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    Get a Complete List of the Top 10 Best Animation Movies of all time

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    The animation world is huge. You will get many of the best animation movies of all time. Disney and Pixar first time depicted hand-drawn animation into animation. masterworks of Walt Disney to modern-day technological wonders from Pixar, Laika, and Illumination, we love animated films because, at their best, they present limitless possibilities for storytelling. You will get much best storytelling along with quality, cultural impact, how well they’ve aged, and re-watchability. This is the definitive ranking of the best-animated feature films ever. 

    Here is the list of the Top 10 Best Animation Movies of all time- 

    10. Shrek (2001) 

    The third and fourth Shrek movies got pretty bad pretty fast, so it might be hard to remember just how fresh, surprising, and invigorating the first one was. The story of the ogre (Mike Myers) who falls for a fair princess (Cameron Diaz) had a relentless irreverence only matched by the tenderness of its heart. Love is blind. Few films since City Lights have expressed that with such clarity and sincerity. 

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    Best Animation Movies of all time 

    9. The Toy Story series 

    Pixar has come with the mature saga of long-term friendship—and growing up—ushered in a new era of animation. The series maintained massive critical and financial success for a quarter-century. 

    There are some of the unexpected dark and bittersweet detours taken in its third act are among the greatest creative risks the artists at Pixar have ever taken, and the most rewarding. Perhaps especially for millennial audiences who grew up with Andy, Toy Story 3 is a profoundly moving film. The fourth picture is often brilliant. 

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    8. Fantasia (1940)  

    Fantasia, Walt Disney’s ambitious collection coming with eight animated musical vignettes set to a score to be conducted by Leopold Stokowski and emceed by Mickey Mouse, the first movie ever released in stereo, was so expensive that it didn’t start to turn a profit until its 1969 theatrical re-release. The film has been re-released so often that it is one of the highest-grossing films of all time when taking inflation into account. The next time you have an opportunity to experience Fantasia on the big screen, don’t pass it up. A state-of-the-art sound system–or better yet, a live orchestra–turns Fantasia up to 11. 

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    7. Finding Nemo (2003)  

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    This is Pixar’s best animation titled ‘Finding Nemo’ which is the best is totally daunting. As much in its screenwriting as in its groundbreaking underwater visuals, Finding Nemo is a masterpiece. Laugh-out-loud funny with an abundance of pathos, the underwater adventure is all about the woes of helicopter parenting, the inevitability of risk, and even danger. 

    6. Bambi (1942)  

    The movie about a white-tailed deer who becomes the Great Prince of the Forest remains a touchstone for animation. The unforgettable paintings of Tyrus Wong inspire the great creators of modern times. For young audiences, Bambi is gateway horror, with a death scene that’s among the most famous, and famously upsetting, in film history. 

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    5. Beauty and the Beast (1991) 

    From Disney’s franchise, this is the second film in the Disney Renaissance is an even more refined, dramatically punchy film than The Little Mermaid. Taking a cue from the 1946 French masterwork La Belle et La Bête, benefiting enormously from the songs of Ashman/Menken, this is a landmark. From some perspective, the film was first shown to an audience in September 1991 at the New York Film Festival, in an unfinished “work print” cut.  

    4. Sleeping Beauty (1959) 

    For a generation or more, Disney’s most ambitious and expensive (at the time) effort was only seen on VHS, cropped and incomplete. Watch it today on a huge screen, with rich sound. It’s a singular experience. Under the art direction of Eyvind Earle, Sleeping Beauty is a labor-intensive high-point for this medium. Some say Aurora doesn’t have as much personality as other Disney leads, and some say the 75-minute film has a thin narrative.  This has all set to the thunderous, swirling, brass-heavy Tchaikovsky-infused orchestral score—is to fully appreciate one of the most spectacularly realized and exciting action-adventure set pieces ever staged. Seriously, it escalates like Die Hard. 

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    3. Spirited Away (2001) 

    Miyazaki said once that the Princess Mononoke would be his final film, and let us all be glad that wasn’t the case. Meeting the 10-year-old daughter of a friend inspired Miyazaki to create this adventure about a young girl crossing over to the spirit world via an enchanted bathhouse have been eclipsed even Miyazaki’s own previous great films and set the current high-water mark for elegance and inventiveness in traditional animation. Miyazaki incorporated some CGI that famously draws tens of thousands of frames by hand for every feature. Spirited Away is an achingly bittersweet epic about growing up and adjusting to change. This is also one of the best-animated movies of all time. 

    2. Pinocchio (1940) 

    Walt Disney‘s one of the best creations and the second full-length feature is at least as stunning as its predecessor; it’s the only picture that can give Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs a run for its money for the title of the greatest animated film of all time. This is also one of the best-animated movies of all time. In this, the characters are more deeply developed, and the strides in animation. It’s also a more frightening watch; everything on Pleasure Island is just plain nightmare fuel. The cursed island turns wayward little boys into donkeys, in a seriously grotesque fashion. 

    Forrest Gump helmer Robert Zemeckis is directing the in-development live-action remake. Disney is rumored to be on the fence about whether to give the update a theatrical launch or release it on Disney+.  

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    1.  Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) 

    The one that started it all, the first animated feature in history, is one of the key American artistic triumphs of the 20th century. Walt Disney bet the farm on this musical fantasy, and a lot of people thought he was nuts to believe audiences would connect with hand-drawn creations for 80 minutes. This is also one of the best-animated movies of all time. 

    Additionally Gothic notes and some visuals inspired by German Expressionism, Snow White features a big bad named one of the ten most unforgettable film villains by the American Film Institute: Snow White’s wicked stepmother, a scheming royal witch who will stop at nothing to destroy the lovable princess, purely out of vanity. 

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