Feb 4, 2018
Commentary: Annie Award of the #Metro Era
When your first award presenter of the evening is a man charged with rape, it's a fair indication of where the rest of the evening is headed.
By the time the 45th annual ASIFA-Hollywood Annie Awards had concluded last night, 14 out of the 30 awards had been presented to projects that were initiated and/or greenlit by people accused of sexually predatory behavior. It wasn't the right time to acknowledge that inconvenient fact because it never is the right time in the animation industry.
Adding to the theme of the evening, no individual woman won any of the 21 achievement categories. Only six women won as part of teams, compared to 46 total male winners.
The Annies' celebration of male figures and its lack of award-winning women are not unrelated: the institutional failures that allow predatory men to thrive in the animation industry are often the same ones that keep women from advancing in the business and being recognized by their peers. (The biggest wins of the evening for women were Nora Twomey's The Breadwinner, and a Winsor McCay Award for filmmakers Amanda Forbis and Wendy Tilby. Tellingly, all three of those women are international filmmakers.)
Putting American industry females in the background at the Annie Awards – a recurring pattern at the show – is one of the more visible manifestations of the industry's attitudes toward women, but to see it happen last night against an intimidating backdrop of winning projects blessed by sex harassers and assaulters set a new low for the Annie Awards.
The animation industry has always operated in a bubble of its own, immune to the pressures and social trends of the larger Hollywood industry of which it is a part. While that can sometimes be a good thing, the industry's willful disregard for falling in line with the rest of the filmmaking community backfired last night. Perhaps this will be the kick in the pants the organization needs to finally address its boys' club award ceremony and to evolve the Annies into an awards show for everyone who works in this business.
The full list of Annie Award winners are below.
Best Animated Feature
Best Animated Feature-Independent
Best Animated Special Production
Best Animated Short Subject
Best Animated Television/Broadcast Commercial
Best Animated Television/Broadcast Production For Preschool Children
Best Animated Television/Broadcast Production For Children
Best General Audience Animated Television/Broadcast Production
Best Student Film
Animated Effects in an Animated Production
Character Animation in an Animated Television / Broadcast Production
Character Animation in an Animated Feature Production
Character Animation in a Live Action Production
Character Animation in a Video Game
Character Design in an Animated Television / Broadcast Production
Character Design in an Animated Feature Production
Directing in an Animated Television / Broadcast Production
Directing in an Animated Feature Production
Music in an Animated Television / Broadcast Production
Music in an Animated Feature Production
Production Design in an Animated Television / Broadcast Production
Production Design in an Animated Feature Production
Storyboarding in an Animated Television / Broadcast Production
Storyboarding in an Animated Feature Production
Voice Acting in an Animated Television / Broadcast Production
Voice Acting in an Animated Feature Production
Writing in an Animated Television / Broadcast Production
Writing in an Animated Feature Production
Editorial in an Animated Television / Broadcast Production
Editorial in an Animated Feature Production
Winsor McCay Award – for their career contributions to the art of animation
Ub Iwerks Award – for technical advancement in the art of animation
Special Achievement Award
June Foray Award – for their significant and benevolent or charitable impact on the art and industry of animation
Certificate of Merit
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