"Siskel & Ebert & the Movies" The Ghost Writer/Shutter Island (TV Episode 2010)
A clip is shown during the Out-Pick the Critics segment."Familiar Faces" Familiar Faces #22: Top 11 Irish Characters (TV Episode 2010)
Aisling is number 1"AniMat's Classic Reviews" The Secret of Kells (TV Episode 2013)
Reviewed, clips shown."Clean Break" Episode #1.4 (TV Episode 2015)
Briefly seen in cinema."WatchMojo" Top 10 Animated Movies from Around the World (TV Episode 2016)
The Secret of Kells is #8.
La 82e cérémonie des Oscars (TV Special 2010)
announced as Best Animated Feature nominee"AniMat's Reviews" Fantastic Mr. Fox (TV Episode 2010)
AniMat confirms he will review this film in the future."Animation Lookback" Don Bluth Part 2 (TV Episode 2011)
Picture shown as an example of an Irish animated film.Le chant de la mer (2014)
Aisling is partly seen among the trick-or-treaters in the bus."AniMat's Classic Reviews" Chico & Rita (TV Episode 2014)
Mentioned as an independent animated feature that AniMat reviewed in the past.
Le voleur et le cordonnier (1993)
According to Tomm Moore, "Some friends in college and I were inspired by Richard Williams' unfinished masterpiece Le voleur et le cordonnier (1993) and the Disney movie Mulan (1998), which took indigenous traditional art as the starting point for a beautiful style of 2D animation. I felt that something similar could be done with Irish art, especially the beautiful tradition of Celtic knotwork that is so popular today."Mulan (1998)
According to Tomm Moore, "Some friends in college and I were inspired by Richard Williams unfinished masterpiece Le voleur et le cordonnier (1993) [referred to as The Thief and the Cobbler] and the Disney movie Mulan (1998), which took indigenous traditional art as the starting point for a beautiful style of 2D animation. I felt that something similar could be done with Irish art, especially the beautiful tradition of Celtic knotwork that is so popular today."Samurai Jack (TV Series 2001–2017)
According to Tomm Moore, "The main stylistic influences outside of medieval art that we referenced were Genndy Tartakovsky's Samurai Jack (2001), which uses so many international filmic and art influences so well."
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