Afleveringen

  • Prompted by the ongoing genocidal campaigns effecting the people of Palestine, Chris and Sylvie decided to tackle an animated documentary from 2017 that endeavored to portray the Israel-West Bank Barrier in a nuanced perspective based on an outsider's perspective. It failed. Miserably. While visually it stuns through a masterful mixing of animation techniques by Alberta based filmmaker Cam Christiansen, as an adaptation of a self-serving, close-minded monologue written by British playwright David Hare back in 2009, its biases and outdated views are apparent and frustrating.

    Wall (2017). Directed by Cam Christiansen. Available to stream on the NFB website: https://www.nfb.ca/film/wall/

    #FreePalestine

    If you liked what you heard and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

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  • We are back on our anime bullshit with another all-time classic series that was introduced to us Canadians by a dub produced in Vancouver. It's Rumiko Takahashi's seminal Shonen series Inuyasha, a beloved series that Sylvie and Chris were first introduced to through the YTV anime programing block "Bionix." As with all CanaDUB episodes, we break down the phenomenon of the series, its release in Canada, and the dynamics, performances, and reception of its dubbing produced by the fine people over at Ocean Productions. Plus, Sylvie gives her definitive breakdown of what constitutes a Little Guy™.

    Episode covered for the podcast is Episode 51 "Inuyasha's Soul, Devoured." Written by Junki Takegami and directed by Satoshi Toba. Dub directed Karl Willems, Teri Snelgrove, and Marc Matsumoto. Original Canadian airdate April 4, 2004.

    If you liked what you heard and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

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  • Howdy Campers! Ever want to spend your summer vacation with some cryptid counsellors and a boundless hyperactive energy?? Then do we have a surprise Canadian entry in the Disney XD lineup for you! It's Camp Lakebottom - a sugar-rush of a throw-everything-at-the-wall camp comedy that gave one of the hosts an ear-splitting headache. Otherwise, it's a fun time! #SasquatchFraser

    Episode covered for the podcast was Episode 44 "Fright Club/Bottomdome." Written by Evan Thaler Hickey and Robert Pincombe/Shelley Hoffman respectively, and directed by Rob Walton and Cilbur Rocha respectively. Original airdate August 28, 2015. (Full episode is available on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h4neFNMN2HE - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fiG-r1Y_1TE).

    If you liked what you heard and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

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  • Like...whatever, it's Daft Planet.

    On this week's podcast, we are looking back at a time when the vibe of the young generation was blasé, sarcastic, and all-around disaffected, which made it very hard to make cartoons that spoke to them. In the early 2000s, Teletoon tried to court this demographic with a flash-animated, pop culture-obsessed portrait of dispassionate teens who are too cool to care...even about a Requiem for a Dream spiral of addiction for video games and boy band music. It's cool, I guess, I don't know.

    Episode covered for the podcast is Episode 5 "Requiem for a Game." Directed by Jon Minnis and written by Brent Donnelly and Derry Smith. Original airdate October 10, 2002. (Full episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IOvdlN33_ys)

    If you liked what you heard and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • For the 100th episode of Cartoon Night in Canada, Chris and Sylvie tackle a big hitter in the Canadian cartoon canon. A formative series for both hosts whose latent film buff personas could be traced partially back to it, it seemed like the only choice for a milestone episode to finally cover personal favourite Being Ian. A hilariously relatable portrait of an amateur filmmaker finding his way against his disapproving family, essentially Being Ian is Ian James Corlett's The Fabelmans.

    Thank you to anyone who has checked out our podcast, shared our interests in Canadian animation, and helped spread our episodes around over the past 2 years. We appreciate you all so much!

    Episode covered for the podcast is Episode 7 "Little Camp of Horrors." Directed by Andy Bartlett and Josh Mepham, and written by Dennis Heaton. Original airdate June 7, 2005.

    If you liked what you heard and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • On this week's episode, we get downright filthy (yet educational) as we chat about the "thin gross line" that is the Bureau of Grossology and how they are the last line of defense against acts of gross themed terrorism committed by a rogues gallery of barely disguised fetishes. We are back grappling with the mid-2000s obsession with gross-out humour and edutainment with the aesthetically pleasing production of Nelvana's Grossology. It mostly holds up!

    Episode covered for the podcast was episode 32 "Stinko." Directed by Kevin Micallef and written by Richard Clark. Original airdate October 11, 2008.

    If you liked what you heard and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • On this week's episode, Chris and Sylvie finally put to bed the hot-button media debate of our age - Is RoboCop PoLiTiCaL?? While the Paul Verhoeven 1987 masterpiece is unassailable on this front, what about the oft forgotten attempt to soften the hard edges of the NSFW sci-fi satire for Saturday morning television that premiered a year later? What gets lost in translation when you take one of the hardest R-rated movies ever released that poignantly and painfully tackles reagonomics, capitalism, dehumanization, and the militarization of the police force and make it for kids? And the most pressing question, does this make RoboCop technically Canadian?

