting some recognition.
@osbroo6 ай бұрын
Dead by daylight
@ESousa-dn4vs5 ай бұрын
night in the woods
@SirBlackReeds5 ай бұрын
I'd strike Celeste from the list. Thorson chose to retroactively make the game a trans metaphor. It's like an artist painting a great picture of Jesus only to repaint into Monkey Jesus later on.
@thefabulouskitten72045 ай бұрын
@@SirBlackReeds what does that have to do with it being a Canadian game?
@polfloe105 ай бұрын
@@SirBlackReeds ???????????????????? as a trans person it makes a LOT of sense that its a trans metaphor
@WyvernGuts6 ай бұрын
I grew up without cable, so a lot of the cartoons I watched as a kid were on public television. One of the main channels I watched was Qubo, which at the time had acquired a lot of Canadian shows. The Canadian studios always felt like they stood out from their American counterparts on the channel. Jacob Two-two was definitely my favorite.
@ArchonKain6 ай бұрын
Honestly, thank you for making this, as a Canadian I have always felt the love towards the arts in my country, be it drawn, music or just in general expression, and in recent years I've felt a bit of a pinch as more Americans come into Canada and I genuinely hate that feeling, it feels like some kind of weird propaganda sensation thrown to me but I think it's cause a lot of us Canadians aren't all that out spoken, unlike our American counter parts. But thankfully I have been noticing a big up swing in the focus of the arts here, I know I'm in a huge minority as a NSFW artist but I've not only received support because I'm an artist and I have more ambitions than just NSFW things like making my own visual novel or comic series, but also because I have a pretty huge back drop of technical support in the form of my government, a few of my friends got some green lights from the NFB and are making their own work, I couldn't be more proud to be Canadian even through I'm not very patriotic at my core. I know my ideas can be safely pitched to not soulless corporations focused only on investors stocks rather than creative works, it's always been a heart warming feeling that I often forget isn't there for my American friends. Also, Canada made P*rnHub so you guys are also welcome for that.
@LeoZhao016 ай бұрын
How dare you, Johnny Test is peak animation. It showed me that the only aound design necessary was a whip crack, really brought me back to the late 1800's.
@katcana16 ай бұрын
seeing canadian animation beating hollywood is really weird
@BenPearson-ph4zb6 ай бұрын
Nah
@fusion12036 ай бұрын
As a Canadian I am offended u.u jk
@BenPearson-ph4zb6 ай бұрын
@@fusion1203 Man i'm canadian too I'm just saying nah Because I just can't believe that he didn't know that
@fusion12036 ай бұрын
@@BenPearson-ph4zb I wasn’t saying I’m offended to you and also I was joking
@BenPearson-ph4zb6 ай бұрын
@@fusion1203 ok man thx for Telling me.
@jaggededge116 ай бұрын
The Log Driver's Waltz is probably the short I remember the most both for it's animation but also for it's catchy tune. And while not NFB, I really did like the CGI Short Circuits they use to air on YTV. Shorts were used to fill air-time between shows; as in Canada there is a limit to how much time you can allot to advertisements.
@fearghaill97386 ай бұрын
aaaaand now it's stuck in my head again thanks for that :P
@Amateur_actors6 ай бұрын
12:38 good sir i did not even have the SLIGHTEST clue this existed (which means it was all the cooler to learn about it!)
@Katy1336 ай бұрын
Thank you for talking about Madam Tutti Putti, I remember watching that film years ago and I still think of it!
@Just_a_commenter6 ай бұрын
Despite being a Canadian myself (and proudly sporting red and white online in the weirdest way), I haven't paid much attention to Canadian animation... But hey, I'll contribute to it as well in time! For now, time to appreciate what my country has produced. Also, got my Doodley plush the other week and I love it :3 It's now my rubber duck/rock to talk to while doing art so I can problem solve better!
@GaeredLinn6 ай бұрын
As someone who has cousins living in Canada and watching Canadian cartoons, I personally think that Canadian animation is a mixed bag, and can either be a force of greatness or the bane of animation critics in America. Since I never grew up watching cable TV, I watched all of my animated content exclusively on both DVDs and digital purchases on Apple TV, and most of them were made in Canada. Some of my favorite animated films and cartoons from Canada are Rock & Rule, Cybersix, Ruby Gloom, Jacob Two-Two, Franklin, The Rhino and the Redbill and Night of the Zoopocalypse. Plus, I would love to see Saberspark doing a video on the NFB's short films.
