Small steps brought The Secret of Kells to New York. Image from this New York Times slideshow.
Back in October, I wrote about attending Singapore's animation festival and seeing The Secret of Kells (sound alert), a movie directed by 33-year-old Irishman Tomm Moore. Well, Moore's secret is now out in a big way. The Secret earned a write-up in the New York Times on Tuesday, a major place in the New York International Children's Film Festival this month, and a wider opening in Manhattan from today. It also has a chance to shine at the Oscars as a nominee in the best animated feature category. The NYT story focused only a bit on the historical underpinnings of the film and its aesthetic that I enjoyed so much. Check out the paper's separate review to read about the distinct stylings of the animation. Instead the big debut piece devoted most of its column inches to the word-of-mouth marketing effort employed by the film's distributors, both worldwide and in America, that earned it an Academy Award nomination.
The Secret's nomination puts it in competition with the very good films Up and Coraline. It has only a very modest chance of success against these films, but the nomination should be a great encouragement to smaller animation outfits throughout the world. Its inclusion loosens up the nominations monopoly usually held by Disney/Pixar. Plus another heavyweight studio 20th Century Fox debuted Fantastic Mr. Fox to great acclaim and their own Oscar nomination this year. The overall quality among this year's nominations suggests animation's widening talent pool should give filmgoers even more quality features to relish, even as the past decade has proven so good.
New Yorker readers, give The Secret of Kells a try, and if you want to be charmed by the early work of another great animation director, seek out Brad Bird's Iron Giant from 1999.
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