Author Archive

Monday, May 29th, 2023

RefPack051: Last Call. Download Now!

Reference Pack

Every other month, Animation Resources shares a new Reference Pack with its members. They consist of e-books packed with high resolution scans video downloads of rare animated films set up for still frame study, as well as podcasts and documentaries— all designed to help you become a better artist. Make sure you download this Reference Pack before it’s updated. When it’s gone, it’s gone!


MEMBERS LOGIN To Download

JOIN TODAY To Access Members Only Content


The latest Animation Resources Reference Pack has been uploaded to the server. Here’s a quick overview of what you’ll find when you log in to the members only page…

PDF E-BOOK
Hiroshige Tokaido Road

53 Stations Of The Tokaido Road
Download Page
Utagawa Hiroshige
Download this article

Animation Resources is proud to be able to share an e-book featuring the complete collection of one of the masterpieces of Japanese art, Utagawa Hiroshige’s 53 Stations Of The Tokaido Road. Vincent Van Gogh collected prints from this set, and Frank Lloyd Wright described them as "the most valuable contributions ever made to the art of the world." These are not cartoons, designed to be flipped through quickly. The images look deceptively simple at first, but closer examination will reveal amazing details that make the pictures come to life. Each one is a world unto itself.

SD VIDEO:
John Sutherland

It’s Everybody’s Business
Download Page
Carl Urbano / John Sutherland Productions / 1954

John Sutherland was a producer of industrial films. His studio maintained high production values thanks to the top artists that worked under him. Carl Urbano directed the film we are sharing here, and Bill Scott and George Gordon were the story artists. The animators on this short include Emery Hawkins, Abe Levitow and Bill Melendez, and the production designer was Maurice Noble. The music is by Les Baxter and Eugene Poddany. That’s a staff that would be the envy of any major animation studio.


MEMBERS LOGIN To Download

JOIN TODAY To Access Members Only Content


SD VIDEO:
Khitruk Stompy

Stompy
Download Page
Fyodor Khitruk / Soyuzmultfilm, Russia / 1964
Download this article

In previous Reference Packs, we shared Fyodor Khitruk’s adaptation of A. A. Milne’s stories about Winnie the Pooh. This time, we are sharing one of Khitruk’s early films, "Stompy". Khitruk’s design in this film is brilliant, especially the use of flat areas of color surrounding lush textures. It makes you want to reach out and pet the characters.

SD VIDEO:
Karel Dodal

Mystery Of The MK204 Turning Point
Download Page
Karel Dodal / Prague, Czechoslovakia / 1934

In one of our previous Reference Packs, we included two commercials from Czechoslovakia. This time, we feature a very early animated commercial by Karel Dodal. The history of animation in Czechoslovakia goes back to the 1920s. Karel Dodal, not only produced advertisements like this one (some featuring Felix the Cat), but also puppet and experimental films.

SD VIDEO:
The Breakdown

The Breakdown
Download Page
Klaus Georgi & Lutz Stutzner / DEFA, East Germany / 1988

Lutz Stutzner was trained as a designer of posters. While attending school in Dresden, he met Otto Muller the head of the DEFA animation studios in East Germany, who encouraged him to apply as a trainee at the studio. He rose to the position of director and teamed with Klaus Georgi who had helped to establish the animation division at DEFA. Georgi directed over 80 animated films in a variety of techniques: cel animation, cut outs, silhouette and puppet animation. When the Berlin Wall fell, many of the state owned businesses were liquidated, including DEFA. Lutz Stutzner was instrumental in organizing efforts to rescue important artifacts and film elements from East German film studios from being dispersed.


MEMBERS LOGIN To Download

JOIN TODAY To Access Members Only Content


SD VIDEO:
Professor Balthazar

Professor Balthazar in "The Rise And Fall Of Horatio"
Download Page
Zlatko Grgic / Zagreb Films, Croatia / 1967

In a previous Reference Pack we featured several Maxi-Cat mini-cartoons by Zlatko Grgic, a Croatian animator who later emigrated to Canada to join the Canadian Film Board. Grgic is best known for his series of cartoons featuring the character Professor Balthazar, an old man who solves problems for his friends by creating inventions with a magical machine. Produced between 1967 and 1973, the series ran all over the world. Its silent pantomime with voice over narration made it easy to translate to other countries It aired everywhere from New Zealand to Romania to Zimbabwe. In the United States it was featured on Chuck Jones’ television program, Curiosity Shop.

