Masters of Russian Animation explained
Masters of Russian Animation is a Russian four-DVD animation collection that contains 45 short animations and stop-motion animations. Animated in the Soviet Union and later released in 2000, the cartoons contain different styles in animation and painting.[1] The animations were released from different years, beginning with the oldest, Story of One Crime (1962), to the more recent, Croak X Croak (1991).
Content
Volume 1 (1962-1968)
[2]
Volume 2 (1969-1978)
[3]
Volume 3 (1979-1985)
[4]
Volume 4 (1986-1991)
- Door
- Boy is a Boy
- Liberated Don Quixote
- Martinko
- Big Underground Ball
- Cat and Clown
- Dream
- Cat and Company
- Kele
- Alters Ego
- Girlfriend
- Croak X Croak
[5]
See also
Notes and References
- https://www.awn.com/news/store-specials-masters-russian-animation-dvd-and-volume-5-remastered Store Specials: Masters Of Russian Animation On DVD And Volume 5 Remastered|Animation World Network
- https://www.thedigitalfix.com/film/dvd-video-review/masters-of-russian-animation-volume-1/ Masters of Russian Animation (Volume 1) Review|DVD Video Review|The Digital Fix
- https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/46613752 Masters of Russian animation. Vol.2 (DVD video) - WorldCat.org
- https://www.amazon.com/Masters-Russian-Animation-Aleksandr-Kalyagin/dp/6305870705 Amazon.com: Masters of Animation - Volume 3
- https://www.amazon.com/Masters-Russian-Animation-Leonid-Kuravlyov/dp/B000051S5O Amazon.com: Masters of Russian Animation - Volume 4