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Post a Comment On: Mayerson on Animation

"Dumbo Part 5"

9 Comments -

1 – 9 of 9
Blogger Eric Noble said...

I think it's a beautiful sequence. I think it's once of those scenes that gives you a sense of the environment that the characters live in. I live the roustabouts design and animation. It has a very impressionistic/expressionistic feeling to me. Jack Campbell certainly was a talented animator. I also love the effects shots here. Also, the colors are powerful. They're not bright, primary colors, but simple, more muted colors, but they make a bold statement. Wonderful post.

May 28, 2010 7:27 PM

Blogger Zartok-35 said...

A beautiful sequence of the film, quite possibly the most beautiful of them all. Very reminiscent of Fantasia.

I can't help but feel the transition from Casey Junior to the Roustabouts is a little strange, though. They don't feel like they should be in the same film.

Shot 1 is probably my favorite part of the entire movie. The staging is brilliant!

May 28, 2010 10:24 PM

Blogger Steven Hartley said...

Wow, a wonderful piece of animation, and I've always thought what did Jack Campbell (before the draft was posted I thought he did the animals!), and the roustabouts are really well-drawn Jack certainly has talent!

One of my two favourite sequences in the film (the other being "Fireman Save My Child" Sequence 14)

I just love the scenes with Casey Junior going up the hill saying, "I think I can, I think I can!", I just love the music to Casey Junior, it has to be (in my opinion) one of the best train songs.

May 29, 2010 4:21 AM

Blogger Steven Hartley said...

Oh (I forgot to mention) Zartok, I'm just the same with you, I really do like shot 1 very much as well, I love the music to when Casey in silhouette goes through a tunnel and back again! Just beautiful, and Paul Kossoff did the Casey in silhouette and Don Patterson did the Casey Junior coming out of the tunnel (BEAUTIFUL MUSIC), Oh by the way, don't you notice that in the film when Don Patterson animates Casey in Shot 1, that he is shaking his head in rhythm.

I love the lyrics to the Casey film, (My favourite Dumbo song, wish it was longer!) I love the first part of the lyrics:

"Casey Jr's comin' down the track,
Comin' down the track with a smokey's stack!"

In "The Reluctant Dragon" there was a Casey Junior sequence (about 5 mintues long), and I think that it was supposed to be a longer sequence in Dumbo, but it got removed, and Casey in that version didn't look like the final match)

May 29, 2010 4:27 AM

Blogger John V. said...

As I mentioned on Hans' blog, it seems Don Patterson did the shots of Casey Jr as a character, while Don Tobin and Paul Kossoff did the shots of Casey Jr as an inanimate vehicle. (a possible exception being Tobin animating scene 12)

Note that on the draft, the white, better dressed circus workers in the "Casey loading" and "Menagerie" sequences are also described as roustabouts, and there are a couple of shots by Jack Campbell.

I agree that the "Happy hearted" sounds strange. Almost as if the song was originally meant to be a cheerful, "whistle while you work" type song, and the line is a holdover from before they decided to turn it into a slave song.

Also, something I only really noticed when watching the film with the draft is how rarely the roustabouts actually appear on screen. Because they're singing throughout, I don't think the audience really notices.

May 29, 2010 5:15 AM

Blogger billburg said...

I love reading your commentary on each sequence, Mark!

One exception to the lack of commentary on the roustabouts is the essay by Bill Benzon on Michael Barrier's site. I'm sure you've read it, but here's a link for anyone who hasn't:

http://www.michaelbarrier.com/Essays/Dumbo/Dumbo.htm

June 01, 2010 5:32 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Maybe I'm a bit naive, but I think that happiness can be found nearly anywhere, and while I'd be the first to admit I wouldn't sign up for the life they were mostly forced to live, it's possible that many make do with the hand their given, and it's likely they came to terms with their situation in a healthier way than we would like to admit.

I compare it to what Mike Rowe had to say on dirty jobs and happiness.

October 06, 2010 9:22 PM

Blogger Rich said...

Hm...I'm not sure I'm with you on the subject of roustabouts. When I first watched this with my kids I was shocked to find that the black workers were faceless and their song berates them. Compared to the clowns and the circus director, the roustabouts seemed to me to be treated as subhuman - and the crows are a caricature of blacks. The racism was typical for the time and is palpable. I still enjoy the movie, but do so because of Dumbo's triumph, and in spite of the background of racism.

October 08, 2010 12:47 AM

Anonymous Raúl Marco said...

The lyrics in spanish say "no quisimos estudiar" (we didn't want to study). This changes completely the meaning of the song and blames the roustabouts for their own bad conditions.

June 25, 2012 6:35 AM

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