SD VIDEO:
Big X

Big X
Download Page
Curated by JoJo Baptista
Download Page
Eps. 41 & 50 / TMS, Osamu Tezuka (1964)
Download this article

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 22 survive. This early series breaks a lot of rules, from wildly off model poses to crazy perspective in the backgrounds to strange exaggerated movement. The artists were experimenting and learning as they went. The results are pretty rough, but they manage to make a fun and entertaining show, even with all the mistakes.


MEMBERS LOGIN To Download

JOIN TODAY To Access Members Only Content


SD VIDEO:
Hans Richter

Four Films By Hans Richter
Download Page
Rhythmus 21 (1921) / Ghosts For Breakfast (1927)
Hans Richter
Inflation (1928) / Race Symphony (1928)

Download this article

Our Sidetracks section features a pioneer of abstract filmmaking this time. Although Hans Richter may not be as well known as Salvador Dali, Piet Mondrian or Marcel Duchamp, he occupies as important a role in the history of the Dadaist and abstract movements in art. Between WWI and WWII, he explored abstraction as well as film making. In fact, his experimental film, "Rhytmus 21" was one of the very first abstract animated films. We’re sharing several of his major films, along with an interview done with Richter in 1972. These films may look primitive and technically crude today, but at the time they were made, they were groundbreaking. There was no precedent for these techniques. Throughout his life, Richter was a catalyst, always on the forefront facilitating revolutionary changes in art.

HD VIDEO:
Trucks and Pans

Trucks & Pans
Download Page
Curated By David Eisman
Download this article

Animation Resources Board Member, David Eisman discusses a subject you might not have thought about seriously before… trucks and pans. The truck, in essence, is the movement of a camera inward or outward. The pan is the movement of a camera from side-to-side, either left to right or right to left. In live action these camera moves are pretty straightforward, but they are more complicated in hand drawn animated films.


MEMBERS LOGIN To Download

JOIN TODAY To Access Members Only Content


ANNUAL MEMBER BONUS ARCHIVE
Download Page
Available to Student and General Members
  • E-BOOK: Arthur Rackham – Rip Van Winkle & Grimm’s Fairy Tales
  • VIDEO: Three Early Betty Boop Cartoons – Dizzy Dishes / Barnacle Bill / The Bum Bandit
  • VIDEO: Five Films By Norman McLaren – Mail Early / Hen Hop / Fiddle De Dee / Begone Dull Care / Blinkety Blank
Arthur Rackham

ANIMATION RESOURCES ANNUAL MEMBERS: Reference Pack 019 is now being rerun and is now available for download. It includes a PDF e-book of high resolution scans of illustrations by Arthur Rackham, three of the earliest Betty Boop cartoons, and a handful of films by the revolutionary animator Norman McLaren! These downloads will be available until May 1st and after that, they will be deleted from the server. So download them now!

Early Betty Boop

If you are currently on a quarterly membership plan, consider upgrading to an annual membership to get access to our bonus page with even more downloads. If you still have time on you quarterly membership when you upgrade to an annual membership, email us at…

Download Page
membership@animationresources.org

…and we will credit your membership with the additional time.

Norman McLaren

Click to access the…

Annual Member Bonus Archive
Download Page
Downloads expire after May 1st, 2023


MEMBERS LOGIN To Download

JOIN TODAY To Access Members Only Content


Whew! That is an amazing collection of treasures! At Animation Resources, our Advisory Board includes great artists and animators like Ralph Bakshi, Will Finn, J.J. Sedelmaier and Sherm Cohen. They’ve let us know the things that they use in their own self study so we can share them with you. That’s experience you just can’t find anywhere else. The most important information isn’t what you already know… It’s the information you should know about, but don’t know yet. We bring that to you every other month.

Haven’t Joined Yet?

Check out this SAMPLE REFERENCE PACK! It will give you a taste of what Animation Resources members get to download every other month!

Sample RefPack

CLICK TO DOWNLOAD A Sample RefPack!

Animation Resources is a 501(c)(3) non-profit arts organization dedicated to providing self study material to the worldwide animation community. If you are a creative person working in animation, cartooning or illustration, you owe it to yourself to be a member of Animation Resources.


MEMBERS LOGIN To Download

JOIN TODAY To Access Members Only Content


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…


JOIN TODAY!
https://animationresources.org/membership/levels/

PayPalAnimationAnimation Resources depends on your contributions to support its projects. Even if you can’t afford to join our group right now, please click the button below to donate whatever you can afford using PayPal.


FacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailFacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailby feather

Friday, May 19th, 2023

Members Update Live Stream TODAY!

YOU MISSED IT!

Animation Resources Live Streaming Project

Animation Resources is hosting regularly scheduled events LIVE on its Streaming Page. Join us every month to find out what’s happening at Animation Resources.

THIS MONTH’S PROGRAM

Members Update 002

REFPACK051 ENDING SOON!
Animation Resources
On The Animation Resources Live Stream Page
(Also Facebook and YouTube)
SUNDAY, May 21st, 2023 5:00 pm (PDT)
HOSTED BY DAVEY JARELL & DAVID EISMAN

Our schedule of monthly live streamed programs under the banner Members Update launches Sunday, October 23rd!

Animation Resources is starting off its second decade with a bang! Reference Pack 51 features the complete collection of one of the masterpieces of Japanese art, Utagawa Hiroshige’s 53 Stations Of The Tokaido Road, which Frank Lloyd Wright described as “the most valuable contributions ever made to the art of the world.” In addition, this reference pack features animated films from Russia, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Croatia, and Japan, four films by abstract filmmaker Hans Richter, and curated breakdowns of animated filmmaking techniques. This RefPack is going away at the end of May, so if you haven’t already, download it now.

Join Director of Programming Davey Jarrell and Director of Publications David Eisman as they discuss their favorite pieces from this reference pack on Sunday, May 21st at 5:00pm (PDT).

ABOUT YOUR HOSTS

Davey Jarell is a member of the Board of Directors of Animation Resources. He is a professional storyboard artist for television and acts as our Director of Programs.

David Eisman is an Animatic Editor who serves as the Director of Podcasting Events on the Board of Directors of Animation Resources.

ABOUT LIVE STREAMING

Animation Resources proudly presents its Live Streaming Project. Over the coming months, we will be presenting live chats, interviews, screenings and seminars. These programs will be open to the public on the date and time indicated. They will not be publicly archived. Archives of the programs will only be available to the members of Animation Resources on the Members Only page. If you miss the program, you’ve missed it, so set your calendar and join us at one of our live stream locations…

Animation Resources Live Stream Page (Primary Stream)
Also Facebook & YouTube

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…


JOIN TODAY!
https://animationresources.org/membership/levels/

PayPalAnimationAnimation Resources depends on your contributions to support its projects. Even if you can’t afford to join our group right now, please click the button below to donate whatever you can afford using PayPal.


FacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailFacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailby feather

Friday, May 5th, 2023

RefPack051: A Peek At The Side Tracks & Breakdowns Downloads

People who aren’t members of Animation Resources don’t understand how comprehensive our Reference Packs are. Over the next couple of weeks, we will be posting what each section of our current RefPack looks like, starting today with the Featured 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?
Download Page
JOIN TODAY!
https://animationresources.org/membership/levels/

Sidetrips

Inspiration for animated films doesn’t just come from other animated films. A lot can be gained from exposing yourself to music, dance, live action cinema and fine art. Even architecture can be a useful area to study. Occasionally, we will share interdisciplinary inspiration here in the Side Trips section.

SD VIDEO:
Hans Richter

Four Films By Hans Richter
Download Page
Rhythmus 21 (1921) / Ghosts For Breakfast (1927)
Hans Richter
Inflation (1928) / Race Symphony (1928)

Download this article

Although Hans Richter may not be as well known as Salvador Dali, Piet Mondrian or Marcel Duchamp, he occupies as important a role in the history of the Dadaist and abstract movements in art. Between WWI and WWII, he explored abstraction as well as film making. In fact, his experimental film, “Rhytmus 21” was one of the very first abstract animated films.

Hans Richter

He also made live action films following Dadaist principles, and pioneered sophisticated double exposure, opticals and montage techniques that would become standard in German expressionistic filmmaking a few years later.

In 1933, the Nazis destroyed Richter’s studio in Berlin in retaliation for his political stances, and he was branded a “degenerate” artist. A great deal of his work was destroyed, including the soundtrack to his Dadaist film, “Ghosts Before Breakfast” (1927).

Hans Richter

We’re sharing several of his major films, along with an interview done with Richter in 1972. Listen carefully to what Richter says about filmmaking and its relationship to classical tradition of arts like drawing and painting, as well as his declaration that film is the “conscious articulation of time”.

