Best Animation Movies of all times
3D Animation Services are required to make an animated movie. Here’s a list of my favourite animated movies.
The best animated movies of all time, like the other best movies of all time, encompass a cornucopia of emotions: celebration, heartbreak, joy, grief, excitement, and anger. Animated movies have a long history of tackling both the more mundane aspects of everyday life, in a comedy or otherwise light-heart film, to serious global and political issues in a drama. Animation is a medium that lends itself to diverse, often tear-jerking, story-telling. Box office smashes and sleeper hits alike make up the top animated movies of all time. It's about time to put some respect on animation and think about it outside the context of a humble cartoon.
Pixar has been running the animation game stateside for many years, blessing us with animated movies like the Oscar-winning toy story and Coco, and the recent installments in the Incredibles and Toy Story series.
Toy Story (1995)
In addition to opening the door for other classic movies from Pixar (such as The Incredibles and Monster's Inc.), Toy Story's witty script and groundbreaking images prompted many critics to call it the greatest animated film ever made. And not without reason—27 animators worked diligently on the film, illustrating every detail, down to each blade of grass, to tell the story of the misadventures of two lost toys trying to find their way home. However, Toy Story's greatest achievement is its balance of nostalgia, childhood wonder, and misty-eyed adult humor.
The Incredibles (2004)
Marvel and DC may own the superhero movie landscape, but in 2004, Pixar proved that you don't need household names and company mascots to tell a compelling story about characters in tights. The Incredibles focuses on a family of superheroes, not unlike the Fantastic Four, that has to juggle their bizarre super powers while trying to live a normal life. The good folks at Pixar weren't just satisfied with regurgitating the same superhero stories we'd seen over and over again, though; instead, they gave us a complex tale featuring superheroes facing domestication and worldwide threats. It's sharp, funny, and, most importantly, it isn't embarrassed of the genre it lovingly pays homage to. It's more fun than
Coco (2017)
The first Pixar movie with an entirely non-white cast (not counting Pixar lucky charm John Ratzenberger, of course) and centering on a major cultural non-American tradition, Coco had a lot to live up to, and it succeeded greatly. The movie focuses on Miguel, a young boy living in a Mexican village who desperately wants to play music despite the protests of his entire family, who finds himself trapped in the afterlife during the Day of the Dead and must find a way to escape, all while discovering long held family secrets. The result is essentially Pixar’s version of Spirited Away: a vibrant odyssey into a mysterious world, done with humor and grace.
Extensive research was done into Mexican culture and traditions and it shows in the bright colors present through the film, as well as the respectful nods to various cultural practices associated with the Day of the Dead. The voice cast is brilliant as well with leads Anthony Mendez and Gael Garcia Bernal standing out, both in their speaking and singing performances.
