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Post a Comment On: Mayerson on Animation

"Curious"

4 Comments -

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Blogger Michael Sporn said...

The answer, of course, is that there is no respect today for animated acting. I'm not sure one can see the difference between a Curious George or a Space Jam or most of the other recent features.
Hoodwinked, Barnyard et al lead us into the 21st Century.
These days the moments are rare when we can connect with an animated character. As a matter of fact, I have a hard time going to see animated characters on screen anymore.

April 26, 2007 8:20 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Well, Michael said it pretty well.

I actually have to disagree in the case of specific places and projects I've worked on where the animators were absolutely treasured, but for those "big" productions alluded to here a la Curious George or, say, Quest for Camelot--the problem was that the bills were paid and shots called by people with no. clue. whatsoever. Nada.

To them animators were in practice simply as interchangable as the gaffers and grips on a liveaction shoot. I mean, JUST like that.

And sadly, that same misunderstanding of roles extends (on those same BIG studio pictures--excepting Disney, DW and Pixar)beyond the animators to the story crew, who are reduced to merely illustrating a script as TV artists do instead of the JOB that makes a movie good or better, which is how it's supposed to work. It's pretty terrible to contemplate--and it always seems funnily enough to result in unwatchable films.

April 26, 2007 1:20 PM

Blogger Barry A Sanders said...

another factor to consider is the effect of 3D animation. In 3D a character will always look the same because it is always the same computer model, this helps a great deal to smooth over inconsistentcies you get in the acting from multiple animators. Once the pervasive attitude becomes one in which we belive any animator can work with any character it leaks back into hand drwan animation. Or at least it's a thought.

April 26, 2007 2:06 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Simple, Mark. The studios love CGI since the character never goes off model. It's therefore MUCH easier to farm the work out all over the world to anyone who can make things move around on screen with no worry about consistency of appearance. This is the main reason for the rise of CGI and the demise of hand drawn (not audience preference).
Audience preference also seems to be the reason why cheap, farmed-out features seem to have failed at the box office (VALIANT and HAPPILY N'EVER AFTER were made this way). But nothing will stop greedy producers from attempting to make animated films without those pesky artists. The animator is considered(by these same producers) not a crew member or a trained professional, but a machine that turns out mechanical images.
Of course CURIOUS GEORGE was hand drawn, but it had a poor story and weak (re) design of the characters. Nothing will save a film with a poor foundation no matter what the medium.

April 26, 2007 10:24 PM

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