October 23rd, 2024

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Theory: Guts Vs Polish

Polish

I was talking about something with a friend this morning that I thought I might mention here…

There are two ways to approach a scene. The most direct way is to go straight for the guts of the idea- to think in the most direct and vital way possible to put the emotion and action of the scene across. The audience sees it, recognizes it and instinctually identifies with it. The ultimate proponents of this kind of animation are Rod Scribner and Irv Spence. (If you don’t know who they are, look them up!) Everything is super clear and grabs you by the collar so you can’t look away. It’s a straight line from the animator’s intent to the audience’s experience of it… like an idea wrapped in a laser beam.

The other way to approach a scene is to “finesse” it. You start with a solid basic framework of blocking and you start adding little details. Small hand gestures, secondary action like a hat sliding down over one eye as the character talks, overlapping action on clothing and hair like dingle balls swinging back and forth against the main accent. You stack up layer after layer. As the scene progresses, it becomes more fluid and smoother… glossy. The action seems more “real” because so much is going on at once and it is all so controlled and smooth and beautiful. Disney was the best at doing this sort of approach. Each scene Marc Davis and Frank Thomas animated was carefully wrapped up and tied with ribbons like a birthday present by a team of specialized craftsmen.

If you’re an independent animator, then working in “finesse mode” is a recipe for failure. The way Disney was able to pull that off required very low weekly footage counts for the animators and lots and lots of assistants tracking and following through on the layers and layers of overlap… incredibly time consuming and labor intensive. An individual animator making films by himself would never be able to compete with that. Getting directly to the guts is something that requires a great deal of experience and skill and judgement, but if you are really good, you can spit it out like a lightning bolt with no one helping you. The Disney animators were certainly able to do that if they wanted to, but the every department in the studio, from animation to ink & paint, was geared towards conforming each scene to the “Disney way of doing things”. That isn’t necessarily a bad thing. It produced a lot of very high quality animation. But for today’s animators building pyramids stone by stone isn’t a very good model to follow.

A lot of people look at animation and judge quality by how smooth it turns, or how polished the overlaps are. But audiences don’t care how much time it took you to animate a scene. They are looking at the performance of the character. They want to see something they recognize in the personality- something real. It’s easy in the frame by frame trenches to focus on details, but if you want to connect in the most efficient way, you should always be looking at your animation from a wider view… and trying to get the guts of the idea you are putting across. Anything else is just gilding the lilly.

If you become a *really* good direct animator, you will be so successful with audiences that you can afford to hire assistants to polish up your stuff for you. There’s no reason to focus on that while you are still growing and learning. Go for the guts.

Stephen Worth
Animation Resources

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Student Membership Drive

Fall is time to join Animation Resources as a student member. Annual dues for full time students and educators is discounted. It’s the biggest bargain in animation at only $70 a year. Animation School is great, but it doesn’t give you everything you need to become a professional animator. You need to invest in self-study to be successful in this highly competitive field. That’s exactly what Animation Resources can help you do if you become a member. Each day we’ll be highlighting more reasons why you should join Animation Resources. Bookmark us and check back every day.

There’s no better way to feed your creativity than to be a member of Animation Resources. Every other month, we share a Reference Pack that is chock full of downloadable e-books and still framable videos designed to expand your horizons and blow your mind, as well as educational podcasts and seminars. It’s easy to join. Just click on this link and you can sign up right now online.



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Posted by Stephen Worth @ 11:00 am

October 21st, 2024

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Theory: How To Get The Most Out Of Animation School

piano

Imagine you want to be a concert pianist and composer, and you go to Julliard to study. What would happen if you arrived at Julliard on the first day of class and you were barely able to play “Chopsticks”. What could Julliard teach you when you don’t even possess the most basic pianistic skills?

Hundreds of animation students do exactly this when they enroll in college before acquiring even the most basic drawing skills. What can you learn about animation without even the most basic drawing skills?

I hear people talk about the Preston Blair course as if it is what you need to learn to draw. THE PRESTON BLAIR COURSE IS JUST THE BEGINNING OF LEARNING TO DRAW. If you want to be an artist in animation, you really should have accomplished the basics of everything Blair before attending college.

