Author Archive

Wednesday, June 21st, 2023

Comic Books: Kirby and Severin in Not Brand Echh

Marie Severin Marvel Not Brand Echh

Animation Resources supporter, Kevin O’Neil was reading one of our comic book articles earlier this week, and it reminded him of some treasures in his own stash of comics. So he came down to the archive and lent us his collection to digitize. Thanks, Kevin!

Current superhero comics (now referred to self-importantly as "graphic novels") take themselves VERY seriously. It’s rare for a publisher to allow a parody of its own characters… and unheard of for the creator himself to get the opportunity to make fun of his own creation. But back in the silver age of comics, cartoonists didn’t take themselves quite so seriously. Here we have the unthinkable… Jack Kirby and Stan Lee doing a parody of their own Fantastic Four and Silver Surfer comics for Marvel’s Not Brand Echh!

Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh

Not Brand Echh was a short-lived humor comic line from Marvel that parodied superhero comics. The title was derived from the term of derision used in the letters section of Marvel comics to describe competing comic book companies… "Brand Echh" was a riff on TV commercials that compared products to their competitor, "Brand X". The series ran for 13 issues from August of 1967 to May of 1969, and featured art by Bill Everett (see our recent post on Bob’s Big Boy), Roy Thomas and John and Marie Severin.

Here we have a story from the premiere issue of Not Brand Echh titled, "The Silver Burper". The plot was loosely based on the story of Fantastic Four #57 through #60… It was written by Stan Lee and drawn by the great Jack Kirby. (Inking by Frank Giacoia and lettering by Artie Simek.)

Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh

Marie Severin Marvel Not Brand Echh

Here’s a parody that mingles the superhero universes of both Marvel and DC. Other stories in this issue lampoon Gold Key’s Magnus, Robot Fighter and Tower’s T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents.

Marie Severin Marvel Not Brand Echh

Marie Severin is one of the underrated geniuses behind Marvel comics. She started as a colorist for EC Comics in the 1950s, where she established a reputation for creating sophisticated color schemes that raised the level of quality above the arbitrary primary and secondary colors that filled other comics at the time. She transitioned to working as an artist on the Doctor Strange and Sub-Mariner lines, but really made her mark doing parodies in Not Brand Echh and Crazy.

Marie Severin Marvel Not Brand Echh

One of those unanswerable questions that never seems to go away (at least at gatherings of comic book nerds) is "Who would win in a battle between Batman and Superman?" Fanboys have expended many hours debating the fine points of this and other match-ups with no clear answer. But now we finally get to see the decisive outcome of a battle royale between the "Caped Crusader" and the "Web Slinger"!

Here we have a story from the second issue of Not Brand Echh titled, "Peter Pooper vs Gnatman And Rotten". It was written by Stan Lee and drawn by the Marie Severin. (Inking by Frank Giacoia and lettering by Al Kurzrok.)

Marie Severin Marvel Not Brand Echh
Marie Severin Marvel Not Brand Echh
Marie Severin Marvel Not Brand Echh
Marie Severin Marvel Not Brand Echh
Marie Severin Marvel Not Brand Echh
Marie Severin Marvel Not Brand Echh
Marie Severin Marvel Not Brand Echh
Marie Severin Marvel Not Brand Echh

Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh

Here is another great team-up of Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, "The Origin of Forbush Man".

Stan Lee Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh

Buy Me At AmazonMark Evanier has a new book out titled, Kirby: KIng of Comics. I haven’t had a chance to take a look at it yet, but I’m sure it’s great. Click through the link to find out about it at Amazon. If anyone out there would like to contribute a copy to the Animation Resources library, we would greatly appreciate it!

Stan Lee Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh

Here we have a story from the fifth issue of Not Brand Echh titled, "The Origin of Forbush Man". It was written by Stan Lee, laid out by Jack Kirby, drawn by Tom Sutton, with lettering by Artie Simek.

Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh
Jack Kirby Marvel Not Brand Echh

Animation Resources is looking for collectors of gold and silver age comic books, 50s and 60s Mad magazines, 50s Playboys, National Lampoon, etc. who would be willing to lend us their books to digitize. If you’d like to help out, contact me at… sworth@animationresources.org.

Check out the new book collecting Not Brand Ecch!

Stephen Worth
Director
Animation Resources

Comic BooksComic Books

This posting is part of the online Encyclopedia of Cartooning under the subject heading, Comic Books.

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Tuesday, June 13th, 2023

PODCAST: Cartoony Music Live Stream Schedule

Podcasts

Animation Resources has embarked on a podcasting series with informal screenings, interviews and seminars. Normally, these are hosted on our Members Only page, but occasionally we share them with the public. Make a note of the date and time and tune in.

AUDIO PODCAST:
Animated Discussions Podcast

Cartoony Music With Skip Heller
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Animated Discussions 011 / Hosted by Davey Jarrell with Stephen Worth and Skip Heller
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NewNewBack in 2007 when the Animation Archive was still under the umbrella of ASIFA-Hollywood, Stephen Worth sat down several times with musician Skip Heller to talk about cartoony music for the A-HAA Podcast. Each time, they chose a musician and explained how their music related to cartoons, playing a representative bit of their music. There were five segments altogether and they were a lot of fun.

Animation Resources’ programming director, Davey Jarrell ran across these old podcasts recently and thought it would be a good idea to combine all of the "Skip and Steve" segments into one Animated Discussions podcast. Join us for a musical spin through some of the funniest and craziest music ever created. Skip and Steve throw down a lot of breadcrumbs to follow for google research into the subject too, so take notes!

Skip Heller is a remarkably versatile musician. He’s performed in every style imaginable. He’s composed for symphony orchestras, played country music and blues in honky tonks, performed in jazz trios and punk bands and did music for both Dexter’s Lab and Flintstones On The Rocks. A true renaissance man with deep roots in the history of his medium, no one knows more about this genre of music than Skip.

AD011: Cartoony Music With Skip Heller
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MP3 Audio File / 1:30:41 / 176 MB Download

SCHEDULE OF LIVE STREAMS

Tuesday June 13, 2023 2pm (PDT)
Tuesday June 13, 2023 6pm (PDT)

Saturday June 17, 2023 2pm (PDT)
Saturday June 17, 2023 6pm (PDT)

Sunday June 25, 2023 2pm (PDT)
Sunday June 25, 2023 6pm (PDT)

Friday June 30, 2023 2pm (PDT)
Friday June 30, 2023 6pm (PDT)

Monday July 3, 2023 2pm (PDT)
Monday July 3, 2023 6pm (PDT)

Saturday July 8, 2023 2pm (PDT)
Saturday July 8, 2023 6pm (PDT)

Sunday July 9, 2023 2pm (PDT)
Sunday July 9, 2023 6pm (PDT)

LIVE STREAM LOCATIONS

The Cartoon History podcast will be live-streamed simultaneously to these locations. We recommend you use Animation Resources’ own streaming page to avoid disconnects by third party sites.

Animation Resources Live Stream Page
Animation Resources
(Also on YouTube and Facebook)

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Thursday, June 1st, 2023

LAST CALL! RefPack051: A Peek At The Early Anime Downloads

People who aren’t members of Animation Resources don’t understand how comprehensive our Reference Packs are. Over a couple of weeks, we are posting what each section of our current RefPack looks like. Today we are sharing the Early Anime section. If you are a member of Animation Resources, click on this post to go to the Members Only page. If you aren’t a member yet, today is the perfect time to join! Our current Reference Pack is one of our best yet, and General and Student Members get access to a special Bonus Archive with even more material from past Reference Packs.

What are you waiting for?
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JOIN TODAY!
https://animationresources.org/membership/levels/


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Early Anime

Lately, Animation Resources board member JoJo Baptista has been researching the early history of Japanese animation. He has searched out video copies of 1960s anime to add to our Animation Archive. Over the past year, he has accumulated hundreds of hours of rare television programs. We will be will be sharing some of them with you in our Reference Packs. Our members have asked us to share complete films and publications with them, not excerpts, so we will be sharing complete half hour episodes with you. We don’t claim that everything here is great. But there are great bits. You can sift through them and discover the gems for yourself.

