Daily post &Photos &SpornFilms 27 Dec 2007 09:03 am

Terminals, Blogs, Free Films & Krazy Kat

- A week ago, I stepped off a train into Grand Central Station to be surprised by the kaleidoscopic carousel of lights that had been arranged in the grand terminal. I tried to take some photos, thinking it’d make a good post for this blog, but wasn’t pleased with the pictures I’d taken. It didn’t do justice to the light show.

Nulla has posted some fine images on her site, Blather from Brooklyn. I urge you to take a look. As a matter of fact, she’s also posted some nice pictures recorded on Christmas Day in NY. You just can’t beat this city for the show they put on. From Grand Central, to the department store windows, to the free ice skating and carousel in Bryant Park, it just gets better each year.

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- My favorite Christmas Blog reading this year was the arcana Tom Sito has treated us to on his site. From wasselling to cutting trees for the home to the birth of Santa. I’ve enjoyed reading about it all, and I’ve shared it with plenty of others. Thanks, Tom..

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- I’ve just found a free site set up by New Hampshire Public TV
which gives access to a number of Weston Woods films via RealPlayer. Among the many shorts available there are some eight films I’ve done for Weston adapting noted children’s books. If you’d like to see
any of these films:

The Amazing Bone
Doctor DeSoto
Leo The Late Bloomer
The Mysterious Tadpole
Max’s Chocolate Chicken
Max’s Christmas
Morris’s Disappearing Bag
What’s Under My Bed?

They can be found here. You have to scroll down the individual categories until you come to one of these titles. They’re not hard to locate if you’re so inclined.

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_

The Daily Telegraph reworks a piece by Sarah Boxer from The N Y Review of Books to give us this article on Krazy Kat. Herriman: Cartoonist who equalled Cervantes.
It honors Herriman while promoting the Fantagraphics series currently in issue.

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Finally, you can tell Christmas is over when Santas start to deflate.


Thanks to Steve Fisher for this picture.
It’s almost an abstraction.

Errol Le Cain &Illustration 26 Dec 2007 08:24 am

Christmas Stockings

- The book by Matthew Price, The Christmas Stockings, is a fun book for kids with large illustrations by Errol Le Cain. Santa has trouble getting around an apartment building in the city, so you have to help him locate a number of doors and windows, which cut out and open, so that he can move from apartment to apartment delivering his goodies.

It’s not a book that I ever loved, but it’s certainly part of the canon. The style is less like the irridescent watercolors of his other books, and more like a cartoon book done with a mix of watercolors and colored pencils.

Each page is a double page spread, so that there are fewer individual illustrations and big is the byword. Not as delicate as some of the others but still it’s the work of an artist.

More to the point, it’s specifically a Christmas book, and when more appropriate to attend to it than now. So here are several of its double page spreads.


Inside front cover; Santa arrives._______(Click any image to enlarge.)


Pages 2-3___Santa arrives on the rooftop.


Pages 4-5___Once inside, he tries to move down the building’s floors, but needs the reader to help him find an exit. There’s a hidden door under the airplane that opens.


Pages 8-9___The door marked “Exit” opens.


Pages 12-13___The door in front of Santa opens.


Pages 16-17___The window opens allowing Santa to escape.


Inside the back cover sits one of the best illustrations in the book.___

As you know, I’ve posted a number of his other books, and you can click any of these links to find those posts.

____Puffin Books_______ ________________Mr. Mistoffelees
____The Snow Queen_______________-____Aladdin
____Growltiger_________________________Thorn Rose
____Pied Piper of Hamelin_______________12 Dancing Princesses
____Have You Seen My Sister____________Hiawatha’s Childhood
_________Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum
____

Animation Artifacts 25 Dec 2007 08:24 am

A Grim Christmas

Here’s a rough drawing of Santa that Grim Natwick did back in 1931 while at the Fleischer studio. I’m not sure if this was for a card or a friendly in-studio gag, but it’s definitely Santa and a Natwick cartoon.


_(Click image to enlarge.)

____Merry Christmas

Animation Artifacts &Richard Williams 24 Dec 2007 09:26 am

Christmas is Coming

You’d better watch out.

I posted this cel two years ago. It was from a scene Richard Williams animated for his Christmas Carol. The drawing was done on cel not on paper with a mars omnichrome pencil. Hence, the inking is Dick’s, as well.