@soupe_yt6 ай бұрын
Borm and raised in Canada, and I grew up with my dad showing me a lot of these short films from the NFB. The Big Snit was one of those that we watched so often that I'm sure, even over a decade after my last watch, I could tell you each and every story beat. Canadians are used to the idea that no matter how great something we make is, it won't matter to anyone but us. And it's a shame. This video gave us what I feel most of us haven't had in a very long time: recognition of the art we make.
@rjfinbow47716 ай бұрын
When I was a little kid, I borrowed an NFB DVD collection of award-winning animated shorts from my local library. Madame Tutli-Putli was on it, and it was the scariest thing I had ever seen. No movie traumatised me and seered itself into my brain as much as that one. I see it completely differently as an adult.
@braydenweiler64566 ай бұрын
If you ever do another Canada animation please talk about Hilda one the best animated show I’ve watched
@Fr3sheeBits6 ай бұрын
I would like to see that tbh
@kootunesscrewy6 ай бұрын
Hilda is also European, btw. But yeah.
@SkyanSam6 ай бұрын
I agree!
@milymilo6 ай бұрын
hilda was canadian? thats cool, hilda was incredible.
@klaibefhuoaiuwehjklbdfsnxnik6 ай бұрын
Burger Man here, Ive actually seen that show! Its pretty good.
@corvidcosmo6 ай бұрын
That’s actually really awesome that Canada supports animation like that. Now I want to see all these kind of animated films because there are so many different styles that I saw.
@yoshispandol86106 ай бұрын
words cannot describe how happy i am about this, i have been in Canada for my whole life and i am glad you've shown our USA friends that there are a HUGE amount of Canadian animations that amazingly good. Thanks Doodley :)
@nellyhidalgo60066 ай бұрын
I had no idea how amazing the Canadian animation industry was, and I was born in it. I thank you for making this video 🇨🇦 🍁
@littleredstar49676 ай бұрын
OMG!!! Thank you for making a video like this ^^ As a proud Canadian and someone who is soon to be an animation student in Canada. This video definitely brought a smile to my face since global recognition is being recognized. I remember watching these short films when I was a child and grew to love them thinking these were films everyone worldwide watches. I never realized how the concept of the government funding art is foreign and essentially weird. There are so many things I have talked about Canadian things to people worldwide but never realized it's only in Canada or if you live here it is 'common knowledge'. Anyways, the Canadian government also doesn't stop at funding animators they fund a whole variety of content like music, a variety of art, ice sculptures, etc. If you're trying to make 'Canadian content', you have the government's support. They love to help, along with us as Canadians. We love seeing art of course! For example in my city they hire artists to paint those random electrical boxes you see outside or make murals on buildings/skyscrapers, statues, road art. I've been to many and I mean MANY cities and towns across Canada and they always have art outside to show to the world. My dad is an architect so I get a lot of insight when they are making commercial or government buildings. Every project every single time they love to hire artists to create something for the building to show more culture depending on where it is and what the building is for. Sometimes even the building means something. Canadian art is everywhere here essentially! So I definitely implore you to come visit or do more research on Canada. Canada is like a huge positive pandora's box just waiting to be explored all you have to do is look.
@ethaisa12396 ай бұрын
Ive seen a bunch of these films from my animation lectures, but I had no idea they all came from canada! its really interesting to see how a little public funding can go so far!
@crestofhonor23496 ай бұрын
You should do something on French animation as they have about as much history as the US does and date back to a similar time period. Both the US and France contributed a ton to the early days of animation. One of my favorite animators of this day is French and his name is Vincent Chansard. I believe he got his start with Wakfu but I don't know, nor have I seen Wakfu
@ExtremeWreck6 ай бұрын
French animation started earlier than American animation, around 1892 to be exact.
@HaHAjax6 ай бұрын
More people needs to know about this! It's insane how little this is documented, and I'm glad you could help tell people about this. I'm american and I didn't know about this, but thank you!
@subiugetur6 ай бұрын
As a Dane, "The Danish Poet" intrigued me. I found it on KZbin and it was very beautiful and inspiring. Thank you for sharing.