You can’t even BEGIN to learn without the basics. Going to college not being able to draw well will only lead to having huge debt in student loans with absolutely nothing to show for it. Schools are a business. If we went to a car mechanic and said, “Here is $500. Fix whatever you think needs fixing and keep the rest” do you think we would get our money’s worth? Schooling is not a passive endeavor.

Students don’t want to hear this. But the ones I see succeed are consistently the ones that were prepared to learn before they even began to learn.

Back To School Days At Animation Resources

Student Membership Drive

Fall is time to join Animation Resources as a student member. Annual dues for full time students and educators is discounted. It’s the biggest bargain in animation at only $70 a year. Animation School is great, but it doesn’t give you everything you need to become a professional animator. You need to invest in self-study to be successful in this highly competitive field. That’s exactly what Animation Resources can help you do if you become a member. Each day we’ll be highlighting more reasons why you should join Animation Resources. Bookmark us and check back every day.

There’s no better way to feed your creativity than to be a member of Animation Resources. Every other month, we share a Reference Pack that is chock full of downloadable e-books and still framable videos designed to expand your horizons and blow your mind, as well as educational podcasts and seminars. It’s easy to join. Just click on this link and you can sign up right now online.



JOIN NOW!
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Posted by Stephen Worth @ 11:00 am

October 3rd, 2024

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RefPack059: A Varied Collection Of Material To Inspire And Inform

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Reference Pack


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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!


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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:
Ollie Harrington

Ollie Harrington’s Bootsie
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Volume One
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Ollie Harrington was described by writer Langston Hughes as "America’s greatest African-American cartoonist". Harrington became a well known figure in the Harlem Renaissance of the 1930s largely due to his single panel cartoons for the Amsterdam News under the title, "Dark Laughter". The cartoon featured a character named Bootsie that Harrington described as "a well-fed but soulful character". Bootsie was a typical African American man dealing with life in Harlem. The cartoon often dealt with issues of racial inequality, segregation and poverty.

Harrington’s work is forceful and hard hitting without being didactic. Instead, it’s brutally honest, showing both the good and bad of life as a black man living in pre-Civil Rights era America. His character, Bootsie never spoke out himself or commented on what was going on around him. Instead the people around him revealed themselves by the way that they perceived him. I think you’ll find that a lot of the issues raised in these old cartoons are still a relevant part of our modern lives.

SD VIDEO:
Jay Ward Commercials

Jay Ward Commercial Reels
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Quisp & Quake / King Vitamin & The Waffle Whiffer

When I was working with Bill Scott at ASIFA, we chatted about his career a bit. He was a storyboard artist at Warner Bros. and U.P.A, and he was a "jack of all trades" at Jay Ward Studios, producing, directing, writing and voicing characters. I asked him what was the most fun to work on, and he admitted that most people know him for his work on The Bullwinkle Show and George of the Jungle, but he enjoyed working on commercials the best of all. They had far fewer limitations due to budget or schedule. The work could all be done in-house. And every one was different.

As you watch these commercials featuring Quisp & Quake, King Vitamin and Wallace The Waffle Whiffer, take note of the format of these spots. They are quite different than most commercials today. They’re structured as little cartoons with a setup of a situation, a brief product shot acting as a commercial within the commercial, and a resolution of the story. The audience watches the commercials the same way they watch the shows they accompany. No one can tune them out, because they are self-contained and entertaining on their own. Cartoon commercials may just be the most delightful form of animation.


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SD VIDEO:
Bruno Bozetto

West And Soda
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Bruno Bozzetto / Italy / 1965
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Bruno Bozzetto is an Italian animator known for his parody of Fantasia titled Allegro Non Troppo. His other feature films include a superhero parody called VIP My Brother Superman and a spaghetti western parody titled West And Soda. Bozzetto’s work is often satirical and political in nature, championing the common man and lampooning government inefficiency and oppression.

In 1965, Bozzetto released a parody of American Westerns titled, West And Soda. It was thought at the time to be a parody of Sergio Leone’s A Fistful Of Dollars which had been released the year before. But in fact, Bozzetto had begun production of this film before Leone started work on his movie, which means that West And Soda has a claim for being the first "Spaghetti Western".

