Commentary 14 Jun 2013 11:17 pm

Huh?

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I received this note from the “Wise Old Man” of Holland, Borge Ring, after I posted my piece about the Disney studio in the last days of the “Nine Old Men” – just before the new guys took ownership:

    hi MICHAEL
    For you to add, share or ditch:

    You touch upon top Walt Disney animators relaxing and losing their (story)mind
    after Walt Disney died on them
    I asked Marc Davis if Walt Disney’s death was followed by a period of
    interregnum among the Nine Old Men.
    Marc’s face turned sour
    “Oh yes. There was no orderliness of production – Everybody did as they
    pleased. Frank would go upstairs and take scenes that should’nt have been done
    by HIM.”

    greetz
    Borge

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Auto Boarded

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storyboardI must be getting old. I’ve gotten so tired of drawing storyboards, after all these years, that it came as a great relief to read that I no longer have to do all that arduous labor.

Now thanks to Amazon Storyteller (and the short description given by Amid Amidi from Cartoon Brew) the computer program will do the drawing for me. As the Amazon ad for the piece reads, “A storyboard can be 10 panels, or 100.” Once you place your “original script” into the program, designed and previously drawn characters will act out your script. All you have to do is add the script.

In a few days, Amazon Storyteller will rate your storyboard and tell you how good it is. (Just what I need, another boss.) This could be the start of something good.

All I need is Amazon Animator, so I don’t have to do that work either. I can just hire the machine to move my storyboard drawings with previously-animated scenes.

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Movies

The films this week came fast and furious. It started with Sofia Coppola‘s latest film called The Bling Gang. Based on a true story, it’s about a group of teenagers in LA who sneak into and rob the houses of celebrated girls, such as Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan. Though we see alarms record the break ins and robberies, it takes a while for the police to investigate any of them. Eventually, all the teens are captured and end up in jail. You people living in LA can feel safe that they’re not out there to search your apartments for the latest in Laboutin shoes. Paris Hilton actually loaned her real home for the shooting.

The film feels a bit disinterested in the characters, and the whole thing feels a bit passive-aggressive. The best part of the film was that it ran quickly through its short 90 minute length.
Unfortunately, I forgot to bring my camera to photograph Sofia Coppola who came prepared to answer questions and whipped through those from moderator Brian Rose, a local film historian. Ms. Coppola does have a large and beautiful head, in the way of most stars. she reminds me a bit of Sophia Loren. Her interview will be on=line soon.

neville1The next night brought a different kind of documentary, Twenty Feet from Stardom. It sounds like some kind of horror film, but it’s really about back-up singers. Their talent is obviously enormous, but stardom seemed to resist most of those on screen. It was nice to hear Bruce Springsteen and Sting talk about their back-up singers. Of course, the film was full of melody and had us dancing in or seats. Darlene Love is part time focus in the movie. Only after she’s working cleaning houses, does she gain respect for herself and her talent. She moves to New York where her career takes off, and she was a success story. She’s become a staple on the David Letterman
neville2show every Christmas where she sings her hit, “Christmas (Baby, Please Come Home).” A very entertaining 90 minutes, the movie zipped along and told its story well. One wonders how the producers of this film were able to secure the rights to many of the songs that played out on the soundtrack, everything from “Space Oddity” to “Walk on the Wild Side” to “Lean on Me.” The post screening interview between director, Morgan Neville and Brian Rose also moved quickly.

The Man of Steel was screened on Thursday evening. The latest adventures of Superman deal with his having to shave on Earth and his difficulties in getting a job prior to work at the Daily Planet.
There was no post-screening interview, but I’m not sure how interested I would’ve been in one.

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Conversations

I’ve been talking about these post screening conversations for the pat few weeks, since the NY chapter of the Academy started scheduling them. These conversations have been placed on line and can be viewed if you’re interested. They’ve just posted the interview with Chris Wedge for his film, Epic. The virtual leader of Blue Sky talks about his film here.

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RIP – Murray Rosen

dumboCartoonist, Murray Rosen passed away this past week. Murray attended schools in New York City. Graduating from Pratt Institute, he went on to work for Walt Disney on Dumbo as a Cartoonist. He then returned to New York and worked for Famous Studios on Little Lulu and Popeye cartoons.

