Highlights
Ella McCay - Jamie Lee’s Camera Roll Clip
Ella McCay
Wicked: For Good - Emotional Journey Clip
Wicked: For Good
Bathtub Scene Breakdown with Yerin Ha & Luke Thompson - Bridgerton Season 4 Part 2
Bridgerton
Paradise Season 2 - Sterling K. Brown as Xavier Collins
Paradise
Rental Family - Scoring a Family Clip
Rental Family
Obsession - Official Poster
Obsession
Rental Family - Premiere Clip
Rental Family
Scarpetta Season 1 - Jamie Lee Curtis Character Poster
Scarpetta
Scream 7 - Yearning for Blood Clip
Scream 7
Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man - Cillian Murphy as Tommy
Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man
Hoppers - Jumping Into the Adventure Clip
Hoppers
Half Man Season 1 - Jamie Bell and Richard Gadd
Half Man
Scream 7 - Featurette
Scream 7
Scarpetta Season 1 - Nicole Kidman as Kay Scarpetta
Scarpetta

Yuri Norstein

Yuri Norstein
Latest Trailers
Birthday
September 15th, 1941
From
Andreevka, Penzenskaya oblast, RSFSR, USSR
Director

Yuri Norstein Biography

PAR Yuri Norstein (Russian: Ю́рий Бори́сович Норште́йн, Yuriy Borisovich Norshteyn; born 15 September 1941), is a Soviet and Russian animator best known for his animated shorts, Hedgehog in the Fog and Tale of Tales. Since 1981 he has been working on a feature film called The Overcoat, based on the short story by Nikolai Gogol of the same name.

According to the Washington Post, "He is considered by many to be not just the best animator of his era, but the best of all time". Yuri Norstein was born to a Jewish family in the village of Andreyevka, Penza Oblast, during his parents' World War II evacuation. He grew up in the Maryina Roshcha suburb of Moscow. After studying at an art school, Norstein initially found work at a furniture factory.

Then he finished a two-year animation course and found employment at studio Soyuzmultfilm in 1961. The first film that he participated in as an animator was Who Said "Meow"? (1962). After working as an animation artist in some fifty films, Norstein got the chance to direct his own. In 1968 he debuted with 25th October, the First Day, sharing directorial credit with Arkadiy Tyurin.

The film used the artwork of 1920s-era Soviet artists Nathan Altman and Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin. The next film in which he had a major role was The Battle of Kerzhenets (1971), a co-production with Russian animation director Ivan Ivanov-Vano under whose direction Norstein had earlier worked on 1969's Times of the Year. Throughout the 1970s Norstein continued to work as an animator in many films, and also directed several.

As the decade progressed his animation style became ever more sophisticated, looking less like flat cut-outs and more like smoothly-moving paintings or sophisticated pencil sketches. His most famous film is Tale of Tales, a non-linear, autobiographical film about growing up in the postwar Soviet world. Norstein uses a special technique in his animation, involving multiple glass planes to give his animation a three-dimensional look.

The camera is placed at the top looking down on a series of glass planes about a meter deep (one every 25–30 cm). The individual glass planes can move horizontally as well as toward and away from the camera (to give the effect of a character moving closer or further away). For many years he has collaborated with his wife, the artist Francheska Yarbusova, and the cinematographer Aleksandr Zhukovskiy.

Source: Wikipedia

Show More

Yuri Norstein Movies

Trending Celebrities