David Nethery has posted a cel from Abe Levitow’s sequence – probably my favorite scene in the film comes from this sequence. The scene where Christmas Present moves back his robe to reveal the two children – “ignorance” and “want”. I think I disappointed Dick when I told him this years ago and hadn’t named one of his scenes. Given the way Dick worked on Raggedy Ann, I’d guess he did the cleanup on these scenes as well.

Photos 23 Dec 2007 09:15 am

Snowflakes, Premieres & Glittering Trees

“Let me tell you, there is nothing like
New York at Christmas Time.
_
“The day we went to the ballet, Jenny’s eyes sparkled like the giant glittering snowflake that greeted us at Fifth Avenue.
She said it was like walking in a life-size pop-up book because lovely thngs kept popping up all around us. She was right.
_
“There were evergreens shining like jewels high on a tower rooftop; dazzling window displays;
Central Park, looking magical and majestic.”
_
These are the lines of narration that greeted me when I initially read the “Narration Script” Maxine Fisher had written for my film, The Red Shoes, back in 1989.

The crystal light fixture that had arrived on 57th Street over the center of Fifth Avenue, was relatively new at the time. We did our own version of the piece, which slowly zooms and pans on screen for about four seconds.

This past Wednesday night we were uptown to attend the premiere of Denzel Washington’s new film, The Great Debaters. It was fun attending one of these premieres, having cocktails prior to the film (courtesy of Harvey Weinstein). The best part was seeing a movie on that enormous screen at the Ziegfeld Theater. It really is a treat. The film was a bit sentimental and not as dark as the reality probably was. Uplifting.

There were some celebrities milling about. I said hello to Mark Forester, the director of The Kite Runner and Monster’s Ball. He was talking with movie mogul, Joe Roth. Oprah Winfrey, who produced the film, wasn’t there. John Canemaker and his companion, Joe Kennedy, were the only animation folk we saw there.

_
The film started late with the entire cast introducing it. Harvey Weinstein introduced
Denzel Washington, who stars and directed, and he introduced the rest of the cast.
Forest Whitaker is on the left of picture 2.

_
At any rate, when the movie finally let out, we headed to rainy Fifth Avenue to catch a taxi or a bus (whichever came first.)

There was the snowflake! I decided to try shooting it while we waited for a bus to show up. These are the pictures.

_
_________These are the “evergreens shining like jewels high on a tower rooftop.”

Animation Artifacts &Comic Art 22 Dec 2007 09:03 am

Terry Comix

I have this comic book page from Paul Terry’s Comics – pg 27. I thought I’d post it since I don’t know who drew the page and thought someone out there might have a good idea. I love Gandy Goose, so it’s enough that he’s featured in the strip. That was reason enough to purchase it a couple of years ago.

The magazine was probably published in 1952-3. Jim Tyer was drawing a lot of the strips at the time, though I’m not sure this is his artwork. The eyes look too normal despite the distortion in some of the bodies.


__________(Click the image to view larger.)

Daily post 21 Dec 2007 09:29 am

MoMA Shows In Jan.

- Today officially marks the anniversary of the premiere of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the first US animated feature. Seventy years later, it’s still one of the finest. There’s an excellent article by Wade Sampson about the premiere. If you have the dvd, why not watch it again?

Though Snow White isn’t going to play in a theater soon, a number of other features will.
Here’s your chance to see some great and important animated features on a big screen.
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In January, the Museum of Modern Art will present a month of animation from its collection, ranging from early shorts (including three Dave Fleischer Popeye shorts from 1936, ’37 and ’39) to four features including 2005′s Wallace & Gromit in the Curse of the Were-Rabbit.

The Popeye films and a 1948 Bunin/Bower Alice in Wonderland will both be projected on prints recently restored by the Museum. You can bet I’ll have a lot more to say about Alice as time gets closer.

Still Moving

The Museum continues its regular series derived exclusively from its film collections, featuring works that have been acquired and preserved by MoMA over the last seven decades.
Still Moving features animation, from traditional cel animation to puppets, clay, and CGI. Included are three Technicolor Popeye shorts from the Fleischer studio, recently restored by the Museum, as well as My Neighbors the Yamadas, a disarming chronicle of contemporary daily life by Japanese animation master Isao Takahata. MoMA’s restoration of Alice
in Wonderland, Lou Bunin and Dallas Bower’s deft melding of live actors and puppets, will be screened, as will the feature debut of Wallace and Gromit, and Pixar’s a bug’s life.

