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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Range of styles in Oscar-nominated animated shorts

“Sanjay’s Super Team” (Pixar / TNS)
Steven Rea Tribune News Service

Old school and new school, color pencils and touchscreen styli, a wide range of formats and techniques are represented in the Oscar-Nominated Short Films 2016: Animation program, and that’s a good thing. The five nominated shorts, and the four additional “highly commended” titles that make up the theatrical package, use computer animation, hand-drawn animation, stop-motion animation, and in several cases, a mix of all three.

The stories aren’t too shabby, either.

Among the standouts: “Bear Story,” from the Chilean animation studio Punkrobot. Director Gabriel Osorio’s gorgeous tale of a sad old bear who constructs an elaborate mechanical diorama is a marvel of invention (watch the “making of” video on Punkrobot’s site, www.punkrobot.cl).

Austin, Texas, animation legend Don Hertzfeldt’s “World of Tomorrow” is the other gem here. It doesn’t have the polished sheen of CGI, but its primitive stick-figure drawings belie an immensely sophisticated, forward-thinking view. Incorporating the tricky concepts of time travel, cloning, and human (and machine) consciousness, Hertzfeldt’s toon follows its young heroine, Emily Prime, as she communes with her future clone on the “outernet,” a neural network full of collective memories. In just 17 minutes of beautifully simple cartooning, Hertzfeldt travels the space-time continuum, getting a surer handle on things than Christopher Nolan did in his big-screen epics “Inception” and “Interstellar.”

Speaking of space, the Russian short “We Can’t Live Without Cosmos” follows a pair of brotherly cosmonauts as they train for their expedition beyond Earth’s gravitational pull.

Old traditions and new media collide in “Sanjay’s Super Team,” about a father at his prayer altar, meditating and ohm-ing, and the son at his video console, playing superhero games. The Pixar short was shown in front of the fall release “The Good Dinosaur.” So, unlike its fellow Oscar nominees, it has actually been seen by a lot of people.

The four not-nominated films that will be screened are “If I Was God,” “The Short Story of a Fox and a Mouse,” “The Loneliest Spotlight” and “Catch It.”

Parental warning: Richard Williams’ hand-drawn “Prologue,” also vying for the Oscar, is not for kids. The animation innovator behind “Who Framed Roger Rabbit” has long been working on a project about ancient warfare, and this short, full of drawings come to life, is a study in bloody combat, visceral, full of gore, and male nudity. It’s last in the program, and families will have an opportunity to leave before it’s screened.