Animation Resources Board Member, David Eisman has provided subtitles for this film, so I won’t take up space with a synopsis. I’ll just say that Bozzetto’s style is appealing and efficient, making him one of the most interesting independent animators of the 1960s.

SD VIDEO:
Polish Experimental Animation

The Eye & The Ear
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F. & M. Themerson / Polish Film Unit / 1945

Stefan and Franciszka Themerson were Polish experimental film makers who worked in both Poland and England from 1930 to 1945. They produced just seven films. The first five were destroyed by the Nazis when they invaded Poland. The last two were made in London, and we are sharing one of those with you in the current Reference Pack.

Most students of experimental film are familiar with the work of Norman McLaren, Len Lye and Oskar Fischinger, but few know much about the Themersons. This is certainly due to the loss of the early work. In this film, however, the approach is quite different than those other film makers’ approach to visualizing music. While McLaren, Lye and Fischinger created abstract forms and motion to depict the moods and rhythms of the music, the Themersons used shapes to represent the musical structure, particularly in the second and third parts. Look closely and you will see that the shapes and movement of the elements on the screen directly relate to the melodic line, the voice, and the instrumentation of the music.

There are many lessons to be learned from experimental animation, even if you work in more figurative styles. It’s important to think about the relationship of sound and image. Too often images simply follow the dialogue without expanding upon it, and allow music to be treated as wallpaper behind the action. Animation isn’t just "drawings that move". It’s the simultaneous expression of sight and sound.


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SD VIDEO:
Professor Balthazar

Professor Balthazar in “The Flying Fabian”
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Zlatko Grgic / Zagreb Films, Croatia / 1968

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.

Altogether there were 59 episodes of Professor Balthazar produced between 1969 and 1978. We will be sharing more with you in upcoming Reference Packs.

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Dororo

Dororo Ep. 1 & 2
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Gisaburou Sugii & Osamu Dezaki / Mushi Production / Japan / 1969

Dororo began as a serialized manga published in Weekly Shonen Sunday. Created by Osamu Tezuka, it told the story of a severely handicapped Samurai named Hyakkimaru and a child thief named Dororo who follows him on his journeys. The story ran for a year in 1967 to 1968 before being cancelled. The ending was finally published in a magazine called Bokeno the following year. But that came too late for the production of the animated version. The animators had to come up with their own ending to the story.

We are presenting the first two episodes of the television adaptation from 1969 which present the origin story. I think you will be impressed by the quality of the design and draftsmanship, even though the animation itself is simple and bare bones. Dororo is particularly successful at using backgrounds to establish mood and in its ability to put across specific personalities through posing and walk cycles. The music is striking as well, composed by electronic music pioneer, Isao Tomita. This series is important to the history of early anime on television, because it tells a complex and mature story whose influence can be seen in later Japanese animated features.


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SD VIDEO:
Charles Ives

Charles Ives’ America
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Joseph Horowitz and Peter Bagdonoff / 2021
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The other day on Facebook, I read a post that stated, "American" is not an ethnic identity. I kept thinking about that comment all day long. Certainly American culture is so pervasive, elements of it exist in just about every country in the world. But when we are immersed in our own ethnic culture, we don’t see it at all. Drop a typical American into the daily life in Bora-Bora or the Steppes of Central Asia and our American ethnicity would become painfully clear. Ethnic identities only become visible in contrast with other ethnic identities.

In this Reference Pack, we are sharing a documentary about a classical composer who has been described as quintessentially American… Charles Ives. His is a fascinating story that few people are familiar with, but surely resonates with all American creative artists… Charles Ives. Ives was arguably one of the most important American composers, winning the Pulitzer Prize in 1947, but his music was unknown to the public until he was retired from creating music for two decades. It’s a truly amazing story of artistic integrity under the most adverse of conditions.

VIDEO PODCAST:
Animated Discussions Podcast

Alan Foreman Interview
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Animated Discussions 015 / Hosted by Davey Jarrell with Alan Foreman
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NewNewAlan Foreman is an Emmy Award winning producer, director, storyboard artist, and animator with over 23 years of experience at studios like Nickelodeon, Adult Swim, PBS, Sesame Workshop, Buck, Psyop, and TED Ed. In addition, his personal work has screened in film festivals across the globe and earned him development deals with both Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network. He currently works as a supervising director at Netflix Series Animation. Listen to Alan talk all about storyboarding, directing, and his creative process in the latest episode of Animated Discussions!