    Episode covered for the podcast is Episode 4 "The Brotherhood." Written by John Shirley and directed by Bill Hutton & Tony Love. Original airdate October 22, 1988.

    If you liked what you heard and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • On this week's episode, Chris and Sylvie do what they do best and ponder the grotesque biological and terrifying existential implications of a show for literal preschoolers with William Joyce's George Shrinks. How does a three-inch child with the ingenious mind of an inventor make his way through a world not built for his size? Can his tiny worldview help save his dismal local hockey team? And what in god's name did the parents go through when they went through the body horror nightmare of giving birth to a child the size of a cockroach?! All this and more on our needlessly deep discussion on a delightful and inoffensive show for toddlers.

    Episode covered for the podcast is Episode 33 "Coach Shrinks." Directed by Brian Lee and written by Jennifer Pertsch. Original airdate January 14, 2003.

    If you liked what you heard and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • In honour of Black History Month, we are using our side series highlighting the innovative and significant animation produced through the National Film Board to spotlight the work of one trailblazing black artist. The paint-on-glass animation of Haitian-Canadian animator Martine Chartrand has been used in her visually stunning work to explore the enduring flow of Black history and culture throughout the makeup of Canada's identity. Whether it be a a montage of centuries of significant events in Black Soul (2000) or one unlikely friendship that irrevocably changed two lives in Macpherson (2012), her intricate and gorgeous work is worth spotlighting any time of the year.

    Films covered are Black Soul (2000) and Macpherson (2012). Links: https://www.nfb.ca/directors/martine-chartrand/

    Chartrand's official website: https://martinechartrand.net/index.html

    If you liked what you heard please and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • Believe It or Not, those coffee table books of weird and strange facts from around the world were once a part of a thriving media empire that at one point included cheaply produced French-Canadian Satutday morning cartoons. Sylvie and Chris catch up with the Ripley brand in the late 90s and discover a surprisingly educational and admirable attempt to translate the compendium of global oddities into a jetsetting, mystery-busting adventure series. Outside of the signature, lowly Cinar animation, the show surprisingly holds up. Plus, our scorching hot takes on the 2018 horror film Winchester.
    Episode 7 covered for the podcast was "Ghost of the Mystery House."

    If you liked what you heard and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.
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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn
    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • On this week's episode, Chris and Sylvie boot up an old copy of The Elder Scrolls: Oblivion and contemplate the history of CGI animation while talking about a wrongfully forgotten show from that history's awkward, transitional years. It's Xcalibur - a sword-and-sorcery tale that was made with so much passion the still nascent technology behind its animation could not match. If you put the show in context, it holds up pretty well. If not, well...

    CORRECTION: In this podcast we refer to the region of France that speaks the Occitan language as "the Occitan region of France." We meant to say "the Occitan-speaking region of France" which encompasses multiple regions to the south including Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, Centre-Val de Loire, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, Occitania, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur.

    Episode covered for the podcast was Episode 1 "The Sword of Justice." Directed by Didier Pourcel. Written by Benjamin Legrand & Amélie Aubert. Original airdate September 1, 2001.

    If you liked what you heard please and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • On this week's episode, Sylvie and Chris look back at the mid-2000s flirtation with martial arts cinema and wonder aloud what exactly a legendary claymation company from jolly ol' England was doing collaborating with Decode Entertainment. It's Aardman Animation's Chop Socky Chooks (no, that's not a slur! It just Aussie for Kung-fu Chicken). A high-concept tribute to martial arts cinema from an innovator in claymation that is neither A). interested in martial arts cinema, or B). claymated. This was Flushed Away era of Aardman Animation we're dealing with, people.

    Episode covered for the podcast is Episode 14 "Karaoke Zombies." Directed by Sergio Delfino. Written by J.D. Smith. Original Canadian airdate June 14, 2008.

    If you liked what you heard please and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • On this week's episode, Chris and Sylvie struggle to find anything of value to say about a show for preschoolers that is the epitome of lazy edutainment. A cobbled-together variety program which lets the creators of Thomas the Tank Engine and stock footage from 60 years ago pad the runtime, there is nothing to the paltry animation of Salty's Lighthouse beyond the decades old footage it records over. Yes, turns out this was a secret CanaDUB episode all-along that took the British nautical puppet show TUGS and made it more Canadian. We had nothing to talk about here, so we mostly let Sylvie politely hijack the episode to teach Chris about the rarely discussed Canadian classic Theodore Tugboat. We pulled a real Salty's Lighthouse and padded our own runtime this week...yet we showed more effort, somehow.

    Episodes covered for the podcast are Episode 19 & 20 "Strike Up the Band" & "Blanketly Blank." Animation directed by Sue Peters and Jeff Hall, and written by Barry Harman, Steve Edelman, and Scott Guy respectively. Original airdates February 6th and February 13th, 1998.

    If you liked what you heard please and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • This week on the program, the CNIC Detour takes us back to college to work through those awkward, zany growing pains of living on our own, finding our identity, and never going to class or bothering with our actual education. From the desperate offices of MTV Animation comes a surprisingly touching, superbly crafted, and well-aged exploration of college life from the mind of a 19-year old who won a contest. It's Undergrads, and it is way more insightful and hilarious than you would expect. Plus, some unfortunate discussion about our cancelled episode 91 and we share our own uncomfortable college experiences.

