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Categorized: Annie Awards

'Coraline' Tops the List with Ten Annie Award Nominations

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Pixar's 'Up' is a close second with nine

Brad Brevet
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Published: Tuesday, December 1st 2009 at 12:29 PM

The nominees for the 2010 Annie Awards were also announced today and Focus Features' Coraline topped the list of feature nominees with 10 with Pixar's Up following with 9 and Disney's Princess and the Frog scoring 8. All three films were included in the running for Best Animated feature along with Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, The Secret of Kells and Fantastic Mr. Fox.

Last year the Annie Awards came under some scrutiny as Kung Fu Panda blanked the soon-to-be Oscar winner WALL•E. The reason for the uproar being DreamWorks was one of the org's top sponsors (which they still are). This year Monsters vs. Aliens is the only DreamWorks Animated feature making any noise (4 nominations), but it looks like Sony Pictures Animation has bumped up their contributions to become a "Gold Sponsor". Will there again be uproar if Pixar's Up doesn't walk away with the top prizes or Disney's The Princess and the Frog. I haven't seen Sony's $122.5 million box-office earner Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs (4 nominations), but people seem to like it and it may be deserving.

In my opinion Fantastic Mr. Fox is the best animated film of the year, but I am sure I am in the minority on that as Pixar's online fandom will certainly shout me down.

Below is the list of theatrical nominees, you can get the complete list including television nominees right here. The 37th Annual Annie Awards are scheduled for Saturday, February 6, 2010 at UCLA's Royce Hall in Los Angeles, California.

Best Animated Feature

  • Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs – Sony Pictures Animation
  • Coraline – Laika
  • Fantastic Mr. Fox – 20th Century Fox
  • The Princess and the Frog – Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • The Secret of Kells – Cartoon Saloon
  • Up – Pixar Animation Studios

Best Animated Short Subject

  • Pups of Liberty – Picnic Pictures
  • Robot Chicken: Star Wars 2.5 – ShadowMachine
  • Santa, The Fascist Years – Plymptoons
  • The Rooster, The Crocodile and The Night Sky – Barley Films
  • The Story of Walls – Badmash Animation Studios

Animated Effects

  • Scott Cegielski, Monsters vs. Aliens – DreamWorks Animation
  • Alexander Feigin, 9 – 9 L.L.C.
  • Eric Froemling, Up – Pixar Animation Studios
  • Tom Kluyskens, Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs – Sony Pictures Animation
  • James Mansfield, The Princess and the Frog – Walt Disney Animation Studios

Character Animation in a Feature Production

  • Andreas Deja, The Princess and the Frog – Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • Eric Goldberg, The Princess and the Frog – Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • Travis Knight, Coraline – Laika
  • Daniel Nguyen, Up – Pixar Animation Studios
  • Bruce Smith, The Princess and the Frog – Walt Disney Animation Studios

Character Design in a Feature Production

  • Daniel Lopez Munoz, Up – Pixar Animation Studios
  • Shane Prigmore, Coraline – Laika
  • Shannon Tindle, Coraline – Laika

Directing in a Feature Production

  • Wes Anderson, Fantastic Mr. Fox – 20th Century Fox
  • Pete Docter, Up – Pixar Animation Studios
  • Christopher Miller and Phil Lord, Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs – Sony Pictures Animation
  • Hayao Miyazaki, Ponyo – Studio Ghibli
  • Henry Selick, Coraline – Laika

Music in a Feature Production

  • Bruno Coulais, Coraline – Laika
  • Michael Giacchino, Up – Pixar Animation Studios
  • Joe Hisaishi, Ponyo – Studio Ghibli
  • John Powell, Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs – Blue Sky Studios

Production Design in a Feature Production

  • Christopher Appelhans, Coraline – Laika
  • Ian Gooding, The Princess and the Frog – Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • Tadahiro Uesugi, Coraline – Laika
  • Christopher Vacher, 9 – 9 L.L.C.

Storyboarding in a Feature Production

  • Sharon Bridgeman, Astro Boy – Imagi Studios
  • Chris Butler, Coraline – Laika
  • Ronnie Del Carmen, Up – Pixar Animation Studios
  • Tom Owens, Monsters vs. Aliens – DreamWorks Animation
  • Peter Sohn, Up – Pixar Animation Studios

Voice Acting in a Feature Production

  • Jen Cody – Voice of Charlotte – The Princess and the Frog – Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • Dawn French – Voice of Miss Forcible – Coraline – Laika
  • Hugh Laurie – Voice of Dr. Cockroach Ph.D. – Monsters vs. Aliens – DreamWorks Animation
  • John Leguizamo – Voice of Sid – Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaur – Blue Sky Studios
  • Jennifer Lewis – Voice of Mama Odie – The Princess and the Frog – Walt Disney Animation Studios

Writing in a Feature Production

  • Wes Anderson and Noah Baumbach – Fantastic Mr. Fox – 20th Century Fox
  • Pete Docter, Bob Peterson and Tom McCarthy – Up – Pixar Animation Studios
  • Timothy Hyde Harris and David Bowers – Astro Boy – Imagi Studios
  • Christopher Miller and Phil Lord – Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs – Sony Pictures Animation
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  1. Adriano

    I haven't seen "The Fantastic Mr. Fox" yet (or "Ponyo"), but both "Coraline" and "Up" are superb films. Actually, I believe "Coraline" may be the only movie I saw this year twice at a movie theater.