@bootmii985 ай бұрын
For being giants of Canadian animation and literally having the Canadian flag in their logo at one point, it's surprising that Nelvana isn't mentioned in the video or the comments.
@patrickstarbed5 ай бұрын
I Love the disowning of Johnny Test in the thumbnail
@carkvr6 ай бұрын
treehouse brings me back dude, i remember watching stuff like max and ruby on treehouse, such good times.
@nairocamilo6 ай бұрын
One of the best things that ever happened to me was after I watched one of those animation thesis that launch every semester and KZbin recommended me a TON of short animated films. It was great. I felt like an archivist/erudite, watching this stuff and sharing it with people... If you allow me this tagent: it feels like how sometimes I sorta forget that I could find that one book I've been looking for from somebody else who may not want it anymore, or sitting still in a Sebo (a style of second-hand bookshop you find in Brazil). I see that jacked-up price of some recently published bestseller in a mall bookstore and think: "Maybe I could find it in a Sebo." Then I don't find it... But I find this other interesting book, or a comic book I've been looking for... In one of them I even found a figurine I added to my collection!
@individualvideos5 ай бұрын
This video was such a nostalgia trip. Growing up, my dad would take me from time to time to the NFB/ONF location in Montréal. We’d sit down in individual seats and watch a bunch of random short films that were on offer. I remember binging a lot of the animated ones such as Ryan (which traumatized me as a kid) and the cat is back. This video brought me back, and definitely makes me appreciate my country a lot more. Thanks ❤️
@tayloreh6 ай бұрын
I am so thankful you're talking about these! I was blessed to be a big part of Fangbone (voices and theme song), a Canadian cartoon that aired a bit in the states as well, and some others. It had a slightly larger budget than other Canadian animated series, as early on they actually had a writers room, rather than writers just writing scripts remotely and independently. It really benefitted the show. So much love went into that show and it turned out great overall, but I could feel how everyone was struggling with the limits of the funding and timeline. NFB is a wonderful exception, but its also not effortless to get funding as an artist, whatever siscipline you're in, and allotments also shrink or grow based on whose in power politically... and when art is seen as a 'waste of taxpayer money' by certain ppl. Canadian co-productions are often extraordinary: Hilda, Breadwinner (Oscar nominee for best animated film), a CBC show called 'What Its Like Being Alone'. I was also in a fully stop motion musical series called 'Norman Picklestripes' that was stunning, super impressive, and shockingly very hard to find! More of a Canada/US co production
@doodley3d6 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!! I really love hearing from people involved in Canadian productions in the comments. I actually didn't even know The Breadwinner was a co-production with Canada, I thought it was just Cartoon Saloon. That film is beautiful. I suppose I'm not surprised, Ireland also has excellent public arts funding.
@tayloreh6 ай бұрын
@@doodley3d i at least know an animation voice director in Canada who I know, Marilyn McAuley - was quite involved with it.
@maplebanan6 ай бұрын
as a canadian who consumes maple syrup, thank you so much for exploring canadian and other countries animation! i had no idea that the USA didnt fund art as much as we do, and now maybe more animators will come here and continue to improve and innovate animation! also, my pet goose and my stallion moose say hi, but they were eating a heart breakfast of maple syrup 👍
@PacDino116 ай бұрын
Great video, I'd love to see someone else do this video but with Irish animation. There's many examples of Irish animated movies, shorts and shows that deserve so much attention.
@TailwagAnimation6 ай бұрын
It’s only been an hour, and the NFB has become my biggest obsession. I blame you.
@DocumentarianWeady5 ай бұрын
As a Canadian, I appreciate you talking about the rich history of our animation. I tend to see that a lot of what make's Canada, Canada, isn't really talked about a lot. People tend to focus on its compairason to our larger and southern neighbour, so I'm glad to see something like this for once. Thank You.
@Pylimethefairy5 ай бұрын
This video is awesome! Despite being born and living in Canada all of my life, I was never really told much about the NFB as far as I can recall. A lot of the information here was complete news to me! I didn't even know that the NFB had those shorts available to watch either! Thank you so much for pointing myself and people around the globe to great canadian talent! Now if you will excuse me, I have some animated shorts to watch :D
@trakzerak7356 ай бұрын
1:09 Boards of Canada! Boards of Canada! Boards of Canada! Boards of Canada! Boards of Canada! Boards of Canada! Boards of Canada! Boards of Canada! Boards of Canada! Great video as always, Dudley!
