Spanish animation refers to animation made in Spain.
Short films
Silent era
is considered the pioneer of Spanish animation, with the stop-motion shorts he made in France for Pathé starting with La maison hantée. An animated sequence within family footage on the First Communion of a child called Mercedes Cura is thought to be the first piece of animation made in Spain. For a long time El toro fenómeno, which was lost, was considered the first Spanish animated production, but nowadays El apache de Londres, also lost, is thought to date from 1915, and thus the centenary of Spanish animation was held in 2015. They were immediately followed by other shorts, including political satires. Starting in 1917 with animated sketches were included in newsreels, and that same year Joaquín Xaudaró, the best known Spanish animator from the interwar period, made his first film, Las aventuras de Jim Trot, and in 1920 he created the first Spanish sci-fi-themed animated film, La fórmula del Doctor Nap. In 1932 Xaudaró founded SEDA, the first animation production company in the country, and the directed its first film, Un drama en la costa, which turned out to be his last film as he died in 1933. The company outlived him briefly, producing three more films: El rata primero, Francisca, la mujer fatal and Serenata. En los pasillos del Congreso, a satire of the Second Republic's politics, was left unfinished. By then other cartoonists were experimenting with animation on their own, like José Escobar with La rateta que escrombrara l'escaleta. Stop-motion was introduced in Spanish animation by Salvador Gijón in 1935, with Sortilegio vacuno and Españolada. It seemed to catch on, and three films were created by different teams in the following year's first months, but the Civil War's outbreak put a halt to all animated productions.
In the 1980s the feature production was diversified under the new autonomous system and films based in the local traditions were produced, such as The Magic Pumpkin in Euskadi and Despertaferro in Catalonia. The Town Musicians of Bremen, which spun a popular series, Los Trotamúsicos, was the first animation film prized at the Goya Awards. Feature production didn't make an impact for most of the 1990s, and only one Goya award was granted in the first half of the decade, for The Return of the North Wind. It was however a period of experimentation: Megasónicos was the first European CGI animation feature, and A Child's Play was the first Spanish stop-motion feature. Production rose in the following years, and in 2000 four films competed for the Goya Award for the first time. The Living Forest was the first widely distributed CGI feature, but most films were made in traditional animation for the first half of the decade. While most of them were influenced by American animation, Gisaku was branded as the first Spanish anime feature and released at nearly the same time in Japan and Spain.
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Television animation
Classic era
Animation first appeared at the Spanish television in commercials and spots. The most famous one was José Luis Moro's The Telerín Family, which was used to tell children it was time to go to bed. Its characters went on to star in the 1966 The Wizard of Dreams feature. In 1968 former Estudios Moro animator Cruz Delgado created for TVE the first Spanish animated series, Microbio. One year before émigré animator Manuel García Ferré had created in Argentina the Hijitus series.