These films may look primitive and technically crude today, but at the time they were made, they were groundbreaking. There was no precedent for these techniques. Richter describes the process of making experimental films in the early days as an “eerie experience” like walking into an empty room with no space. Throughout his life, Richter was a catalyst, always on the forefront facilitating revolutionary changes in art.

Hans Richter

I conceive of the film as a modern art form particularly interesting to the sense of sight. Painting has its own peculiar problems and specific sensations, and so has the film. But there are also problems in which the dividing line is obliterated, or where the two infringe upon each other. More especially, the cinema can fulfill certain promises made by the ancient arts, in the realization of which painting and film become close neighbors and work together.

It’s clear that Richter thought like an animator.

Hans Richter

REFPACK051: Richter On Film 1972
Download Page
MP4 Video File / 12:13 / 349 MB Download

REFPACK051: Rhythmus 21 1921
Download Page
MP4 Video File / 3:20 / 30 MB Download

REFPACK051: Ghosts For Breakfast 1927
Download Page
MP4 Video File / 6:27 / 117 MB Download

REFPACK051: Inflation 1928
Download Page
MP4 Video File / 2:44 / 45 MB Download

REFPACK051: Race Symphony 1928
Download Page
MP4 Video File / 5:08 / 132 MB Download


MEMBERS LOGIN To Download

JOIN TODAY To Access Members Only Content


Breakdowns

One of the most popular features of Animation Resources’ social media accounts is our breakdown clips. Animation Resources board member, David Eisman shares a handful of them in each Reference Pack, along with analysis of what you can learn from still framing through the animation.

HD VIDEO:
Camera Moves

Trucks & Pans
Download Page
Curated By David Eisman
Download this article

In animation, there are three categories of camera moves: perspective turns, trucks, and pans. As perspective turns were discussed in Reference Pack 044, this article will focus on trucks, pans, and their variations. However, before these camera moves can be discussed in detail, they must be first defined in simplified terms. The truck, in essence, is the movement of a camera inward or outward. In live-action, this would be accomplished with a dolly, wherein a camera is mounted to an apparatus and pushed inward or outward along a track. The pan is the movement of a camera from side-to-side, either left to right or right to left. As for variations, there are multiple different types of trucks and pans. For the truck, there is the multiplane truck, manual truck, zoom, and multi-stage zoom. For the pan, there is the multiplane pan, single-plane pan, manual pan, and corkscrew pan.

Camera Moves

There are crucial differences between a truck and a zoom. In a truck, there are changes in perspective. As the camera moves inward, planes of the environment move away from center-frame. Likewise, with a truck-out, the planes move toward center-frame. Additionally, the planes rotate according to the movement direction. In the case of a truck-in, the planes rotate toward camera, and rotate away from camera during a truck-out. In a zoom, none of these things happen. Instead, the scope of the frame changes. With a zoom, the frame goes from being either completely in-view or only partially in-view. There are no planar movements or rotations. Crucially, for a successful animated zoom, the frame, itself, must be several times larger than typical so that there is no loss of resolution.

The first two categories of truck that will be discussed are the multiplane truck and manual truck, demonstrated by Breakdown 04 and Breakdown 05 respectively. Breakdown 04 was generated by a multiplane camera, a specialized animation device where multiple separate planes are moved at different rates to simulate planar movement. However, the weakness of the multiplane camera is its inability to create planar rotation. The planes themselves are still images and, thus, cannot be rotated, only moved. The multiplane camera does allow for the planes to be moved at different rates, which helps to better simulate depth-of-field, accommodating for the lack of rotation. The farther away a plane is from camera, the slower it is supposed to move. This can be achieved either through differentiation of timing or spacing. In terms of timing, for instance, the plane closest to camera would move on 1s, while the one furthest could possibly move on 4s. However, since Breakdown 04 is entirely on 1s, the differentiation of rates is accomplished through variations in spacing. The closest planes have wide spacing, while the farther planes have tight spacing, with the exception of the furthest plane – the castle – which is entirely stationary. The other weakness of the multiplane truck is that, by its very nature, must be separated into a distinct number of individual planes. It is physically impossible to generate an infinite number of planes. Yet, in reality, a shrub three inches further back from a tree is a separate plane and moves and rotates at a different rate. In a multiplane truck, the shrub and tree would be part of the same plane due to their close proximity.

