July 23rd, 2021

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DISCORD DISCUSSION: Veteran Animator Lenord Robinson

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Animation Resources Discord

Animation Resources is hosting monthly Discord parties on its Discord server. Join us the last Saturday of every month to participate in discussions and network with fellow artists from all over the world. The party starts at 4:30 pm (PDT) and the program begins at 5:30 pm.

THIS MONTH’S PROGRAM

Lenord Robinson

Our schedule of monthly programs under the banner Discord Discussions continues Sunday July 25th!

Lenord Robinson has worked in the animation industry for over 40 years. An animator, storyboard artist, character designer, producer, and director, Lenord has helped bring many of your favorite properties to life- “The Black Cauldron”, “Fox and the Hound”, “Muppet Babies”, “Tiny Toons”, “Animaniacs”, and “Bob’s Burgers”, to name a few. He has lived through many technological changes in the animation industry, changes that left many veteran artists by the wayside, such as the rise of CG animation and fall of 2D animation, and the transition from paper to Cintiqs. Join Lenord Robinson and Animation Resources Programming Director Davey Jarrell on Sunday, July 25th on Discord as they talk about Lenord’s work and reveal the secrets to career longevity in animation. Doors open at 4:30pm PDT and program starts at 5:30pm PDT!

LEONORD ROBINSON INTERVIEW
Animation Resources
At The Animation Resources Discord Server
SUNDAY JULY 25th, 2021 5:30 pm (PDT)
HOSTED BY DAVEY JARELL WITH LEONORD ROBINSON

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!

ABOUT YOUR HOST

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.

ABOUT DISCORD

Discord is a free chat app that supports video, voice chat and text chat. Discord servers are divided into channels, which all have their own subject or theme of discussion. Members are assigned roles which helps everyone keep track of who’s who. The Animation Resources Discord channel is a virtual meeting place for our supporters. You can meet other Animation Resources members, talk with the people behind the scenes at our organization, and attend lectures and screenings— all without leaving your home. It’s free and open to everyone in the creative community. If you’d like more info on how Discord works, see this article: What is Discord?

Here’s how to install the Discord app and login to the Animation Resources Discord Server:


    1. INSTALL DISCORD
  • iPhone or Android: Download the app from the App Store or Google Play Store and install.
  • Desktop: You can access Discord for your Mac or PC from discordapp.com. You can choose to download and install the free Discord app, or enter our channel directly using your web browser. https://discord.gg/cuvNvsMNQP
    2. CREATE AN ACCOUNT
  • Just follow the prompts to create your own login account.
    3. JOIN THE ANIMATION RESOURCES CHANNEL
  • Click the plus sign to the right of the app and select "JOIN A SERVER".
  • Enter this invite code: vES5YsV
    4. YOU’RE THERE!
  • Take a moment to look around, read the rules and introduce yourself.

The Animation Resources Discord Server is open to the public right now. Pop in and look around, and make a point to visit on Sunday!

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Posted by Stephen Worth @ 12:45 pm

July 13th, 2021

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REFPACK040: Two Oswald Cartoons By Lantz

Reference Pack

Every other month, members of Animation Resources are given access to an exclusive Members Only Reference Pack. These downloadable files are high resolution e-books on a variety of educational subjects and rare cartoons from the collection of Animation Resources in DVD quality. Our current Reference Pack has just been released. If you are a member, click through the link to access the MEMBERS ONLY DOWNLOAD PAGE. If you aren’t a member yet, please JOIN ANIMATION RESOURCES. It’s well worth it.


REFPACK 040
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June-July 2021

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Walter Lantz Oswald

Walter Lantz’s Oswald
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"In Alaska" (1930) / "The Candy House" (1934)

Most cartoon fans are aware of Disney’s Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, but not many are familiar with Walter Lantz’s version of the character. At the Disney Studio, Ub Iwerks was the animator supervising the Oswald Cartoons. In New York Bill Nolan was performing the same duties on the Krazy Kat and Felix the Cat cartoons. Both animators were instrumental in refining the technique of rubber hose animation, even though they had never met. Iwerks was aware of Nolan’s work would go to the theater to see the latest Felix and Krazy Kat films when they were released. Likewise, Nolan made a point of seeing Iwerks’ Oswald and Alice in Cartoonland cartoons. A friendly transcontinental rivalry developed.

Margaret Winkler and Charles Mintz pulled the rug out from under Walt Disney, signing a distribution deal with Universal for a new series of Oswald cartoons, and hiring Walter Lantz to replace Disney. And as fate would have it, Carl Laemmle pulled the rug out from under Winkler and Mintz putting Lantz in charge of the Universal Cartoon Studio. Lantz chose Bill Nolan to supervise the series, and Nolan found himself directing the character Ub Iwerks created.

