Spike
and Mike's Classic Festival of Animation (1999) ... includes Bunny,
1999 Academy Award winner for best Animated Short Tightrope,
1998 Academy Award winner for best Animated Short Balance,
1990 Academy Award winner for best Animated Short
Spike and Mike is a collection of
short animated films, ranging from two to seven minutes each. Some are cute, some are
beautifully drawn, and some are neither. The entire show takes around an hour and a half
and it feels like less. Still, it's hard to stay awake through everything - after all,
there are no stories or characters, just animated snippets that are fun to watch, but not
particularly involving.
There are several standouts: American Don Hertzfeldt's Billy's Balloon, in
which a toy balloon decides to seriously abuse the unfortunate child who is holding it;
the beautifully drawn The Queen's Monastery (Emma Calder, director), from
England, a five and a half minute feast of intriguingly blended water color and animation;
and the classic Bambi
Meets Godzilla, (Marv Newland, Canada), whose title says it all. There is
also Son of Bambi Meets Godzilla, which is a rematch between the new and improved
Godzilla and our cute little Bambi. The rematch begins with the score Godzilla 1, Bambi
0. At the end Bambi still has 0.
Also included are two Academy Award winners, Balance (1989),
and Tightrope (1998). In Germany's Balance (Christophe and
Wolfgang Lauenstein), five people on a floating platform must constantly change their
positions each time anyone moves. In the end selfishness decrees there will be only one
person left. Tightrope (Daniel Robichaud, USA) is a rather cumbersome morality
play about two people approaching each other on a tightrope, one wearing a business suit,
one the costume of a jester. The animation is intriguing, but there are several other
selections this reviewer found superior.
There is one really dumb selection as well. Peter Reynolds' The
Blue Shoe (USA), in which one shoe doesn't realize the other shoe is her sole-mate,
stands alone in vapidity.
All in all, if you like cartoons you will enjoy the creativity of these
animators. If you are looking for intriguing entertainment, lightweight and escapist, but
also artsy and without any formulas, by all means check out Spike and Mike.
- DAK