@crimsonyogurt6 ай бұрын
Wow, I live in Europe and most of the films you mentioned in this were shown to us in my uni animation classes by my professors, some of them multiple times. We've seen a rise in animation recently, for the first time in my country, exactly due to more public funding of short films, yeah.
@Ineedaburrito6 ай бұрын
Canadian doodley is awesome, if you ever make another Canada video or something like that talk about Hilda its really good.
@spinjitzumasterfalcon6 ай бұрын
One of my favorite shows: Ninjago, is animated by WildBrain and it’s insanely incredible with how the animators animate the action in that show
@weirdproq6 ай бұрын
Thanks for this video! As a Canadian, I grew up watching a few of the NFB shorts on a VHS I rented from my local library. I love them. You can actually find a ton of them on their official KZbin page in high quality. (though I don't know if they're restricted outside of Canada)
@AnthonyMiele6 ай бұрын
Canadian studio Hinterland Studios, Developer of The Long Dark, made one of my favorite games of all time. It's such a beautiful game.
@lafolleauxmostisma6 ай бұрын
I went to the ONF for a school trip once! We did our own little animation there and we watched some of the animated shorts there it was really fun!
@anouarthecactus6 ай бұрын
0:16 it appears that canada redeemed itself
@thornz95006 ай бұрын
So glad someone is talking about the NFB’s amazing linup+it’s film history. Im a canadian who had to learn about it in my animation class and many of the films have really inspired me as an animator (especially Ryan and neighbours). Hoping to see more ppl talk about it in the future. :] Amazing vid as always Doodley!
@EAPvideoz5 ай бұрын
"Those are real human eyes!" *begins to feel feintish* "They edited footage of real people's eyes over the puppets" *huge sigh of relief*
@Scullgaming9626 ай бұрын
as a canadian animator i feel honoured 🇨🇦
@goldsberrie94486 ай бұрын
I live in Canada and didn’t know about some of this! Super informative!
@makowallet6 ай бұрын
1:08 Fun Fact: This is actually where the electronic duo Boards of Canada got their name from!
@NitzanBueno5 ай бұрын
Had to look it up, you're right! Super cool.
@Dtoons6 ай бұрын
I remember Cartoon Network airing ”O Canada” late at night, which featured NFB shorts!
@korbenmurray4396 ай бұрын
As a canadian animation student, the NFB is such an important cornerstone in our education, it inspires me to create unconventionally and freely without fear because even if my submission doesn't get selected it always has some type of recognition on forums or blogs about runner ups. I think thats the main goal of the NFB, inspire diversity and support artists, because without them, there would be no connection, no culture and no community, and at least in my experience all my life in Canada, community and supporting others is essential to every part of our sense of self! So thank you Doodley for sinning a light on this gem in our country that helps everyone connect and hopefully more foreigners can appreciate art and community like we here hold so dearly!
@joannehong42846 ай бұрын
As a canadian animation enthusiast who lives very close to vancouver, I feel ashamed of myself for not knowing any of this.
@chobies53836 ай бұрын
"Go to the church and ask God to forgive you!!" - The Sweater, NFB Short Film
@Game_Hero6 ай бұрын
As a Québécois, I always find it really funny you canadians made a (very funny) meme out of this short, based on one our book authors and how important the Canadiens team are to our culture, they're our Québécois french-speaking team in a world of english-speaking teams, so I was really not expecting to see how popular it was outside Québec.
@chobies53836 ай бұрын
@@Game_Hero DAWG I'M MEXICAN AMERICAN!!
@Game_Hero6 ай бұрын
@@chobies5383 good to know, guess americans do too
The first season by far looks the best of all of Johnny Test
@ssg-eggunner6 ай бұрын
*WHIP CRACK*
@nitroturbo78696 ай бұрын
@@lesleygoodall5345 Reboot? What Patrick-home rock am I living under?
