THE JOURNAL

Anomalisa (2015) by Messrs Charlie Kaufman and Duke Johnson. Photograph by Collection Christophel/Alamy
The animated films that inspired Mr Wes Anderson’s Isle Of Dogs.
Ever since pioneering animator Mr Ray Harryhausen brought cantankerous, sword-slinging skeletons to life in 1963’s Jason And The Argonauts, stop-motion animation has thrived on the big screen. Despite the advent of CGI, 3-D trickery and VR, films such as the Oscar-nominated Anomalisa and Mr Wes Anderson’s dogs-topia Isle Of Dogs prove stop motion can be just as compelling as any other movie-making technique. As an homage to the genre, here are five stone-cold stop-motion classics.
Alice (1988)

Alice (1988) by Mr Jan Švankmajer. Photograph courtesy of First Run Features
You can’t talk about stop-motion and not mention Czech surrealist Mr Jan Švankmajer – and especially his surrealist breakout film, Alice. Based loosely on Mr Lewis Carroll’s Wonderland-set yarn, it follows a young girl whose vivid daydreaming leads her into a nightmarish fantasy of pyromaniac mice and sock-puppet worms. A mixture of live action and the kind of topsy-turvy stop-motion wizardry Mr Švankmajer is known for, Alice is a pitch-black take on a cornerstone children’s tale – one, the director says, examines the nature of our dreams and how morality doesn’t always apply in them.
**Watch a clip here **

Heaven And Earth Magic (1962)

Film No. 12 (Heaven And Earth Magic Feature), 1959-61, re-edited 1962, by Mr Harry Smith. Photograph courtesy of Anthology Film Archives, New York
For anyone who’s had to endure toothache and the chemical highs of the dentist chair, Mr Harry Everett Smith’s cult trip-out will resonate. It depicts a series of waking dreams following a dental procedure carried out on a young woman – one to the gates of heaven, and another back to Earth for a fight to the death with German philologist Mr Max Müller. Presented in a number of cuts before its mainstream release in 1962, Heaven And Earth Magic is still frequently screened across the world, and was once live-scored by Warp Records’ beat-wrangling experimentalist Flying Lotus.
**Watch a clip here **

Inspirace (1949)

Inspirace (1948) by Mr Karel Zeman. Photograph by the National Film Archive
For one reason or another, stop-motion films tend to veer towards the murkier aspects of life – the universalisms we real-world humans would rather not confront. Not so in Mr Karel Zeman’s 11-minute masterstroke though, a sensorial glide through the delights of figure skating. Cue glacial semi-viscous ice and shimmering lights emulating the collective glow of a crowd at a sporting event. Inspirace was a huge influence on the work of Mr Terry Gilliam as well as on Mr Anderson’s new Japan-set dogs’ film.
**Watch a clip here **

Jason And The Argonauts (1963)

Jason And The Argonauts (1963) by Mr Don Chaffey. Photograph by Archives du 7e Art/Columbia Pictures/Photo 12
Stop motion’s defining sequence – a five-minute sword fight in which Greek militant Jason and his crew do battle with a gang of skeletons – took Mr Harryhausen four months to perfect. Still, it changed cinema forever, opening up the possibilities of stop-motion-meets-live-action for generations of young auteurs. Mr Don Chaffey’s 1963 epic was scored by Psycho’s Mr Bernard Hermann, whose booming orchestrations perfectly accompany the film’s iconic scenes.

Anomalisa (2015)

Anomalisa (2015) by Messrs Charlie Kaufman and Duke Johnson. Photograph by Archives du 7e Art/Paramount Pictures/Photo 12
One of the great successes of Anomalisa is that nobody really saw it coming. Especially in the hands of Mr Charlie Kaufman, who became an indie-cinema darling after writing Adaptation and Being John Malkovich. However, the film’s subtly devastating ode to loss and grievance slots perfectly into Mr Kaufman’s filmography – and was a triumph for stop-motion cinema in the face of CGI and endless comic-book adaptations. It’s voiced by the ever-brilliant Mr David Thewlis as a customer-service expert and author haunted by a letter from an old flame.
**Watch a clip here **
Lots of character
