 As far as animation, there's been a lot of people asking me about animation, and I broke it down into three categories. Because animation is huge, as far as I'm concerned, some of the most brilliant movies ever made have been animation, some of the most important movies ever made have been animation. So what I'll give you, I broke this down into three categories. One of them, the first one being, I'm going to give you a list of ten full-length animated movies that I've watched multiple times. So this isn't, you know, I wanted to do the ten best animated movies, but very difficult to do because again, it depends on the genre, and you know, there are amazing movies out there that I've only watched once, I've only had the opportunity to watch once, right? So these are, we'll call this the ten full-length animated movies that I've watched multiple times. First one, and this is in no order. The first one on the list is Tekken Kin Kirit, then English name would be black and white. It came out in 2006, and it's based on a manga series from 1993, 1994, and wow, what a brilliant movie, really just visually stunning in the story, it was absolutely magnificent. And after watching the movie, I tracked down the manga, and I read the manga, and the movie was fantastic as well, really amazing. After the first five minutes of that movie, ten minutes of the movie doesn't blow you away visually, I don't know what well. The second movie is from 1988, from Studio Ghibli, Grey of the Fireflies. And it's, wow, what a powerful movie. It's the movie that I, it's the two go-to movie that I expose people to, if they've never watched animation, if they're into more serious movies and stuff like this, if they're into the brush-off animation, Grey of the Fireflies is what I introduce them to, and it was directed by Isio Takahata, a Japanese studio Ghibli, a third movie, absolutely brilliant movie, it's sort of a French-Canadian, I believe French-Canadian, sort of multiple countries involved in this, Thief and the Cobbler, on the production for this, started in 1964, and they were able to finally finish it in 1995, it came out, I think it was released in 1993, but I think it was released before that, I remember finding out that this movie, it cost a lot of money. It's absolutely brilliant, it's like, asherish, as far as the animation is concerned, just layered, but the production was taking so long, it's considered to be the longest production movie there's ever been, and at some point I believe the DVD for this was being released with cereal boxes, like one of the children's cereal boxes, they included the DVD of this in the cereal box, it should be much better known, fourth movie on the list, Cowboy Beep Up, the movie 2001, amazing movie, amazing movie, fifth movie, The Prophet, it came out in 2014, it's got multiple directors, it's based on the book by the Lebanese writer, artist, philosopher I guess they mentioned here, Khalil Gibran, and it's amazing, it's a fantastic animation really, I've already watched it two or three times, it came out, I was just exposed to it a few months ago, well in the last year anyway, a fantastic movie and great stories and the animation styles are beautiful, beautiful, very reminiscent of Animatrix, The Prophet, the sixth movie, The Iron Giant, 1999, brilliant, brilliant movie, very powerful movie, the seventh movie, Princess Mononoke, 1997, Studio Ghibli again, directed by Miyazaki, Princess Mononoke, amazing movie, fantastic theme, and again from Miyazaki, and this movie, Miyazaki's movies have certain themes associated with them which is environmental, and this movie as well just blew me away, 1984, it came out, Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, and I didn't know this, I found this out after looking this up, but this is the movie that gave birth to Studio Ghibli and Miyazaki's success, Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind, was so successful that Miyazaki started Studio Ghibli with just kicking that off into Studio Ghibli, fantastic, and a couple other animations, old school that I've watched the most would be Heavy Metal from 1981, fantastic, and it has Vancouver roots to it, I believe some of the production was done here or financed from here, and Lord of the Rings, the 1978 animation that was Bakshi, Ralph Bakshi, and fantastic, amazing animation, too bad they ran out of money to finish the whole thing off, but fantastic animation, I saw both of these in the movie theatre, Heavy Metal I got in, I was a kid but I got in, and Lord of the Rings was a double feature with Clash of the Titans, and I went on a matinee by myself and watched it, it was fantastic, right, so those are 10 movies, animated movies that I've watched multiple times and I will continue to watch multiple times.