After marrying his wife, Shirley Binder on May 27, 1956, they moved to Maine where Murray operated an installation company for a friend’s storm window firm, remaining in the storm window business for 20 years. On May 8th, following a brief illness, he died with with his wife Shirley and friends at his side.

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Current

vthairpowerRecently, in response to Andreas Deja’s comment – on his own blog – he called the animation for 101 Dalmatians an excellent example of “Modern Anmation.” I commented on this use of “Modern Animation”, and was challenged by one of my readers. Andrea K. Haid wrote: “The reason that Andrea Deja calls 101 Dalmations “modern” is because it is set in a contemporary environment with contemporary music. It was the first story told in an animated feature by Disney to be placed in a modern setting with modern artwork.”
To this I began to think back on animated features that were more current than others and came away with a bit of surprise for myself.
Viewing the Disney features in chronological order:
Snow White, of course, operates within a Fairy Tale land.
Pinocchio also oerates within that world.
Fantasia is all over the place, so I ignore that one.

Bambi, however, is absolutely current. We see no clothing or hear no coversation, but it can be without doubt that the film takes place when it was made, 1942.

Dumbo, however, is very current. The people are dressed for 1942, the action takes place then. Even the fringes of the civil rights movement attest to the date of the story.

Victory Through AirPower takes place during WW2 and is immediate in its action. The film, itself, is an attempt to sell the idea of using aviation to help win the War.

saludosOf the package features, Saludos Amigos and Three Caballeros both take place currently. There could be no other approach in an attempt to melt the international curtains between North and South America.

For the sake of this essay, I won’t analyze the shorts in the rest of the packaged films. The Headless Horseman, The Wind in the Willows, are probably dated. While other shorts like Little Toot, Trees and Bongo are all current. They’re not worth defending.
Cinderella was 18th Century fairy tale land.
Peter Pan and Alice In Wonderland were 19th Century.
Sleeping Beauty, to the 17th Century fairy tale world.
Lady and thte Tramp back to the early 20th Century.

the_jungle_bookThat brings us to 101 Dalmatians. Modern humans and dogs in modern dress.
Sword in the Stone was 16th Century England.
The Jungle Book was 19th Century, per Rudyard Kipling.
The Aristocrats was early 20th Century. (There were cars.)
Robin Hood was 17th Century England.

Let’s skip to the new generation of animators:
Toy Story 1, 2, & 3 were all today.
As was The Rescuers and The Rescuers Down Under. The UN is there, for pete’s sake.
Basil of Baker”s Street dated. The Fox and the Hound, current.
Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, Hunchback of Notre Dame and Pocahontas were all hundreds of years old.

I don’t think I need go on. We are into “Modern Animation” and I think it has nothing to do with what period the film is set in.

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CitiBikes

You step out onto the street on Monday, and you’re greeted by a hundred blue bikes. Sort of the same color as the lines on this page. I wasn’t expecting it. No double-parked cars.

The Citi decided that it’d be better for me if I took a bike. Rent the bikes for 2 minutes, then roll to the next check-in point. You pay some bucks and you take the biks. (They don’t offer bike-helmets for the softer-brained, accident-prone people. There’s just a lot of info about the fines you’ll pay if you go over the twenty minute rental time.

Last weekend everybody wanted a bike. (Aren’t they all girls’ bikes? What’s up with that?) They were all rented by couples speaking non-English. (A tourist thing, undoubtedly.) Only two gone so far this weekend. Meanwhile, no one has a parking space. At first I thought they were mopeds, like in Europe. We’d be hearing buzzing all day long in conjunction with the square jeep-type taxis.

We’ll see how it goes, though. No buzzing, a crash of cerulean blue, and lots of tourists reading the signs in groups of about eight.

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Jerry’s Visit and a Great Film Program

This is a note I received from Jerry Beck. It doesn’t take place until the end of July, but thought you’d like some advance notice, now.

    I don’t know if you usually attend the Animation Block Party in Brooklyn,
    but this year I’m going to come back to New York and introduce
    a screening of Oscar winning shorts on Sunday night July 28th at 7pm

    Munro / Gene Deitch / 8:20 min / 1960
    Ersatz (The Substitute) / Dušan Vukotić / 10 min / 1961
    The Hole / John Hubley and Faith Hubley / 15 min / 1962
    The Critic / Ernest Pintoff / 4 min / 1963
    The Pink Phink / Friz Freleng and Hawley Pratt / 6:38 min / 1964
    Dot and the Line: Romance in Lower Mathematics / Chuck Jones & Maurice
    Noble / 10 min /1965
    Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass Double Feature / John Hubley / 6 min / 1966
    The Box / Fred Wolf / 9 min / 1967

    After the films I’m hoping to lead a 15-20 minute panel discussion about these films, and the Oscars, and the filmmakers… etc. I do not know who Animation Block Party are asking to be a part of it, but I thought I’d reach out to you myself – as an actual Oscar nominee, you’d be a great addition to the discussion.

