When was the Ofuji Noburo Award established?
The Ofuji Noburo Award was established in 1962 by the Mainichi Film Awards. It was first presented to Osamu Tezuka for his film The Secret of the Tezuka in that same year.
Short answers, pulled from the story.
The Ofuji Noburo Award was established in 1962 by the Mainichi Film Awards. It was first presented to Osamu Tezuka for his film The Secret of the Tezuka in that same year.
Russian animator Aleksandr Petrov won the Ofuji Noburo Award in 1999 for his film The Old Man and the Sea. This work utilized paint-on-glass animation techniques to create a masterpiece of stop motion.
The Animation Grand Award was created in 1989 to address the dominance of big-budget studio productions that threatened to dilute the original purpose of the Ofuji Noburo Award. It was first awarded to Hayao Miyazaki for The Castle of Cagliostro to recognize large-scale cinematic animation.
The Ofuji Noburo Award was not given in 1978 and 1992. The jury chose to maintain high standards rather than force recognition upon subpar work during those years.
The Ofuji Noburo Award recognizes a wide range of styles including traditional hand-drawn animation, stop motion, and paint-on-glass techniques. It specifically honors the tactile, handcrafted nature of animation that stands in contrast to digital perfection.