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Time Out's 50 greatest animated films, with added commentary by Terry Gilliam

In celebration of the release of Pixar's 'Up' and Wes Anderson's beautiful stop-motion rendering of Roald Dahl's 'The Fantastic Mr Fox', Time Out ushers in the help of master animator Terry Gilliam – whose own partially animated 'The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus' opens in cinemas this month – to run down 50 of the greatest animated features of all time

Click here for 40 through to 31

50. Heavy Metal (1981)
Directed by Gerald Potterton
Lick my love pump!
As an exercise in nakedly exploiting the sweaty peccadilloes of the teenage male, ‘Heavy Metal' would appear at first glance to be a sure-fire winner: an adaptation of stories stripped from the pages of ultraviolent French sex-comic, Métal Hurlant, with a slew of churning metal anthems booming over the top. It's everything an adolescent boy could wish for, non?

Sadly, it's not the breast-filled bloodbath of orgiastic carnage set to the savage cacophony of Iron Maiden and Sabbath that one remembers. What we're in fact offered is a jarringly discontinuous parade of badly drawn cockamamie featuring heavy-set, matronly women riding tigers to the strains of art-rock also-rans Devo covering ‘Working in a Goldmine’ or Stevie Nicks bleating away over an inscrutable snippet of hamstrung space opera. At the time though, it was boss! ALD
Watch a blast of ‘
Heavy Metal

Read the Time Out review of 'Heavy Metal'

Cloudy With A Chance of Meatballs.jpg

49. Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs (2009)
Directed by Phil Lord
This time, the food fights back…
Too soon? Perhaps, but we’re convinced that this maddeningly ingenious and wildly original smart kids’ adventure will one day take its rightful place in the animated pantheon. In time-honoured cartoon fashion, ‘Cloudy… ’ takes a simple idea – scientist creates machine that turns water into food – and milks it for all its worth: you want spaghetti tornadoes? Ice-cream snowfalls? Palaces made of jelly? Killer Gummi-Bears? ‘Cloudy… ’ has it all.

But perhaps the film’s most notable characteristic is it’s absolute refusal to fall prey to this century’s most annoying cartoon bugbear: cultural referencing. From the industry in-jokes of ‘Shrek’ to the soul-searching self-help psychology of the ‘Ice Age’ movies, animators seem to have forgotten how to make movies for kids without patronising their parents. ‘Cloudy… ’ gets the balance just right, with a winning parade of witty asides, outrageous sight gags and beautifully judged character moments. TH
Watch the great Bruce Campbell introducing the movie

Read the Time Out review of 'Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs'

Final Fantasy.jpg

48. Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within (2001)
Directed by Hironobu Sakaguchi
All fur coat, no knickers
With its impenetrable plot, lazy voice casting and dialogue that sounds as if it’s been mangled through an online interpreter, there’s little to be said for the narrative elements of this CGI spin-off of the enduring computer game franchise. But turn the sound down and slap some mellow beats into the CD player – we suggest Slowdive or mid-period Simple Minds – and you’ve got yourself some serious ambient eye candy. Full-tilt gun battles, ethereal aliens and stately space action fills every frame, and with the sound off you have the added bonus of having to invent your own plot, which will almost certainly be more cogent than the one the filmmakers came up with. ALD
Watch the trailer that promised so much…

Read the Time Out review of 'Final Fantasy'

Sleeping Beauty.jpg

47. Sleeping Beauty (1959)
Directed by Clyde Geronimi
Disney meets Nick Cave.
Everything about ‘Sleeping Beauty’ is huge and grand, from its wildly kinky villain and wonderful score to the sweeping, colourful animation. The only quibble is that they are all put to the service of a story that doesn’t really actually get round to going anywhere. It might well have its roots firmly set in the elemental undertow of classic fairy tale, but any such tale needs to be adapted for its age, and while the basic premise is sound as a pound, there’s hardly enough going on in this Disney adaptation to get it over the finishing line. The design and animation remain a marvel, but the vague miasma of nightmares past that drip from every frame – added to the torpid plot – has dated the film rather badly. ALD
Watch the Disney Princess legacy…

Read the Time Out review of 'Sleeping Beauty'


Paprika.jpg

46. Paprika
Directed by Satoshi Kon
Brain-bending pop-cultural noir from the pulp Miyazaki
Pushing through the fourth wall and throttling your brain into submission, 'Paprika' posits the notion that the psyche unbound would be the most destructive force on earth as a therapeutic invention for making dreams come to life falls into the wrong hands. The scenario is home to an array of brash set-pieces which take place in both modern-day Japan and the noirish inner world of one police detective’s mind. They usually consist of a fantastical parade of childhood icons and Freudian nightmares that edge ever closer to the real world. It’s a playful, complex psychological disaster movie with dark sexual undertones that happens to have been animated in the eye-scorching style of early-morning kids' TV fodder. PF
Watch the unhinged mind-parade