SD VIDEO:
Big X

Big X
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Curated by JoJo Baptista
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Eps. 41 & 50 / TMS, Osamu Tezuka (1964)
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Big X was created by Osamu Tezuka, and it was the first television series produced by TMS (Tokyo Movie Shinsha). It debuted on August 3rd, 1964 and 59 episodes were made, of which only 22 survive. The story involves a Nazi secret weapon that is smuggled out of Germany by surgically implanting a card with the formula inscribed on it into a young man named Shigeru. Years later, Shigeru is living in Tokyo. The card is discovered in his body and is removed. Nazi sympathizers steal the card, and a serum from the formula is made by the grandson of a Nazi scientist. It turns out to be a drug that turns a man into a giant. Shigeru’s son Akira recovers the drug and uses it to fight various evil doers and monsters.

Big X

Big X was one of the very first television cartoons made in Japan. The process hadn’t been established yet and it shows in this show. The staging from scene to scene is completely random. A downshot will be followed by an upshot, characters face left in one shot and right in the next, perspective is off with the character level in a completely different plane than the background, lipsync consists of randomly exposed “gum chewing” cycles that aren’t always lined up to the beginning or end of the dialogue, and there are reuse scenes and camera errors everywhere. There’s absolutely no direction or context to anything that happens on the screen in Big X.


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Big X

But although there isn’t anything in this show to learn in the way of technique, it does a good job of what it intends to do… give kids a half hour of weird fun. While Tezuka’s manga is plot heavy, the animated adaptation is almost completely without continuity. It resembles early Van Beuren cartoons in that it appears to have not been storyboarded. Sequences must have been handed out to animators to do whatever they want with. Every animator seems to have his own idea of what kind of show they were making, and styles vary from cut to cut. These styles have considerable appeal, and randomly juggled throughout the half hour, at least they give everyone something to like.

Big X

Not everything is poorly drawn though. In episode 41, there are several scenes of the main character that are animated volumetrically in good perspective (see the scene that starts at 21:27.) There are also character designs that are drawn in a very funny style (see 02:39, 06:18, 08:44). These designs are even animated funny (10:03, 18:09).

Big X


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Episode 50 starts out with a sequence that seems to be influenced by UPA’s Mr. Magoo feature, 1001 Arabian Nights. There’s another strange perspective shot and a very odd walk cycle at 03:24. At 07:21 the whole cartoon shifts to a parody (?) of Disney, along with lots of random cuts that don’t play out long enough or hook up with each other. At 12:59 there’s a funny sequence with squirrels (or are they monkeys?) At 17:58 there is a dragon lifted straight out of Sleeping Beauty.

Big X

The individual moments succeed in sustaining audience interest, but don’t look for context or putting across character’s personalities or a story here. If I had to pick one word to describe this show, it’s “slapdash”. But there’s enough enthusiasm and fun to make it sort of worthwhile. The animators on this series had lots of big ideas without the experience nor the resources to pull them off. But they take a valiant stab at it and create something fun, even if it is primitive and random. The fact that the main character pokes himself with a hypodermic needle in the title sequence pretty much guarantees this series won’t be re-run ever again.

Big X

I’ll have more early Japanese TV series to share with you in our next Reference Pack.

REFPACK051: Big X Ep. 41
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MP4 Video File / SD / 25:55 / 186 MB Download
 
REFPACK051: Big X Ep. 50
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MP4 Video File / SD / 25:56 / 217 MB Download


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Animation Resources is one of the best kept secrets in the world of cartooning. Every month, we sponsor a program of interest to artists, and every other month, we share a book and up to an hour of rare animation with our members. If you are a creative person interested in the fields of animation, cartooning or illustration, you should be a member of Animation Resources!

It’s easy to join Animation Resources. Just click on this link and you can sign up right now online…


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