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[13] [14] AdWeek called adult animation "animated projects aimed at grown-ups, not kids." [15] In North America, there is children's animation, adult animation, and young adult animation, with various mature animations in the United States, especially in television series.
An episode of Camp Camp, an adult-oriented animated cartoon published by Rooster Teeth. Adult animation, also known as mature animation, and infrequently as adult-oriented animation, is a term of any animated type or media that is catered specifically to adult interests and is mainly targeted and marketed towards adults and adolescents, as opposed to children or all-ages audiences.
[13] [14] AdWeek called adult animation "animated projects aimed at grown-ups, not kids." [15] In North America, there is children's animation, adult animation, and young adult animation, with various mature animations in the United States, especially in television series.
Global animation has seen a significant uptick in the production and dissemination of titles produced for mature audiences. Catalonia is no exception, and the Spanish community’s adult animation ...
This is a list of adult animated films that were made from the 1920s onwards. These are films intended for a more mature audience than many animated films, both short and feature. They are often distinct from television series or web series.
In 2019, Sony Pictures Animation announced the creation of an "Alternative Animation Initiative" dedicated to producing films aimed at more mature audiences. [154] The adult animation film Cryptozoo by Dash Shaw was released at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival .
Adult animation has slowly moved forward in Canada. From 2002 to 2003, Clone High, a Canadian–American adult animated sitcom, a parody of teen dramas such as Dawson's Creek and Beverly Hills, 90210, [1] first aired in its entirety on Canadian cable network Teletoon at Night between 2002 and 2003, later debuting on MTV.
Beginning with Animerama, the first Japanese animated film trilogy or series to be rated X by the MPAA established in the United States, begins the first film of the trilogy is A Thousand and One Nights (1969), was a success in Japan with distribution box-office revenue of ¥290 million, [2] it fails at the box-office revenue in the United States until Fritz the Cat, the first animated film ...