@Jose.Eduardo.C6 ай бұрын
10:00 BRASIL MENTIONED!!! luxuriously produced as ever, nice video
@SpennyEcks6 ай бұрын
As a 20-something Canadian, I never knew the NFB existed! Kind of surprised I never heard more about it through my college or something. Thank you for making this David, I never knew our government had such a stake in pushing the medium forward! 🇨🇦 0:09 the first project I worked on as a 'professional' featured in an article about Canadian animation is also very surreal 🥺
WALL OF TEXT WARNING Canadian, I am very glad and prideful of my nation's commitment to the arts and while I did have a general idea that the government funded domestic films prior to this video, I had no idea it was to this extent and I will definitely be checking out the extended catalog. About Canadian animation being cheaper to produce, don't get me wrong, it's great that it is easier for Artists to be Artists here but I do have concerns since Hollywood has heavily begun out sourcing labour to areas like Vancouver. This type of practice predatory, it isn't for the talent or give people jobs in Canada but rather it's for financial greed as Canadian animation is taxed less and Canadian animators aren't unionized to the extend American animators. I worry that the animators in Vancouver take this work because it's never been available to them but are also still underpaid by Corporate in Hollywood since they know these animators here will take less for the same reason. It's taking advantage of people willing to take less. Not to mention, outsourcing labour to Canada and other countries means American animators are being shafted by Hollywood which we see in the massive lay-offs waves. Thousands of US animators are out of a job simply because they demand better treatment and pay which foreign markets (worse of these in Japan and Korea) are devoid of and therefor cheaper. Ever wonder why the rise of Indie Animation happened at the same time as the Hollywood lay-offs? That's all the talent which was let go, looking for work and finding it with online independent studios who create stuff here on KZbin. Animation has it pretty rough right now with Hollywood becoming increasingly corporatized and profit driven as well as the invasion of "AI" (I throw up a little typing that). They don't care for the well-being of animators or even the final product as long as it makes them money. The *entirely finished* animated movies which are being shelved are for tax ride-offs, that's now how far corporations are willing to go for the bottom-line. I'm sorry I've brought the mood with my depressing tangent but I'll say this, If you love animation, continue to love animation, even more so now. Love not just the things that you watch but the people behind them, support the Artists because they make the things you love, not the corporations.
@shanjida6096 ай бұрын
About government funding NFB who gets to decide which projects gets funding.is there a government censor that the projects have to pass.are there certain qoutas?
@katanatherobocrux4 ай бұрын
canada also brought us a little-known studio called Mainframe Entertainment and an obscure show called ReBoot
@-yumefroots-82446 ай бұрын
I'm Canadian and The Cat Came Back is such an important part of my childhood. I used to watch it all the time with my dad. The song still gets stuck in my head.
@Ithoughtthiswasamerica6 ай бұрын
He jussst couldn’t stayyyy awayyyy, my teacher used to play it for us in class and I had no idea it was Canadian and not an international hit until I was well into adulthood.
@roadkillerino38686 ай бұрын
Me, a canadian when i hear someone mention where I come from: WOOOO YEAH
@Cosmic-Clod6 ай бұрын
OFC I bolted to this vid when I saw Canada in the title
@Andr3G9084 ай бұрын
Thanks for this, us canadian animators can be just as good as those americans
@Isimarie3 ай бұрын
The thing about other countries funding art is so true! I'm German and I swear every time I see a German indie game they are sponsored by the government, and it makes me really happy!
@Parisella2 ай бұрын
Fellow Canadian animator, here. I gotta say, I was born in that perfect pocket where Teletoon's Frame by Frame (later renamed 'Animania') had provided my 8 year old brain with a steady stream of strange, Canadian animated shorts. I'll never forget how much the weirdness inherent in those inspired me. I still rewatch The Big Snit to this day! It actually brings a tear to my eye.
@Nevakanezah_6 ай бұрын
The Donkey Kong Country TV series was also made in canada.
@TheStewGuyy6 ай бұрын
As a Canadian I say: "Sorry, Maple syrup lumberjack poutine, bud"
@2MKcreations6 ай бұрын
You're not bilingual enough to say that
@TheStewGuyy6 ай бұрын
@@2MKcreations I was born, raised, and spent my whole life in Canada, I'm more than qualified
@Sturgeon_man6 ай бұрын
YOO ITS A DOODLEY VID!!
@CurryCrusader7116 ай бұрын
9:12 I genuinely thought he was going to say they had “spare eyeballs” lying around and made sockets in the puppets