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Post a Comment On: Mayerson on Animation

"The Simpsons Meet The Fleischers..."

9 Comments -

1 – 9 of 9
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hmm. Looks like a typical CG character construction to me. *wink
Much of the earlier designs for CG come off like this. Heck, a lot of the current designs still do. So we have stiff computer puppets or stiff hand drawn animation. A common theme for 21st animation seems to be emerging. Stuff like this is hard to animate well and get a sense of flow or music in the character. You can get away with it in stop motion because the animation is so obviously hand-made that all those little imperfections add their own kind of magic to the play. For hand drawn animation the flow of the line is a lot of the magic. If The Simpson's marks a return to hand drawn animation as a viable business model again (like it ever wasn't, but you know what I mean) here's hoping that the stiffness of the Simpson's universe isn't the new de-facto style guide to what hand drawn animation should look like. But like you mention, not that Fox really cares.

August 05, 2007 10:53 PM

Blogger Erik Westlund said...

hummm...

The Fleischers where on to something for a while there before the bottom fell out. Serial animation for adult audiences. Now, the Simpsons have occupied that same space handily in recent years.

I wonder if knowing the median age of the audience changes what is considered acceptable in terms of squash and stretch, and other playful visual aspects of animation?

Just some speculation based on what I see represented here.

August 06, 2007 12:26 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

The Tracy Ulman Simpsons shorts actually were fairly cartoony.I read Matt Groening is ashamed of those short episodes, I think at heart he's a bit boring and conservative and not comfortable with the expressiveness,lunacy and anarchy of a real cartoon.

August 06, 2007 1:44 AM

Blogger J. J. Hunsecker said...

You're dead right about the Simpsons/Fleischer construction similarities. I always thought that the Simpsons characters looked like something out of an early thirties cartoon, too -- minus the looser, rubber hose animation, though.

August 06, 2007 3:02 PM

Blogger Thad said...

Mark, one of the writers probably read this post. So watch for a scene of Barney drunk dressed in Bluto's garb in the 18th season!

August 07, 2007 1:01 AM

Blogger Stephen Worth said...

There's a huge difference between those two model sheets. One is made up of shapes that look like the ductwork of a building, and the other is made up of round, animatable ones with joints and points where the character can flex.

See ya
Steve

August 07, 2007 12:49 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

>>There's a huge difference between those two model sheets. One is made up of shapes that look like the ductwork of a building, and the other is made up of round, animatable ones with joints and points where the character can flex.<<


You can squash and stretch the Simpsons characters easily-they just dont do it.

August 08, 2007 10:46 AM

Blogger Andreas said...

>>I think at heart he's a bit boring and conservative and not comfortable with the expressiveness,lunacy and anarchy of a real cartoon.

Cartoon Lad, you might be on to something. Have you read his strip Life in Hell?

August 08, 2007 11:16 AM

Blogger Robert said...

Sure, Andreas. That's how you know Mrs. Simpson's outrageous hairdo is covering rabbit ears.

February 11, 2016 7:27 PM

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