Walter Lantz Oswald


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Walter Lantz Oswald

Nolan was a master of rubber hose animation. One of the earliest Oswald cartoons at Universal, In Alaska, shows how much further he took the character than Iwerks ever had. His animation is loose, rubbery and sometimes surreal; but most of all, it is laugh-out-loud hilarious. As you still frame through this cartoon, check out the funny drawings. Even the incidental characters are amazing to look at.

Lantz and Nolan were partners at first, but Lantz had aspirations to become an independent producer with his own studio. Lantz and Nolan parted company in 1935 and Walter Lantz Productions was established to supply cartoons independently to Universal as a distributor. Lantz negotiated ownership of the characters, including Oswald and proceeded to shift the personality of the character to a blander disposition, more resembling Mickey Mouse.

Walter Lantz Oswald


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Walter Lantz Oswald

The Candy House is a transitional cartoon at the end of Nolan’s tenure at the studio. The difference between this cartoon and In Alaska is stark. The focus has shifted from funny drawings and movement to elaborate backgrounds and fairy tale themes. Once Nolan was gone, the Lantz cartoons struggled to find their own style for a while. Oswald was getting a little too tired to be the cartoon star of the studio, so they set to work developing new characters, like Pooch the Pup, a monkey trio named Meanie Miney and Moe, Baby Faced Mouse and Li’l Eight Ball; but none of them caught on. The Walter Lantz Studio finally found its legs when they started producing color cartoons, and the introduction of Andy Panda and Woody Woodpecker eclipsed Oswald, relegating him to the role of a side character.

Walter Lantz Oswald

Rubber hose animation doesn’t deserve its reputation of being primitive and old fashioned. It’s a valid style of animation that focuses on simple shapes and rhythmic movement, rather that realism and complexity. This simplicity allowed the animators to focus less on how the character looked and more on how they moved. Today, we associate rubber hose with the 1930s, but there’s no reason that modern ideas couldn’t be put across with simple shapes and rhythmic movement. The efficiency and freedom the style allows makes it a good model for internet animation.

REFPACK040: Oswald In Alaska
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REFPACK040: The Candy House
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Posted by Stephen Worth @ 10:07 am

June 28th, 2021

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REFPACK040: Animation Resources’ New International Section

Reference Pack


REFPACK 040
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June-July 2021

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Every other month, members of Animation Resources are given access to an exclusive Members Only Reference Pack. These downloadable files are high resolution e-books on a variety of educational subjects and rare cartoons from the collection of Animation Resources in DVD quality. Our current Reference Pack has just been released. If you are a member, click through the link to access the MEMBERS ONLY DOWNLOAD PAGE. If you aren’t a member yet, please JOIN ANIMATION RESOURCES. It’s well worth it.

International Animation

The world of animation is much bigger than it might appear to us at first glance. We are all familiar with the films we grew up with, but Hollywood wasn’t the only place that produced great cartoons… Poland, Japan, Russia, China and Europe all have their own traditions and a rich history of animated film making. Animation Resources’ archive contains many foreign films that are rarely seen in the United States. We feature a sampling of interesting animation from around the world in each Reference Pack.
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Mowgli

Adventures of Mowgli – Ep 1: Raksha
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Roman Davydov / Soyuzmultfilm, Russia / 1967
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In a previous Reference Pack, we featured a Russian propaganda film titled The Shareholder. Directed by Roman Davydov, the film showcased dynamic stylization and tremendous draftsmanship. A few years later, Davydov was given the opportunity to take his skills one step further with an adaptation of Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book. The story was broken into five short films, which were produced by Soyuzmultfilm between 1967 and 1971. In 1973, the five films were trimmed and merged into a single feature film, and in 1998 it was released in America in a dubbed version narrated by Charleton Heston.

Over the next several Reference Packs, we will be sharing the five shorts with their original soundtracks. Although the dialogue is in Russian, if you are familiar with the books or the Disney version, you’ll have no trouble following along. Davydov’s first film was produced independently of Disney’s Jungle Book and was released the very same year. They make an interesting subject for comparison and contrast. Disney’s version relies heavily on the personalties of the voice actors, rather than the characters in the story itself. It’s funnier, tending towards being goofy at times, and takes a relatively light-hearted pass at the story. Davydov’s version couldn’t be more different. It follows the book more closely, addressing the themes of death, duty and the meaning of being a human being.