  2. Michael

    Coraline is tops for me, one of my favorite movies. Fantastic Mr. Fox slightly edges Up for second place.

  3. Ted

    I think Pixar will be happy being shut out once again in the Annies like last year if it means they'll get another 5 or 6 Oscar nominations and a win or 2 two. Besides, UP is the only animated movie that will be a major playor for other Oscar nominations beyond animated feature, from sound, score, original screenplay, and potentially, best picture.

  4. AJ

    I always have a hard time deciding if "the best animated film" should be the best film out of the animated ones, or the one that has the best animation. I tend to lean towards narrowing the field down to the choices that I think are quality films as a whole, and then giving it to the one among those that did the most with the craft. That way, stuff that's really showy but in the service of a weak story doesn't make the first cut, and stuff that has a clever script but is crudely done doesn't quite win out either.

    I think both "Up" and "Coraline" manage to be technical masterworks in the service of solid stories and good films as a whole. I'd be pleased to see either one win it (with a slight preference to Coraline, since I think it, and stop-motion, could use the recognition more than Pixar at this point.) "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs" was a solid effort and entertaining, but not really award worthy on either side. I hope "Princess and the Frog" is outstanding, but haven't seen it yet…

    I don't want to eliminate budget animation from competing entirely, but I guess I do lean that way. I suppose for me, it's like giving a Best Cinematography award to a "found footage" movie… Sure, you could possibly make a great movie that way, but it's likely working despite the crudeness of the craft in question.

  5. steve

    Santa, The Fascist Years what a title!

  6. americanrequiem

    do see cloudy, most fun Ive had at a movie all year, UP for the win as of now, I wouldnt be upset if Corlaine won, Cant wait to see Princess and the frog and fantastic mr fox

  7. JM

    Actually there's been tons of good animated films this year. Best is "Up." A close second is "Fantastic Mr. Fox." You're right, Brad, that FMF was an excellent fucking movie. But "Up" just happened to be slightly more fucking excellent. "Wall-E," though is still the best thing to happen to animation for the last decade (decades, even, in plural).

    Cloudy w/Chance of Meatballs: A-
    Ice Age 3: B+
    Coraline: I haven't watch it, but I really want to

  8. Shawn

    I could foresee this happening…

    Oscar Animated film nominees:

    Coraline
    The Princess and the Frog
    The Fantastic Mr. Fox
    Ponyo
    Cloudy with a chance of Meatballs or Ice Age 3 or 9

    As for UP? I think it will be voted into the best picture category and voters will in turn cede it's slot in Animated Feature to another animated film. I think UP gets in because of the Wall-E snub (which was criminal imho), feeling among voters that it's probably high time Pixar gets honored with a spot at the big table with the big boys, and also because it's a superb film in it's own right.

    Of course, the Academy could hold out and wait until Toy Story 3 to finally award Pixar it's best picture nomination, but what happens if it falls short of Wall-E, UP, and Ratatouille quality? I know Pixar's track record is superb and chances are that Toy Story 3 will live up and surpass even their loftiest standards, but why even take that chance and wait? Everyone eventually stumbles.

  9. ez6

    I have to buck the trend on "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs" – it had serious plot and tonal issues, and its only cleverness stemmed from the book's original concept (for which the movie can't take credit). No way does it deserve to be considered alongside films like "Fantastic Mr. Fox."

  10. I have to see Fantastic Mr. Fox. Hopefully I can fit it in this weekend. It looks out of the ordinary, and that intrigues me.

  11. Matt B.

    Am I the only one who thinks Storyboarding is a ridiculous category? That's like giving an Oscar for Best Scheduling of a Feature Film Production. Or Best Story Pitch (much more important than screenplay – LOL). I just don't get it.

  12. AJ

    Er… I'd say that, in animation, the storyboarding *is* more important than the screenplay. A significant portion of the film is invented in the process of storyboarding it. You don't do extra "takes", or film scenes from multiple angles and then edit it together in the most interesting way with animation (although that may be more possible now that computer animation is being more and more the norm)… nearly all of the important visual decisions for traditional animation are made during the storyboarding phase.

    Most of that goes for any high-end FX extravaganza as well. I'm willing to be James Cameron or Steven Spielberg would leap to defend the artistic necessity of solid storyboarding as well.

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