Hunger/La Faim is a 1974 animated short film produced by the National Film Board of Canada. It was directed by Peter Foldes and is one of the first computer animation films. The story, told without words, is a morality tale about greed and gluttony in contemporary society.

Hunger/La Faim
English opening title
Directed byPeter Foldes
CinematographyRichard Michaud, Alan Ward
Music byPierre F. Brault
Animation byNestor Burtnyk, Peter Foldes, Marceli Wein
Distributed byNational Film Board of Canada
Running time
11 minutes and 12 seconds
CountryCanada
LanguageNone
Budget$38,893

The film won thirteen film awards from 1974–75, and it was nominated for Best Animated Short Film at the 47th Academy Awards in 1975. An additional Academy Award was granted in 1997 for technical achievement in computer animation.

National Research Council

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Peter Foldes worked in collaboration with the National Research Council Canada's Division of Radio and Electrical Engineering's Data Systems Group, who decided to develop a computer animation application in 1969. NRC scientist Nestor Burtnyk had heard an animator from Disney explain the traditional animation process, where a head animator draws the key cels and assistants draw the fill in pictures.[1][2] Burtnyk worked as lead animator on the NRC project, and he wrote the computer program code.[3] The work of the artist's assistant seemed to Burtnyk to be the ideal demonstration vehicle for computer animation and within a year he and physicist Marceli Wein programmed a "key frame animation" package to create animated sequences from key frames.[1][2][4]

The National Film Board in Montreal was contacted so that artists could experiment with computer animation.[1] Foldes, who was living in Paris at the time, was contacted first.[3] Foldes' first film using Burtnyk's program was a 1971 computer key frame animated short experimental film involving freehand drawings called Metadata.[3][5] This was followed by Hunger, which took Foldes and his NRC partners a year and a half to make.[1] It cost $38,893 (equivalent to $258,902 in 2023) to create.[6]

Critical reception

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Hunger was nominated for an Oscar in the Best Animated Short Film category for the 47th Academy Awards in 1975, becoming the world's first fully computer-generated animated movie to be nominated.[1][3] It also won the Cannes Film Festival Jury Prize and other international film awards.[1][3]

In addition to the film awards that Hunger won in 1974–75, Burtnyk and Wein later received awards and honors in 1996–98. In 1996, the Festival of Computer Animation in Toronto granted Burtnyk and Wein an award for Fathers of Computer Animation Technology in Canada.[1][3] In 1997, Burtnyk and Wein earned an Academy Award for Technical Achievement in computer animation for their "pioneering work" on Hunger.[2][3][4][7] The Ottawa International Animation Festival paid tribute to Burtnyk and Wein in 1998, saying that "their work led the way for a flood of technological innovations in Canada and beyond."[3]

Soundtrack

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The music for the film was composed by Pierre F. Brault.[8]

Awards

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Retired NRC Scientists Burtnyk and Wein honoured as Fathers of Computer Animation Technology in Canada". Sphere. 4. National Research Council of Canada. 1996.
  2. ^ a b c "Mr. Nestor Burtnyk". IT History Society. 21 December 2015. Retrieved June 30, 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Deachman, Bruce (August 31, 2018). "And the Oscar goes to...: Ottawa scientists were pioneers in animation technology". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved October 11, 2023.
  4. ^ a b Wein, Marceli (January 2023). "From Holocaust Hidden Child to Computer Animation Laboratory". IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications. 43 (1): 103–109. doi:10.1109/MCG.2022.3218030. PMID 37022440. S2CID 256573128. Retrieved June 30, 2023.
  5. ^ "Metadata". Collection. National Film Board of Canada. Retrieved 12 January 2010.
  6. ^ Evans 1991, p. 137.
  7. ^ "1997 Academy Awards: Technical Achievement Award". IMDb. Retrieved June 30, 2023.
  8. ^ a b "La Faim Peter Foldes: Jury Prize - Short Film 1974". Festival de Cannes. Retrieved June 30, 2023.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Hunger". onf-nfb.gc.ca. National Film Board of Canada. Retrieved October 11, 2023.
  10. ^ "Past Winners, 1975" (PDF). yorkton.com. Yorkton Film Festival. Retrieved 8 March 2023.

Works cited

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