Popeye the Sailor Meets Sinbad the Sailor. 1936. USA. Directed by Dave Fleischer. 17 min.
Popeye the Sailor Meets Ali Baba’s Forty Thieves. 1937. USA. Directed by Dave Fleischer. 17 min.
Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp. 1939. USA. Directed by Dave Fleischer. 22 min. Program 56 min. ________________
Tuesday, January 1, 2:00
(T2); Wednesday, January 9, 1:30 (T3); Thursday, January 10, 1:30 (T3)
(The image above thanks to Animation Backgrounds.)_

Alice in Wonderland. 1948. Great Britain/France. Directed by Lou Bunin, Dallas Bower. Screenplay by Henry Myers, Albert Lewin, Edward Eliscu.With Carol Marsh, Stephen Murray, Pamela Brown. 96 min.
Wednesday, January 2, 6:00 (T2); Friday, January 11, 1:30 (T3); Thursday, January 17, 1:30 (T3)

Wallace & Gromit in The Curse of the Were-Rabbit. 2005. Great Britain. Directed by Steve Box, Nick Park. Screenplay by Box, Park, Bob Baker, Mark Burton. Acquired from Dreamworks Animation. 84 min.
Thursday, January 3, 6:00 (T2); Wednesday, January 16, 1:30 (T3); Friday, January 18, 1:30 (T3)

A Bug’s Life. 1998. USA. Directed by John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton. Screenplay by Stanton, Don McEnery, Bob Shaw. 94 min.
Friday, January 4, 6:00 (T2); Wednesday, January 23, 1:30 (T3); Thursday, January 24, 1:30 (T3)

Hohokekyo tonari no Yamada-kun (My Neighbors the Yamadas). 1999. Japan. Written and directed by Isao Takahata. In Japanese; English subtitles. 104 min.
Wednesday, January 30, 1:30 (T3); Thursday, January 31, 1:30 (T3)
(Image above thanks to Conversations With Ghibli _

Articles on Animation &Commentary 20 Dec 2007 08:36 am

Persepolis – Opening Soon

- I saw Persepolis for the second time last Thursday. I am an ardent supporter of this film, and any criticism I offer must be taken with that grain of salt. The film is not the most daring of animated films, but it certainly does advance the intelligence of the animated feature – in enormous strides – given the current state of things. However, it is also cinematically annoying.

To start with, I must say the music does no service to this film. A synthesized tinkle and a simplemided tune does not help the emotional state of the film. In my opinion, it detracts rather than adds to the whole. On the second viewing, the music actually became an irritant for me.

The animation is simple, but I often wished it were more rooted in the soul of the characters. Instead, it seems more rooted in the style of the comic. The film is adapted from Marjan Satrapi’s “graphic novel” – “bandes dessinées”. As such the story is simple and built around clever graphics. These graphics served to set the scene for the film, and they play out as short set piece after short set piece with graphic transitions from one to the other. Irises, wipes, morphs all cleverly pull us from one short sequence to the other always hiding the fact that we’re not living the film; we’re being told what’s happening. In fact, it gets a bit tiring. Something that would work enormously well in a short, gets exhausting and then tedious in a feature.

This, I think, is the product of inexperienced film makers and the very faithful transition from book to screen. Mind you, as I stated earlier, this is my favorite animated feature this year; I only wish I could feel like I’d want to watch it again. Unfortunately, it feels as though I’ve seen the film, and there’s not much more I can get from it.

I’ve read many of the reviews; some of the more mainstream reviewers are beginning to check in. Deservedly most of those reviews that have been printed have been positive. However, the one by Anthony Lane in The New Yorker feels particularly true for me. In his final paragraph, Lane writes:

    The film is largely in black-and-white, yet the result, far from seeming gloomy, has the pertness and the simplicity of a cutout. I found it, if anything, too simple. The faces are no more than tapered ovals, which makes some of the characters hard to distinguish, and I was left with the nagging, if ungallant, impression that I had been flipping through a wipe-clean board book entitled “Miffy and Friends Play with Islamic Fundamentalism.” There is no denying the boldness of “Persepolis,” both in design and in moral complaint, but there must surely be moments, in Marjane’s life as in ours, that cry out for cross-hatching and the grown-up grayness of doubt.