    I completely understand if you cannot attend, but I thought it was worth a shot.

    Event is at Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAMcinématek) located at 30 Lafayette Ave, Brooklyn.

10 Responses to “Huh?”

  1. on 15 Jun 2013 at 2:39 pm 1.Charles Kenny said …

    I read in Bob Thomas’ fascinating book about Roy O. Disney ‘Building a Company’ that after Walt’s death, Roy called all the executives in and explained to them quite clearly how things were going to become very unwieldy since the artists had lost their leader and for the execs. to give them some time but to eventually “give them hell”.

  2. on 15 Jun 2013 at 10:43 pm 2.the Gee said …

    I really do not understand Amazon.

    The site says that Amazon Studios is a WGA member. But, the Studios are separate from Amazon and this Storyboarding system. Amazon gets first optioning rights on an original work (which must preclude somethings; it can’t possibly be al original scripts/treatments)

    The company also has a program worked out where people who write fan fiction (using the copyrighted characters of others) can actually publish and sell their fan fiction. A hitch is that the copyright owner can use the ideas in the fan fiction at no cost (based on what I read somewhere).

    I don’t get Amazon’s angle on either of these. I don’t even understand why they are trying to make original content and reinvent the way that said content is made/developed. The dang company barely profits and hasn’t for its entire existence! So, what the hell?

    Years ago, Microsoft funded projects like a comic strip creating program, using existing art. And, it has tried to enable content creators with goofy solutions and working with artists to develop stuff but in the end, I doubt most efforts were successful…at least until some of their video games sold well and the Xbox sold really well.

    I doubt Microsoft tried to change the system of making video games though, or try to enable small crew indie game makers either.

    Anyone got an idea on why Amazon wants to be an owner of content on a small scale?

  3. on 15 Jun 2013 at 10:48 pm 3.the Gee said …

    Microsoft’s comic strip creating program used *commissioned* art, not existing art.
    I think Jim Woodring was the main or only artist who was hired to make elements for it. So the end result looked like a Jim Woodring comic strip.

    (again, what the hell?)

    It is good that someone is probably being paid to make the art for the storyboard program. Maybe many people are. Maybe we should get in on that action. But, if writers aren’t always good storyboarders then I can’t see an algorithm improving on the golden egg omelets that writers have in mind.

  4. on 15 Jun 2013 at 11:43 pm 4.liim lsan said …

    I actually thought of 101 Dalmatians as “Modern” not because it’s so graphically modern (though it is; the xerox process seems organic for the only time they ever used it)…

    but because Bill Peet’s treatment is one of the least saccharine Disney movies made yet.

    Remember, modern art and literature in the 50s reveled in the “Lone Cowboy,” in the self-abnegating Alec Guinness or Pogo set against a giant establishment… because the threat of communism was forcing an individualistic society into larger and larger comformity, the collective fantasies became more and more selfish. Bill Peet, by his treatment of the family as the cohesive unit, was seen to be stable for the time.

    Therefore, no one stopped him from introducing another element to the plot – the tragic, Mark Rothko element to the characters.

    More so than any Disney film made yet, the characters in 101 Dalmatians are at the mercy of horrible events beyond their imagination.

    We were locked in an arms race at the time, and the despair of the knowledge that the world could end at any moment, and you’d be stuck in the thick of it, permeated art and literature… the reason Disney became successful in the fifties is by providing escape from these fantasies; you can escape a nightmarish world by waking up, or you can simply retreat from the earth itself, or revert to the gay teens in order to escape the times, or have fairies ready to aid your every move with Christian allegory.

    But in 101 Dalmatians, any such help the protagonists receive is ramshackle and built from the ground up. Dependent on the willpower of a poor songwriter to decline a check, or a message chain spreading the message that could easily bungle the message and reduce it to nothing.