Mowgli

This time we are presenting the first episode, titled Raksha. Here is Wikipedia’s synopsis of the action:

The story begins with a golden jackal named Tabaqui and his master, the dreaded tiger known as Shere Khan. Shere Khan rises and stretches and walks to a camp in the jungle with Tabaqui guiding him. With great cruelty and hatred, Shere Khan attacks the campsite. Whilst doing so, he accidentally burns his right forepaw, allowing a young child named Mowgli to escape. Mowgli wanders into a wolf cave in the jungle. Shere Khan tracks him down, and unable to fit through the cave’s entrance, he demands that the wolves give him his prey. The wolf mother, Raksha refuses and drives him away. Shere Khan, angered by her defiance taunts them and says that the wolf pack will pay as he skulks away. Meanwhile, Tabaqui runs around the jungle telling the animals that a wolf pack has adopted a human. Bagheera, the black Indian leopard, is minding her own business when Tabaqui appears to tell her the news. Bagheera scolds him for spreading malicious gossip and chases him away. Tabaqui cowers in fear as Shere Khan appears. Bagheera puts on a defiant display that causes Shere Khan to back off.

Mowgli

Meanwhile Mowgli is adapting to the life of a wolf cub under the training of Baloo the Bear, matching the performance of the other wolf cubs at every turn. The elders of the wolf clan are evenly split about whether or not they should allow him to stay until they see Mowgli bravely pinch Tabaqui’s nose, who has come to taunt him. Shere Khan appears and demands that he be given his prey. Akela, known as the "Lone Wolf" and patriarch of the pack, refuses to turn over the boy, and Raksha and Baloo come to his defense. Shere Khan is undeterred until Bagheera also appears and offers the wolf pack a freshly killed bull in return for keeping Mowgli alive. Shere Khan is forced to admit defeat, but he vows that he will still eat Mowgli one day.

REFPACK040: Mowgli Ep01
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Two Greedy Bear Cubs

Two Greedy Bear Cubs (1954)
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Vladimir Degtyaryov / Soyuzmultfilm, Russia / 1954

It’s interesting that in Russian animation there was no separation between mediums. An animator might work on a hand-drawn film and then follow it up by working on a puppet film. Puppet animation reached its zenith in Russia in the 1950s and 60s, and continues to be popular there to this day. During the Cold War era, the emphasis was on presenting an uniquely Russian point of view. The Iron Curtain isolated Russia from being able to view many films from Europe and America, so the focus was on adapting Russian folklore and literature for the screen. The film we are sharing with you today is one of the most elaborate and refined puppet films that I have ever seen… Two Greedy Bear Cubs.

Two Greedy Bear Cubs

Based on a Hungarian folk tale, The Two Greedy Bear Cubs has a simple story that is easy to follow… Once upon a time there were two little bear cubs. They lived in a cabin in the forest with their mother. The two cubs were very competitive and argued constantly, trying to get the better of the other cub. One day, their mother had her fill of their bickering and kicked them out of the house. The two cubs decided to take a walk through the forest, where they discover a large wheel of cheese. The bear cubs argue over who saw the cheese first and attract the attention of a clever fox. The fox offers to arbitrate their disagreement. The bears give her the cheese to fairly divide for them. The fox breaks the cheese in half, but one half is bigger than the other. The cubs argue over which one should get the larger half, but the fox interrupts them and solves the problem by eating the smaller half herself. She breaks the larger half into two pieces, and again the halves aren’t equal so she eats the smaller half. This continues until there are just two small pieces of cheese left. She gives each bear cub a tiny piece and points out that now they have equal shares. The cubs learn a lesson on selfishness and greed.

Two Greedy Bear Cubs

This film has wonderful production design. The sets are beautifully composed to fit the action and the forest has incredible depth. The puppets are beautifully designed and dressed, and they are capable of a wide range of poses and expressions. Puppet animation doesn’t get better than this.

REFPACK040: Two Greedy Bear Cubs
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Well Just You Wait

Well, Just You Wait! – Ep 1: City And Beach
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Vyacheslav Kotyonochkin / Soyuzmultfilm, Russia / 1969

The premise of Nu, Pogodi! (which translates into English as Well, Just You Wait!) was pitched by a writing team of satirical humorists to many directors at Soyuzmultfilm, but was rejected every time. Finally in 1969, Gennady Sokolsky agreed to direct a 2 1/2 minute pilot for the series in an omnibus film called "Happy Merry Go Round". The general consensus at the studio was that the cartoon was "low class" and beneath the dignity of Soyuzmultfilm, but director Vyacheslav Kotyonochkin strongly believed in the concept, so the studio decided to take a chance and allow him to direct a few episodes… and then a few more… and then more.

Kotyonochkin was proven correct. The cartoons were a huge success. Between 1969 and 2006, Soyuzmultfilm ended up making 22 episodes, and in a 2014 poll of audiences all over Russia, Well, Just You Wait! was voted the most popular cartoon series of all time by a landslide. Although the series resembles both Tom & Jerry and the Roadrunner and Coyote series, the director, Kotyonochkin claimed not to have ever seen any of these Hollywood cartoons until 1987 when his son got a video tape recorder and Western tapes began to be imported.