I’ve seen a number of interviews with Marjane Satrapi and co-director Vincent Paronnaud. They’re starting to repeat themselves. At my initial screening, I was given a press book. Therein were a number of official interviews with the staff and cast. I’d like to post one with “Art Designer,” Marc Jousset. It’s informative, not too long and it gives another voice to this fine feature.

Interview with Marc Jousset – Art Designer

Why did you decide to produce Persepolis almost completely in a “traditional” way, not using computer generated images?

The question of which technique to use, arose very quickly when we discussed the movie. We started with 2D images on pen tablets, but we were not totally happy with the result. The lines lacked definition. It also seemed logical that Marjane should be able to work with the animators using the tools of her trade; paper and ink. It was clear that a traditional animation technique was perfectly suited to Marjane’s and Vincent’s idea of the film.

It’s an animation film with many characters…

Development took a long time, because of the sheer number of characters. For Marjane’s character, there were five separate steps: little girl, pre-teen, teenager, young woman and adult. Since it was also based on real events, and took place in Tehran under the Shah’s regime, then under Khomeini’s revolution, (not to mention Austria), we had to take into account the way people were dressed. There are scenes taking place at the university, in airports, at a punk concert, so it was impossible to draw only two or three characters. We had to animate a good deal of extras. However, we were lucky. Marjane drew all the characters. I thought we would have 200 model sheets to do, each character seen through different angles, so there was no discrepancy from one shot to the other, but actually we made over 600! I think it’s a record for an animated movie.

Did the use of black and white make things particularly difficult for an animated movie?

Using only black and white in an animation movie requires a great deal of discipline. From a technical point of view, you can’t make any mistakes. As soon as an eye isn’t in the right place, or a pupil not perfectly drawn, it shows up straight away on the large screen. It’s even more obvious in this particular film since it’s not a cartoon with codes, conventions and distortions. We were closer to Japanese animation because of the story’s realism, but we couldn’t apply the techniques used in manga. As a result, we had to develop a specific style, both realistic and mature. No bluffing, no tricks, nothing overcooked. With animation director Christian Desmares, twenty animators worked on the movie. Marjane had quite an unusual way of working. Each sequence (1,200 shots) was given to an animator. Marjane insisted on being filmed playing out all the scenes. Given that she’s a genuinely talented actress, it was a great source of information for
the animators, giving them an accurate approach to how they should work. It was also very encouraging for them that she was so committed and passionate. Usually, in animated movies, directors are rarely so concerned with the day-to-day work on the film. After animators, the assistant animators put the finishing touches to the drawings and check them against the original. Marjane’s drawings look very simple and graphic, but they’re very difficult to work on because there are so few identifying marks. Realistic drawings require outstanding accuracy.

How many drawings were needed for Persepolis?

About 80,000 drawings for around 130,000 images. That’s quite reasonable for a feature made in the traditional way.

What do you think are Marjane Satrapi’s best attributes?

It’s a combination of rigor and generosity. She was always there for you, and never acted like a diva, like filmmakers who pop in once a week to hand out praises and criticisms. Not thinking about what memories this process might rekindle in her, she was totally committed and involved. She even animated certain scenes in the movie. It brought a unique atmosphere to the team and the collaborative effort.

What about Vincent Paronnaud?

His rigor, his eye and his daring. Marjane and Vincent have always favored content, whilst being very respectful to the visual work done. The story always came first. It’s not a movie made by technicians. They went to work on PersepoHs as though it were a live-action film.

Vincent is very good at artistic direction, composition, playing with black and white, and Marjane masters that as well. She was, however, more focused on the accuracy of emotions and feelings. Each had enough hindsight with his or her work, so that their advice stimulated the other. It’s quite amazing to see them work together. They are a true two-some.

What was the main challenge for you?

