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Post a Comment On: Mayerson on Animation

"Pinocchio Part 5A"

4 Comments -

1 – 4 of 4
Blogger Michael Sporn said...

All of the films overseen by Disney had quiet starts. Dumbo and Mother, Cinderella singing to the birds, at home with the Darling family, the puppy training of Lady, even Alice singing among the flowers. I think it was The Lion King that introduced the first rousing number that pushed the action envelope just a bit higher. Of course, everything since then (except maybe Toy Story and Iron Giant) has tried to top it.

April 02, 2007 7:54 AM

Blogger Wayne said...

"For all of this film's elaborateness, there are some cheats. It's standard for animation that's over a panning background to be done on ones. In scene 11, some strange things are happening. It could be the DVD transfer, but it appears that every 5th frame of the panning background is on 2's. The animation is all on two's, but on every fifth frame it's on 3's! Even if the DVD transfer is guilty of causing this, there's no question that the animation is on 2's while the background pans on 1's."

When reviewing animation on a home video playback machine, video tape or DVD, NTSC format plays back at 30 frames per second, versus the 24 frames per second on film. The video transfer uses a "3/2 pull down" method of transfering the 24 fps to 30 fps, filling in the 6 additional frames per second required. Also, for PAL, which plays back at 25 fps, the transfer is direct and the film plays at 4% faster, (1/25th faster) than an NTSC video.
Disney usually used ones for scenes that had a camera move, like a pan or a diagonal truck, anytime there might be a east/west move, which if animated on twos, the character would chatter, or strobe. They also animated on 1s for fast action where they would use a speed line special effects to simulate a "blur" on the action. You can see many such scenes on Jiminy Cricket. They did often miss these opportunities if their schedule and deadline called for a scene to just get done and eliminate the additional inbetweens to avoid the strobing issue.

April 02, 2007 4:42 PM

Blogger Thad said...

Does anyone know what the best looking version of this film on home video is? I only own the 1999 'Limited Issue' DVD which has dull, lifeless colors. I might have to spring for a 16mm print if I want to watch this masterpiece properly.

April 02, 2007 7:30 PM

Blogger Liimlsan said...

It's one of Bill Tytla's best performances. All I ever heard about it was 'Oh, and Bill also did some of Gepetto early in the film.' I always assumed (I was young) that he had the scene of 'I have just the name for you!', earlier on. And some smatter shots.

Then I bought the DVD solely so I could study both the Ferguson scenes and that one scene of Gepetto dousing himself. It's astonishing - I always thought it was Babbit, because it looks so labored. But labored and analytical are not the same thing, I realize after, you know, actually animating.

Now that it's Tytla, it makes sense.

March 13, 2012 11:33 PM

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