Well Just You Wait

We will be sharing more of these Wolf and Rabbit cartoons in upcoming Reference Packs, but to start the ball rolling, here is episode 01, "City And Beach". Although the drawing style is basic and a bit crude, it’s still got a spark of life that is too often missing from American television cartoons. This is due to a difference of approach. American TV animation from this era tended to rely on voices to convey personality and mood. The drawings in American animation were clean and "on model", but the movement was static, with most action occurring off screen. For instance, if a character tripped and fell, he would trip and fall off screen and a sound effect and camera shake would convey his off screen landing. Then the camera would cut to a tightly composed static shot of the character disheveled in a pile of stuff. The backgrounds in American TV cartoons are generally detailed and beautifully painted. It’s easier to paint one nice background and a single clean static pose than it is to do full animation.

Well Just You Wait

In these Russian cartoons, there is almost no dialogue, and the action almost always occurs on screen. Static tableaux are rare, as are detailed backgrounds and "on model" drawings. These cartoons focus on expressive poses and movement, and save time and expense by avoiding the careful cleanup required for character model details and overlapping action. The theory here is, if it moves funny, it’s funny… and they are right about that. Shamus Culhane once lamented that television animation consisted of mostly lip-sync animation. He would have preferred to do away with lip-sync entirely and just have simple drawings that really move. Well, Just You Wait proves that he was absolutely right about that.

REFPACK040: Well Just You Wait Ep01
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Koziolek Matolek

Koziolek Matolek – Ep 1: Singing Competition
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Zofia Oraczewska / Studio Miniatur Filmowych, Poland / 1969

Now we shift from Russia to Poland. Studio Miniatur Filmowych in Krakow was established in 1958, and since then it has produced nearly 1,500 animated films. This series, titled The Strange Adventures of Koziolek Matolek was produced between 1969 and 1971 and 26 episodes were made. We will be sharing more of these in upcoming Reference Packs.

Koziolek Matolek

Koziolek Matolek was created in 1933 as a character in Polish comic books. The idea behind the character is a bit surreal, and might seem odd to us in America… Koziolek Matolek is a goat who undertakes a quest to find Pacanow, a town where he has heard that they make shoes for goats. His travels take him to the ends of the Earth and throughout time from the jungles of Africa to medieval Europe to the Wild West. Although the character’s adventures have been well known for generations in Poland and are a staple of children’s literature there, I don’t believe any of the stories, comics or cartoons have ever been translated and distributed outside of that country.

Koziolek Matolek

The cartoons were directed by a variety of animators, and the character looks a bit different in each of the individual director’s episodes. Again, the focus is on movement and funny expressions, albeit even more economically so than with Well, Just You Wait!

REFPACK040: Koziolek Matolek Ep01
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Pies Kot I

Dog, Cat And… Ep 1
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Zofia Oraczewska / Studio Miniatur Filmowych, Poland / 1972

Finally, we are sharing one other cartoon series produced by Studio Miniatur Filmowych, Pies, Kot I… which translates to Dog, Cat And… This is a different sort of take on the Tom & Jerry model, with the opponents outsmarting each other instead of just chasing each other out of hate or hunger. There is more to the relationship between the characters than just rivalry. This particular cartoon is the first episode in the series, so it establishes the situation, but as you see more episodes in upcoming Reference Packs, you might start to discern how it relates to slapstick comedy teams like Laurel & Hardy and Fatty Arbuckle and Buster Keaton. The dog and cat are not just generic animals, but individual personalities with a dynamic relationship that is much more engaging than most “cat and mouse” or “dog and cat” cartoons.

Again, these cartoons are almost devoid of dialogue with the focus on loose, funny animation. In fact, the drawings are often hilarious on their own, even removed from their context within the gag sequence. The facial expressions are well observed, and the poses employ clear silhouettes that form funny graphic shapes.

Pies Kot I

Well, Just You Wait!, Strange Adventures of Koziolek Matolek, and Dog, Cat And… are all very efficient at what they do. They could easily serve as a model for internet animation. The internet encourages repeat viewing more than television does. When you watch a dialogue driven cartoon on TV, once you’ve heard the jokes, you don’t need to watch it again. However, a short cartoon that looks and moves funny is entertaining no matter how many times you watch it. And for the animator who is making the cartoon, it’s a lot more fun to animate simple funny characters than it is to animated a lot of tedious lip-sync.

Pies Kot I

Dog, Cat And… looks like it was a lot of fun to make. The film makers at Studio Miniatur Filmowych didn’t feel constrained by the ordinary lives of animals. Their characters can drive cars, build their own houses and go to exotic places. That freedom allowed the animators to keep their series fresh, and gave them the opportunity to experiment within a 10 minute format. Simple drawings, funny movement and no rules… these are the kinds of series that would work well as episodic internet cartoons.

REFPACK040: Dog Cat And… Ep01
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MP4 Video File / SD / 09:23 / 172 MB Download


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Posted by Stephen Worth @ 11:58 am