Read the Time Out review of 'Paprika'


Transformers - The Movie.jpg

45. Transformers – The Movie (1986)
Directed by Nelson Shin
In space no-one can hear you, Starscream
The final film role of Scatman Crothers….and, yes, Orson Welles also snaffled up a madballs array of vocal talent that takes in Eric Idle, Casey Kasem and Leonard Nimoy for an adventure that somewhat desperately announced itself to be ‘Beyond Good. Beyond Evil. Beyond Your Wildest Imagination.’ Despite being loud, muddled and cheesy, it’s still a wonder that it failed to pull in audiences. But for those who did manage to mither their parents into taking them along, it was event cinema of Death Star proportions and the very zenith of the animator’s art. ALD
Watch the trailer to ‘Transformers’

Read the Time Out review of 'Transformers – The Movie'


Waking Life.jpg

44. Waking Life (2001) / A Scanner Darkly (2006)
Directed by Richard Linklater
I think the technical term is ‘talky’?
Definitive take-‘em-or-leave-‘em entries, Richard Linklater’s pioneering philosophical doodle ‘Waking Life’ is known best as the film that brought the term Rotoscoping to the unwashed masses. In basic terms, it’s a process that involves animating live footage which gives the actions and movements a realist sheen, but also allows lots of room for experimentation when it comes to size, colour and context. The resultant film was essentially an animated version of the director’s meandering debut, ‘Slacker’, which pieced together a selection of tortuous conversations and monologues and threw a brilliant tango soundtrack over the top. ‘A Scanner Darkly’ saw a more refined and fluid use of the technique, this time roping in a host of A-listers (Keanu Reeves, Robert Downey Jr, Winona Ryder) to act out a Philip K Dick story about a mind-expanding drug that is sweeping the nation and the newly developed government software that allows one to enter the mind of another. While neither quite managed to attain the much-sought-after status of ‘mind-blowing’, they sure were real purty. DJ
Watch a typical scene from the film here

Read the Time Out review of 'Waking Life' here

Read the Time Out review of 'Through a Scanner Darkly' here

Happy Feet.jpg

43. Happy Feet (2006)
Directed by George Miller
It’s ‘March of the Penguins’ with tap.
Hard to believe the director responsible for the post-apocalyptic ‘Mad Max’ trio could have turned his hand to something as schmaltzy as an animated coming-of-age musical starring a dancing penguin. But mawkish moments aside, ‘Happy Feet’ is a joyous little toe-tapping extravaganza quite unlike any other animated film to date. Granted, the production team didn’t have to worry about creating complex, interactive backgrounds since the setting itself is a total whiteout, but the fluidity of the characters and some of the set pieces are exquisitely rendered. What impresses most, though, is the way the film switches, without warning, from a cute song-and-dance comedy – with some classic tunes – to a dark, stark and shocking ecology message about habitat destruction and animal incarceration. The result is a children’s film that engages the full gamut of emotions. Miller is currently working on follow-ups to both of his franchises: ‘Happy Feet 2 in 3D’ and ‘Mad Max 4’. Hope they don’t muddle up the rushes in the editing suite. DA
See the penguins do Boogie Wonderland

Read the Time Out review of 'Happy Feet'


Fritz The Cat.jpg

42. Fritz the Cat (1972)
Directed by Ralph Bakshi
Who’s the cat that won't cop out when there’s danger all about?
A hippy redneck cat boppin’ and scattin’ his way across Harlem in search of reefer, sex and shits ‘n’ giggles may seem perfectly reasonable subject matter for an animated film these days. But in 1972, things were a little different. Despite being unnecessarily crass in places and occasionally – albeit unconvincingly – veering off toward the right wing, Bakshi’s adaptation of cartoonist Robert Crumb’s feline funster comic strip made a mint at both the regular box-office and on the bongo circuit. A rash of sequels followed, including ‘The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat’, ‘Saigon Fritz’ and ‘Fritz's Adventures in Boobland’, but none had the swagger or groove of the original. ALD
Click here for the trailer

Read the Time Out review of 'Fritz the Cat'

FernGully.jpg

41. FernGully: The Last Rainforest (1992)
Directed by Bill Kroyer
Charming kiddie flick for lentil-lovers everywhere.
With the recent release of satellite imagery depicting the continuing destruction of vast swathes of rainforest, this is a timely moment to revisit Bill Kroyer’s 1992 eco-flavoured, fantasy fable about a fairy charged with helping to protect her little pastel-coloured glade from the advancing ‘humans'. An unabashed dig at international logging and the destruction it causes to both flora and fauna, Kroyer’s ahead-of-its-time film wins no prizes for animation (despite a few inventive, near-psychedelic sequences) and the music sucks big time. But its message was always loud and clear – despite falling on deaf ears. DA
Watch some eco base-jumping