Bonus Download

As a special thank you to our annual General and Student members, we have created a special page where we will archive past Reference Packs. There will be a new rerun of a complete RefPack between the new ones.

ANNUAL MEMBER BONUS ARCHIVE
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Available to Student and General Members

REFPACK028: June / July 2019

PDF E-BOOK:
Esquire

Esquire Magazine
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Cartoon Annual Volume 3 (1937)

Esquire was the leading "gentleman’s magazine" of its day. Great writers like F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemmingway wrote for the magazine, and the Esquire staff included a stable of illustrators and cartoonists that represented the best in the field. Even though it was founded in the height of the depression, the publishers spared no expense to produce a first class product.

In 1937, the staff of Esquire prepared a prototype copy of a proposed cartoon annual containing the best cartoons from the first few years of the magazine’s publication. However before the book could be printed, the project was cancelled and the prototype was put on the shelf. Twenty years later, they finally did publish a book honoring the great work of the Esquire art staff, but it was a much different selection of cartoons. Animation Resources was given access to the one-of-a-kind prototype of the 1937 book, and we have been sharing it with our members. This is the third and final volume. We hope you find it to be useful.

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Annual Member Bonus Archive
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Downloads expire after August 2024

HD QUALITY VIDEO:
Tune In Tomorrow

“Tune In Tomorrow”
UPA / 1954

Industrial films are fascinating time capsules charting the evolution of style in animation. Since their budgets were limited, they often leaned on clever and eye catching design to make an impact on an audience, rather than complex movement. This particular film is no exception. It’s loaded with eye popping modern design and bold color. The film’s purpose is to promote CBS Radio Network, and it was made in 1954 just as television was beginning to replace radio as America’s “electronic hearth”.

Films like this were ephemeral by design. They served a purpose in a particular time and place, and after that time had passed, they were disposed of. We are very fortunate that Advisory Board Member Steve Stanchfield uncovers these lost jewels and shares them with us.

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Annual Member Bonus Archive
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Downloads expire after August 2024

DVD QUALITY VIDEO:
Spider And The Tulip

Kumo To Tulip
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Kenzo Masaoka / 1943

"Kumo To Tulip" was made by Kenzo Masaoka during World War II. Masaoka is regarded as one of the pioneers of Japanese animation, having directed the first Japanese sound cartoon in 1933. During his twenty year career, he directed over two dozen animated films, mostly based on fables and folklore. "Kumo To Tulip" was his masterpiece, exhibiting skillful technical effects as well as solid personality animation.

Of particular note is the beautiful effects animation- wind, rain, fire and smoke- all done in a unique, keenly observed style. The contrast in the way the spider and the ladybug move is also impressive. If you look carefully, you’ll see that the backgrounds incorporate photographs and there are several very long camera moves that must have necessitated match cuts or dissolves to accomplish. The film evokes a gentle mood, quite contrary to the spirit of other Wartime films.

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Annual Member Bonus Archive
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Downloads expire after August 2024

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…

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membership@animationresources.org

…and we will credit your membership with the additional time. These bonus downloads expire after September 1st, 2024.


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Whew! That is an amazing collection of treasures! 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.

THIS IS JUST THE TIP OF THE ICEBERG!

Animation Resources has been sharing treasures from the Animation Archive with its members for over a decade. Every other month, our members get access to a downloadable Reference Pack, full of information, inspiration and animation. The RefPacks consist of e-books jam packed with high resolution scans of great art, still framable animated films from around the world, documentaries, podcasts, seminars and MORE! The best part is that all of this material has been selected and curated by our Board of professionals to aid you in your self study. Our goal is to help you be a greater artist. Why wouldn’t you want to be a member of a group like that?

Membership comes in three levels. General Members get access to a bi-monthly Reference Pack as well as a Bonus RefPack from past offerings in the in-between months. We offer a discounted Student Membership for full time students and educators. And if you want to try out being a member, there is a Quarterly Membership that runs for three months.


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Posted by Stephen Worth @ 10:00 am