Camera Moves

The manual truck, as showcased in Breakdown 05, has none of the weaknesses of the multiplane truck. Since the manual truck is just a series of sequential frames, it is completely possible to incorporate planar rotation as well as practically infinitesimally-small separations of the environment into distinct planes. The downside of the manual truck is that its successful generation is so difficult, it verges on the impossible. In the case of Breakdown 05, the complexity of the truck is bewildering, moving through radically different environments entirely on 1s with no stuttering or slipping. Moreover, the truck even incorporates moving animals. While Breakdown 05 is certainly impressive, it, like most of Richard William’s works, begs the question of purpose. It is unclear whether such a staggeringly difficult shot actually improved the quality of the scene. While animators are sure to gawk in stunned amazement, the uninformed viewer will neither care nor understand the magnitude of the work that was required to achieve such a camera movement.

The manual pan, the counterpart to the manual truck, has remained elusive. Perhaps once such a camera move is located, an addendum to this article will be released. However, the manual pan can still be speculated upon as to how it would operate. Like the manual truck, the hypothetical manual pan would have planar rotation. However, the planes would rotate either to the left or right as opposed to away or toward camera. For pan-right, the planes would rotate to the left, and for pan-left, the planes would rotate to the right.

Camera Moves

Breakdown 01 and Breakdown 02 demonstrate one of the most common types of pans, the multiplane pan. Like Breakdown 04, the environment is separated into distinct still images that are moved at different rates to create depth-of-field. Moreover, like Breakdown 04, both Breakdown 01 and Breakdown 02 choose to generate different rates through varied spacing rather than timing. Obviously, Breakdown 01 is a much more complicated shot, with more planes as well as characters articulating as they move through the shot. However, Breakdown 02 generates a more convincing depth-of-field than Breakdown 01, since the differentiation of movement rates between the planes is more clear, with the furthest planes moving slower than the closest. In Breakdown 01, the planes move at essentially the same speed.

Aside from the multiplane pan, there is, of course, a single-plane pan, where a single still image much longer than the scope of the camera is moved alongside a horizontal access. Sometimes, the plane itself is wildly complex. For instance, the plane may have trees in the foreground, telephone poles in the midground, and skyscrapers in the background. However, since that aforementioned image is a single plane, it is impossible for the foreground, midground, and background to move at different rates like they could in a multiplane pan. Thus, the camera move does not create depth-of-field and simply looks like a still image being dragged from left to right or vice-versa.

Camera Moves

Breakdown 06 is an example of a multi-stage zoom, a more complex version of the basic zoom described earlier in the article. A multi-stage zoom is where the camera zooms in on one large image. That image is then replaced with a new frame so that the zoom can proceed. In Breakdown 06, the frame is swapped with a new background at frame 30, 40, 62, 78, and 97. While this replacement process does allow for a longer zoom, it creates a distracting stutter effect that feels more like a mistake than deliberate operation.

Finally, Breakdown 03 is an entirely different type of camera move called a corkscrew pan, where the camera spins. This particular pan has several purposes in this scene. For one, it is humorous and fits the jovial, ridiculous tone. Additionally, it hides the transition where the two characters swap clothing and then eventually body parts. The background is a single still image being spun around, while the foreground characters are animated frame-by-frame. While the corkscrew pan is certainly unique and fun, it must be implemented with purpose and not just thrown into a scene for the sake of random chaos.

Camera Moves

Ultimately, trucks and pans are as elaborate and complicated as perspective turns, just in different ways. They can be generated frame-by-frame or through the manipulation of still images. Regardless, no one form of truck or pan is better than the other. It is simply a matter of which method fits the scene better.

BreakdownsBreakdowns

Breakdown 51-01: “The Caveman” (Iwerks / 1934)

Breakdown 51-02: “Icarus” (Paul Bochner / 1974)

BreakdownsBreakdowns

Breakdown 51-03: “Swing You Sinners” (Fleischer / 1930)

Breakdown 51-04: “Cinderella” (Disney / 1950)

BreakdownsBreakdowns

Breakdown 51-05: “Thief and the Cobbler” (Richard Williams / 1993)


MEMBERS LOGIN To Download

JOIN TODAY To Access Members Only Content


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…


JOIN TODAY!
https://animationresources.org/membership/levels/

PayPalAnimationAnimation Resources depends on your contributions to support its projects. Even if you can’t afford to join our group right now, please click the button below to donate whatever you can afford using PayPal.


FacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailFacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailby feather