Read the Time Out review of 'FernGully'

Click here for 40 through to 31

Author: Derek Adams, Dave Calhoun, Adam Lee Davies, Paul Fairclough, Tom Huddleston, David Jenkins & Ossian Ward



User comments on this story

  • Me of Course said...
    I hope this list is not in order from worst to best because no way did happy feet beat sleeping beauty, I mean for goodness sake they never aged the poor penguin! They just made him bigger. The most irritating thing is that it served no purpose! I mean it wasn't even cute anymore, just severely disturbing. Posted on Feb 05 2012 11:33
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  • Tulika said...
    Cloudy with a chance of meatballs is just an amazing movie !!!!!!!!!! Do try and watch it........... Posted on Jan 07 2012 08:47
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  • PritsWire said...
    No Up? No Sword in the Stone? No Alice in Wonderland? No Ponyo? No How to Train Your Dragon? No Waltz with Bashir?! Posted on Nov 28 2011 22:30
    Report as inappropriate
  • Kev said...
    Ciro, I like your list as well. Mzuri sana! Posted on Oct 19 2011 09:48
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  • Liz said...
    You missed so many amazing movies, like how could you not include the Lion King, or Beauty and the Beast? you also missed out on Howl's Moving Castle, but included some really lame movies like Cloudy with a chance of meatballs. you shouldn't worry about trying to not over-repersent studio's you should try to make an accurate list with the best animated movies, Also you didn't include Grave for the Fireflies, hands down one of the best animated movies ever, and Up. needs some serious editing, Posted on Oct 01 2011 20:17
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  • LipFusion said...
    Great article on this famous story..Thanks for sharing with us Posted on Sep 28 2011 09:44
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  • Phloof said...
    how in the hell paprika is ranked 46th. That movie was truly a work of of art from one the greatest animators of all time. Paprkia should of deserved to be featured as top ten. I'm displeased to quite few animated movies ranked poorly by some carp such as beavius and butt head, and happy feet. You people should seriously review these things more thoroughly. Posted on Sep 19 2011 02:09
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  • GlassesEye9 said...
    Terrible list. Just terrible. How do crappy movies like Happy Feet, Transformers, Lord of the Rings, Beavis and Butt-Head, Aqua Teen Hunger Force, and Final Fantasy make this list, while films like Batman: Mask of the Phantasm, Finding Nemo, Kiki's Delivery Service, Wallace & Gromit, and Toy Story 2 are left out? You guys are really bad at this. Posted on Jun 26 2011 22:13
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  • matty said...
    wow, when a masterpiece like Beauty and the Beast (not to mention countless others) are left off the list, yet Ferngully and the Aqua Teen movie are included, y'know something's wrong. Mostly alright list, but there are some movies missing that should be illegal to leave off, and seriously some included that make me question my faith in humanity. Posted on Jun 15 2011 08:12
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  • girlsense said...
    what is 1st movie Posted on Jun 09 2011 00:47
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  • Michael said...
    I have a lot of issues with this half thrown together article piece..for one every single animated film that was put up was put down for pretentious reasons by the article writer and Terry Gilliam..two you left out of the most important animated films of all time Fullmetal Alchemist:Conqueror of Shamballa yet you put Aqua Teen Hunger Force Movie on this list?Really?The fullmetal alchemist film should be on this list alone just for its lush and beautifully fluid animation!Its a crime that its not on this list!South Park the movie a musical masterpiece?I can't take you or this article seriously after such a laughable comment like that..at least you had enough common sense to put Spirited Away and Akira on this list and Toy Story is one of the most overrated films made in the last 15 years no doubt.The list was somewhat interesting but far to predictable and idiotic for my taste. Posted on May 31 2011 10:02
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  • heykyleinsf said...
    I was hoping #50 would be #1
    Hanover Fiste: He never did... anything that was... illegal...
    [pauses] Unless you count all the times he sold dope disguised as a nun! Posted on Mar 24 2011 22:26
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  • yogesh said...
    up
    Lion king
    Wall-e
    Bolt
    These masterpieces coudn't make it to the list???
    Cant trust these reviews. Posted on Feb 25 2011 16:17
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  • jaykay said...
    Fantastic list.and im glad that The Lion king didnt make the list even thought its a good movie it very much ripped off Kimba The White Lion.
    Pretty surprised that the aqua teen movie made it.as for Happy feet yeh its not best at being political but its still somewhat of a enjoyable film.not for me tho but for kids. Posted on Feb 19 2011 05:39
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  • fung0 said...
    You missed "The Thief & the Cobbler," which even in its tattered 'workprint' form is one of the greatest animated films ever. Posted on Feb 09 2011 22:57
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