    In the Dalmatians universe, like the modern world we were flung into by the bomb, you’re in constant danger and the small respites, creaky though they be, are to be treasured. The only reason everyone can survive is because of the combined efforts of a deaf colonel, a scraggly cat who can’t corral a whole puppy herd, several way stops – and your only hope is to cover your tracks or disguise yourself from a crazed, vengeful enemy with no predictability whatsoever.

    Hell, the climactic scene isn’t frightening because you don’t know if the protagonist would win the fight – it’s frightening because they’re trapped in the back of the van, with no means of escape save their hope that the driver will outrun the witch. There’s a palpable sense of death and doom in the film, more than anything else. It’s like greek tragedy of the kind that blossomed in the fifties.

    If “Despair” isn’t the key feature of midcentury modern, I don’t know what is. (Aside from Neurosis, but Disney isn’t going there anytime soon.) The mood’s always been the thing that seperated this film from its precursors and successors. Your thoughts, anyone?

  5. on 15 Jun 2013 at 11:46 pm 5.liim lsan said …

    I always thought the reason 101 Dalmatians was “Modern” wasn’t surface flash (though it’s one of the most modern-appealing films they ever made), but the palpable sense of doom and despair that pervades it – the world of the atom bomb and the despairate worries.

    The characters are like greek tragedy characters, buffeted by the fates of those larger than themselves. The characters have less to take into their hands than those of any other Disney movie, and much higher stakes – the cross-country trek is grueling, but it gives them nothing to work with save desperate hope and sore limbs and a sense of futility.

    Hell, the climax, they’re trapped in the back of the truck, unable to escape, with no hope save the hope that the driver will outrace Cruella. There’s nothing for them to do but hope and/or grimly meet their fate. Age of the Atom much?

  6. on 16 Jun 2013 at 2:39 am 6.Mark Sonntag said …

    I think the Amzaon storyboarding system is really to benefit live action projects. Generic material will NOT help sell an animated property. Create your own animatic, don’t go Amazon, you will lose rights and as we know the effort just to design a concept is huge enough. Who wants to give their work away. With all the crowd funding avenues, one doesn’t need Amazon to get started. Amazon is essentially trying to become a TV network/studio online, it’s been talked about on various sites lately.

  7. on 16 Jun 2013 at 9:01 pm 7.Elliot Cowan said …

    For what it matters it’s the bling “ring” not the bling “gang”….

  8. on 17 Jun 2013 at 4:34 am 8.Peter Hale said …

    Is Amazon now working on a program to create scripts from a one sentence outline, drawing on pregenerated dialogue, settings and action, do you suppose?

  9. on 17 Jun 2013 at 7:14 pm 9.Andrea K Haid said …

    A modern animated film can certainly be set in a fantasy or not-modern time period, however I think that 101 Dalmations is a rather contemporary film and perhaps one of the more modern Disney animated films, at the least in terms of it’s bold visual elements. It had a very stylish and modern feel at the time of it’s making.

    You can watch Andreas Deja say “101 Dalmations is the most modern Disney animated movie ever made. The one that has the most guts, that says ‘this is art’, but it’s entertainment at the same time” in the 101 Dalmations Making of featurette recorded I believe in 1996. Eric Goldberg and Brad Bird go on to talk about how the film is unique among the Disney cannon as it’s a contemporary story made to play in that time period and that it’s contemporary to this day. Deja calls it Picasso coming to Disney. Bird talks of the real and flirtatious relationship between Roger and Anita. It’s not simply the setting and time period (as with Dunbo) that make Dalmations contemporary but also the music, the new Xerox process and the implications of that, the color, backgrounds and the handling of the characters.

    The most obviously noncontemporary elements of 101 Dalmations is the sexism. The “crazy woman drivers” comment is an example of that. And Anita and Perdy are useless in terms of intellect. Pongo and Roger are always the heroes, the ones coming up with the solutions while their adoring females merely look worried or adoring.

    Just my two cents.

    Watch the making of featurette on youtube:

    The Making of 101 Dalmations Part 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RBKLzFxK4TU

    The Making of 101 Dalmations Part 2:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65tsRNiEGR4

    The Making of 101 Dalmations Part 3:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h_7zBsJ96FE

    The Making of 101 Dalmations Part 4:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WmYtRL2_1lM

  10. on 09 Jan 2024 at 1:35 am 10.Thurman said …

    Why visitors still use to read news papers when in this
    technological globe the whole thing is presented
    on web?

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