Did I Say Kickstarter?
And talking about Animated Features, did I mention our Kickstarter Campaign to get POE in motion? Well, not today, yet. I promised to get it into the next couple of week’s posts the way Gail Collins is name dropping Mitt Romney‘s tying his dog to the roof of his car and driving to Canada.
Many thanks if you’ve been able to contribute anything. Many thanks for just paying attention. As I said, if you can get the word out to friends and friends of friends, maybe it’ll work. I’m a hoping.
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THE LORAX
- I saw THE LORAX. What can I say? It’s the biggest piece of crap this side of 2012. This is further proof to me that CGI is not animation but bad puppetry done with machines. At least that’s what it felt like. The characters just kept moving – pop, move – pop, move – pop, move – until they stopped in any given scene. Those movements were all tied to some of the worst VO shouting, screaming, racket I’ve heard in a while. It’s like they kept trying to wake me up, but they had a mini story that spoke about nothing. Only an idiot like Lou Dobbs could attack this as “Liberal.”
I’m not sure the performances always felt bad, but the manipulation, choices, cutting of those tracks and combined with the gloopy colors and continual, non-centered movement. ECH! I was shouted down for what felt like two hours – I know, it was actually only 86 minutes, but that’s a big chunk of my life that’s gone, and it felt like two hours. (Actually there were a couople of dance moves the Ed Helms character had that were clean, but that’s about all that I saw.)
This was the #1 film in the country last week. No doubt this is the same country that is buying into the robocall Republicans accusing women of everything under the sun and trying to set the clock back to 1962. I’ve got to clear my palette. We’ll see if this miniscule but LOUD film can beat out the legions backing John Carter.
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Arrietty Movement
- I keep going back to ARRIETTY, but I have to say I think back on that as a style that didn’t quite work for me. It felt a bit pinched. I’d have preferred a looser design more like Spirited Away or Ponyo, Very Anime in many ways.
However, the character animation, I think, is some of the best we’ve seen from Ghibli. On all of the principal characters (with the exception of the annoying mother character), I found the motion of the characters really trying hard to be part of character development. I think specifically of a number of scenes.
There’s a small scene where Haru (the Carol Burnett dubbed character – and I was surprised at how great a job Ms. Burnett did) stands over a small table. She is going through a simple, and basic action, but she loses her balance for a millemeter of a second and recovers. This is not something done by the books. It’s purely a motion that is put into the context of the scene she’s in, and it gives some credence to the odd character. I wish I had a dvd of the film, so I could show off some frame grabs detailing what I’ve seen.
Eventually.
There, I feel better. I can block out that American Crap, now.
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John Carter, Wherefore Art Thou?
A.O.Scott kinda half liked it in his NYTimes review:
Directed by the Pixar fixture Andrew Stanton (“Finding Nemo,†“Wall-Eâ€) and based on a 1912 magazine serial by Edgar Rice Burroughs, it is a potpourri of arcane and familiar genres. “Mash-up†doesn’t begin to capture this hectic hybrid; it’s more like a paintball fight.
“John Carter†tries to evoke, to reanimate, a fondly recalled universe of B-movies, pulp novels and boys’ adventure magazines. But it pursues this modest goal according to blockbuster logic, which buries the easy, scrappy pleasures of the old stuff in expensive excess. A bad movie should not look this good.
Lou Leminick of the NYPost wrote in his ONE STAR review:
Interminably long, dull and incomprehensible, “John Carter’’ evokes pretty much every sci-fi classic from the past 50 years without having any real personality of its own.
You could say much the same about the title character, as uncharismatically played by the unfortunately named Taylor Kitsch of TV’s “Friday Night Lights.’’ Even in 3-D, he’s barely one-dimensional
and
Joe Neumaier of the Daily News wrote:
‘John Carter’: Silly sci-fi fantasy isn’t out of this world, but it can be playful and down-to-Earth.
There’s little here that hasn’t been seen before, which to some people is sorta the point. Stanton, a co-founder of Pixar and director of the unassailable “Wall-E,†lets “John Carter†wear its heart on its loincloth, and he never lets the often clunky-looking effects — essentially they’re “Dune†done well — overwhelm the humans.
Those humans, though, do feel like they were cast from the backlot of a miniseries set in Rome. The aptly named Kitsch is never dull and lunkheaded like similar movie warriors Sam Worthington and Jason Momoa, but neither does his sinewy grunge look mix with the late-19th-century earthly story or the sandy alien landscapes.
I have a screening I can attend of the film this coming Tuesday. After I do, I’ll let you know what I think (not that my opinion on this kinda stuff really matters.)
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Getting The Spirit
I actually have been so deeply into Spirited Away that I was going to write at length about that film. I can’t tell you how much time I’ve spent with the movie. It just keeps getting deeper for me. The animation is all serviceable and some of it is excellent; I see Ghibli really going through animation changes on this film and upcoming ones. We seem to have nothing comparable happening in the US just now, everything’s gotten so tiny here. The Brits are still doing some wonderful work, and the French have some remarkable animation. I keep watching.
Anyway, I haven’t really spilt my mouth with the Spirited Away in me. Miyazaki is just a force for me to watch. I’ve gone back to see some of his earlier features, and watch how they’ve reinforced and helped realize future works. Something like Kiki’s Delivery Service is a bit flat for me, but the story’s character development is the center of the film for Miyazaki, so I understand its place in his history.
I’ve got to watch Totoro again. It’s such a simple, lovely film. Maybe later today. I remember, years ago, someone introducing himself to me at an Ottawa Animation Festival and giving me a copy of the DVD telling me it was his favorite film, and he wanted to share it with me. It wasn’t a copied DVD; it was an unopened, store-bought copy.
That film was an enlightening discovery. (Unfortunately, I don’t know who that who gave me the DVD. Please to reveal yourself if you read this. I’m enormously grateful.)
That is a gem of a movie. There’s the inspiration.
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Giving the Story
- Jenny Lerew, on her blog, The Blackwing Diaries, has an excellent post about character and story. She has been a principal in many a theatrical film’s story development, and she knows what she’s talking about. It’s a good read, and I encourage you to take a look.
This post actually adds to one she reworked in the past week. It’s a look into some of the later Disney features (pre Beauty & the Beast) where character took precedent over story. (Jungle Book, anyone?). If you have interest in story development, in this day of bad story writing, you should read both.