To be on schedule, and to stay within budget, whilst maintaining our requirement for high quality. The budget was 6 million Euros, which is reasonable for a 2D movie made in France. I’ve rarely seen a team so focused on a project, not only for the technical challenge, but also for the story itself. I think the culmination of the fact that it was a true story, that the main character worked with you, that an animated movie dealt with a current issue and that it was intended for adults was tremendously exciting for the team.

Animation &Books &Daily post 19 Dec 2007 09:35 am

Jack Zander and other thoughts

- Because I was never very involved in the commercial (meaning ads) end of the New York animation world, I didn’t have much contact with Jack Zander. Yet, I do know that he was a significant part of that end of the business in this city. Once you got past the names of Paramount and Terrytoons, Zander’s Animation Parlour was the big studio of my earliest days.

In fact, I probably had more contact with Jack’s son, Mark, over the years. The one interview I had at Zander’s was with Mark. It was one of those interviews where something in the air tells you that you’re never going to work at this place, so why try again. It was nothing Mark did; nothing I did. It just didn’t feel like I was a good fit. I didn’t try again and didn’t have much contact with Jack in the future.

Mark Mayerson let me know, last night, that Jack had passed away Monday at the age of 99. Mark also has one of the best, most succinct bios I’ve seen of Jack’s life on his site this morning. I urge you to check it out.
Tom Sito also has a nice post about Jack on his site today.
AWN has an interview with Jack Zander by Joe Strike.

Jack Zander was a significant figure in New York’s commercial history. He deserves some attention.

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- Michael Barrier had a wonderful post at his website, Dec. 17th; it was on Borge Ring, and excuse to print his letter to Mike. I was a pleasantly surprised to see myself mentioned in the piece. Many people have said nice things about me, but this is the first truly poetic quote I’ve read. Borge is a poet of an animator.

He made a small error though in commenting on my film, Dr. DeSoto. Borge said I made the film for $4000. In fact, it was $3500 per minute. I don’t think I could have gotten it photographed for $4000. I’m sure I miscommunicated, as usual, way back in 1984 when we spoke of that film. I hope he doesn’t like the film less.

If you’d like to see some of Borge’s work, Mark Mayerson wrote about him and led us to several films in 2006.

The illustration, above, is by Patrick Mate. I couldn’t resist swiping it for this post; it’s such a great picture and really captures Borge – in my mind, anyway. Patrick’s blog is worth checking into if you don’t know it.

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- I just received my issue of Hans Bacher‘s book Dream Worlds. It took a while for Amazon to get it out.
I haven’t read it as yet, but was astonished in carefully thumbing through it. With the same ardent enthusiasm I had for Amid Amidi’s Cartoon Modern and Mike Barrier’s The Animated Man, I encourage you to buy a copy of this book if you’re serious about animation.
It’s stunningly beautiful, filled with excellent art, attractively designed and it looks to be enormously informative. The book shows you what a production designer does in an animated film. I’ve seen no other book like it.

I will have much more to say about this book as I read it.

Comic Art 18 Dec 2007 08:40 am

Gasoline Alley

- I recently posted a number of comic strips panels and story threads from The Gumps by Sidney Smith. This was an example of one of the great story strips that reigned in the 1920-30′s. It was certainly not the only example of these.

Gasoline Alley has always been one of my favorite strips. I fell in love with it when I was a kid just about the time that Dick Moores took over the strip from Frank King. Probably as a result of this, I have been more a fan of Moores’ work than I have been of King’s. There’s something about his open drawings that really sing to me.

Moores had been a long time assistant to King prior to taking over the strip, so he knew it well. Only recently, thanks to the work of Bill Blackbeard and Chris Ware have we been able to really appreciate this strip. It’s being published in chronological order via Drawn & Quarterly Books.

Walt found Skeezix, a baby, on his doorstep on Feb. 14th, 1921. For an unmarried garage mechanic to raise a child in the 20′s there were obvious problems to face. The strip faces these problems as we watch Skeezix grow up over the years and Walt grow older. Life goes on in this strip, and it’s wonderful.
Here are a few strips from the 1921 and 1922.


(Click any image to enlarge.)


Within the first year you can already see the attachment between Walt and Skeezix, and you can see that Skeezix is growing up in front of your eyes. It’s just great.

A while back I posted a piece about the illustrated novel by Frank King “Nina and Skeezix.” It was published in 1941, 20 years after Skeezix was born. You can read that post here.

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