Today's insanity break: a spectacular Oscar-nominated animated short film by Moonbot Studios, another gem discovered at Vimeo.
Ormie is a pig. Pig see cookie. Pig want cookie. How to get cookie?
I'd call this the "afternoon insanity break," but it's too freaking insane for that.
Tonight's insanity break is this wildly creative video for "Get Real, Get Right," from the new album by the delightfully weird Sufjan Stevens, The Age of Adz.
Today's insanity break is another short gem from Vimeo, titled "Cdak." [Video]
Salesman Pete is 57 flavors of awesome. [Video]
Salesman Pete, Humor, Animation, Vimeo, Short Film, Video, Crustaceans
The world's smallest stop-motion animation character: Dot. Professor Fletcher's invention of the CellScope, which is a Nokia device with a microscope attachment, was the inspiration for a teeny-tiny film created by Sumo Science at Aardman. It stars a 9mm girl called Dot as she struggles through a microscopic world. All ...
Today’s insanity break is a very groovy animated short from Cours Toujours, posted at Vimeo. [Video]
Video, Short Film, Vimeo, Cours Toujours, Animation, Open Thread
Exceptional wall-painted animation by Blu. [Video]
“Blind Spot” by Cécile Dubois-Herry has a decidedly dark storyline; definitely not the usual cheerful, wacky rabbits-and-ducks CGI cartoon. [Video]
Here’s a very cool animated flight over the Mojave Crater on Mars, created with accurate terrain data from the University of Arizona’s High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HIRISE). Check out the 720p version in fullscreen mode. [Video]
Just an open thread for the afternoon, with consolation video from FREEZELIGHT.RU. [Video]
Here’s a great little animated video posted at Vimeo.com, created by students in the BAA Animation program at Sheridan College in Oakville, Ontario, Canada. [Video]
The University of Utah’s Genetic Science Learning Center has a very cool animated zooming thingie that graphically illustrates the differences in scale between common objects and microscopic objects like cells and viruses, all the way down to a carbon atom: Cell Size and Scale.
A change of pace, after a rather intense news day: Sorry I’m Late. [Video]
Instapundit links to a very cool animation showing patterns of immigration to the United States, from 1870 to 2007. [Video] (Hat tip: LawHawk.)