    Make sure to follow Pete William's Kickstarter campaign for the Undergrads movie for updates.

    And here is a great article by Ben Cohen on the show's enduring popularity in Canada years after it flopped on MTV.

    Episode covered for the podcast is Episode 6 "Roommates." Directed by Jerry Popowich. Written by Julie Rottenberg, Elisa Zuritsky, Josh A. Cagan & Andy Rheingold. Original Canadian airdate September 23, 2001.

    If you liked what you heard please and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • On this week's episode, Chris and Sylvie answer the call of neglected kids in distress and save the day with cheap novelty toys with Captain Flamingo. While reminiscing and lamenting the bygone era of superhero media that was not under the conglomerate thumb of Marvel and DC, we chat about this utterly charming cartoon about forsaken kids in a world of uncaring, absent adults and the reality-warping powers of too much comic books. Plus, some diatribes about A.I. art (as we are want to do).

    Episode covered is 6a/b, "Ack Give my Backpack Back Jack/Appointment Terror." Written respectively by Myra Fried and Steve Wright. Both directed by Eduardo Soriano, Brad Neave, Oscar Perez Jr. and Tyler Schroeder. Original airdate March 28, 2006.

    If you liked what you heard please and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • Happy 2024 everybody!!!

    What better way to ring in the new year than with some unfinished programming from last December and a show that is the most technically Canadian thing we have ever covered. Heavily inspired by Japanese pop culture, based on a Canadian manga series and a 2010 film by a cult British director, and animated by one of the most critically acclaimed Japanese studios in the past 10 years for Netflix - there is barely any "Canadianess" in this series. But no matter how hard you try, you cannot stop us Canadian weebs from lamentably claiming Scott Pilgrim as one of our own.

    Episode covered for the podcast was Episode 1 "Scott Pilgrim's Precious Little Life." Directed and Storyboarded by Abel Góngora. Written by Bryan Lee O'Malley and BenDavid Grabinski. Original airdate November 17, 2023.

    If you liked what you heard please and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • On this week's episode of Cartoon Night in Canada's tribute series where we celebrate the anime co-productions this country tried to get off the ground in the 2000s, we return to an old favourite in the TMS produced Cybersix to really ponder whether or not we oversold or undersold how inexplicably horny it was last time we covered it. A lycanthropy love triangle, the best cape animation you'll ever see, and a litany of fetishes snuck into the margins make for one of the best pseudo-animes of all time. We send the awful year of 2023 out to pasture with a banger of a show.

    Episode covered for the podcast was Episode 10 "Full Moon Fascination." Directed by Keiko Oyamada. Written by Barry Whittaker. Original airdate 9, 1999.

    If you liked what you heard please and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • It's heavy hitter time here on CanaDUBcember! On this week's podcast, Chris and Sylvie let 'er rip against roaming gangs of pre-teens with devastating spinning tops containing the trapped souls of demigods. It's Beyblade!

    Is it a toy commercial? Kind of? Is it a gag dub? Kind of? Does it hold up? You better believe it!

    Episode covered for the podcast is Episode 1 "The Blade Raider." Original canadian airdate May 31 2002.

    If you liked what you heard please and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • On this week's journey into Canada's mid-2000s flirtation with that mysterious entity known as anime, a YA novel series about mounting giant arachnids in the hollow earth becomes nothing more than a blip in the storied careers of two titans of the industry. Brought to you in part by PA Works and Bee Train, it's another slapped together mélange of anime tropes and obvious inspirations that was somehow not just an excuse to sell toys. Calling all Spider Riders!

    Episode covered for the podcast was Episode 1 "The Inner World." Original Airdate March 26 2006.

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    Theme song by https://soundcloud.com/hvsyn

    Logo designed by https://www.rachelsumlin.com/

  • Throughout the entire month of December, we are in the spirit of celebrating with an entire month dedicated to covering what everybody associates with the holidays...ANIME!!!! Specifically, CanaDUBcember is an entire month spotlighting the exciting cross-cultural exchange of the anime boom in the early-to-late 2000s and the still felt effects it had on the media landscape. Not just officially licensed dubs produced here in Canada, but how Canada took a hands on approach to capitalizing on a popular culture shift through co-productions, anime inspired aesthetics, and tons of other surpriseses.

    We are kicking off the month with a "classic" in the "solely produced to sell toys and card games" of 2000s anime. The underwhelming, incomprehensible, and heavily dated Yu-Gi-Oh/Beyblade coattail rider somehow produced in part by our friends at Nelvana - Bakugan Battle Brawlers.

    Episode covered for the podcast is Episode 1 "Bakugan: The Battle Begins." Directed by Mitsuo Hashimoto. Original Canadian airdate February 24, 2008.

    If you liked what you heard please and wish to support the show, please consider subscribing and leaving a nice review on your podcatcher of choice.

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