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Post a Comment On: Mayerson on Animation

"Six Authors In Search of a Character: Part 9, Storyboards"

7 Comments -

1 – 7 of 7
Blogger Michael Sporn said...

This is a fabulous posting, Mark. As always, you're right up at the top of the heap.

June 14, 2007 8:48 AM

Blogger Eddie Fitzgerald said...

A very interesting post! I'm a storyboarder myself and I guess I like it because it's close to direction. Like every other storyboarder I find myself wishing the finished film would mirror my storyboard.

The problem is that films with a strong storyboard feel often don't lend themselves to animation very well. If you look at the funniest Bill Nolan black & white Terrytoons you'll see that the highlights, the real audience-grabbing scenes, are often something the something the animator thought of. Cartoons lost some of their innocense and innovation when animators were reduced to fleshing out other peoples' ideas and layouts.

Of course audiences like structure and and so do I. Some of the storyboard feel is inevitable. But without the animators input to the stories cartoons are a sad thing.

I like stories and storyboards that give animators a chance to shine. We storyboarders shouldn't try to accompish everything with cuts and angles and dialogue. We should remind ourselves that the animators are the stars (or should be) and we're there to make them look good.

June 14, 2007 1:49 PM

Blogger Mark Mayerson said...

Eddie, when I finally print the conclusion to all this in the coming weeks, you'll see that I think that animators have been shafted big time. So many of the things that we accept as normal in the animation business are the result of decisions made in 1915 or 1935 that were done for convenience, not for the good of the medium.

From a business standpoint, control was taken away from animators in order to make production more efficient. In the case of a strong producer like Disney or strong directors like Clampett, Jones, Avery, etc. it also led to good cartoons. However, without that strong artistic presence at the top of the hierarchy, the results are too often garbage. Even with that strong artistic presence, animators have usually been saddled with far too many constraints to really flower as contributors.

Today we've arrived at a situation where animators are often irrelevant to animated films.

June 14, 2007 2:41 PM

Blogger Tom said...

Great posting, Sir! When I was animating on Disney films like Beauty & Beast and Little Mermaid, whenever the storyboard pose caught the essense of what the scene was trying to say, it made my job so much easier. That was not always the case, but when it worked it was great. Still, as a director I used to run into animators and layout people who feel it's incumbent upon them to one-up the board and find another solution anyway. I don't think that's utilizing what works in a board.

Mike Lah once told me that the way Tex Avery cut his story reels (Leica Reels to some) they were even sharper and funnier than the final animation!

June 14, 2007 4:46 PM

Blogger Eddie Fitzgerald said...

Mark, good answer! What you said sounds right! I can't wait to read the conclusion and I'll make sure I read all the installments!

June 14, 2007 6:20 PM

Blogger Whit said...

It makes sense that Tex's leica reels worked better than the final animation. He was always pulling inbetweens to sharpen the gags.

June 15, 2007 1:56 AM

Anonymous S.Carras said...

I wonder who Lieca reel worked best for at Warner Bros. Chuck Jones obviously used them for some of his artister (and in my opion only less funnier) things like What's Opera Doc (I don't buy the Ferdinand-dung from Charles Solomon that WB never used pose reels, btw).Steve

May 04, 2013 1:49 AM

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