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Post a Comment On: Mayerson on Animation

"The Last Hurrah"

11 Comments -

1 – 11 of 11
Blogger p spector said...

Thanks Mark. Once again, you've captured the total picture in that wonderful way you have.

October 26, 2008 1:16 PM

Blogger Thad said...

I have a review 30% done, and I've pretty much come to the same conclusions you have. I've been trying to simultaneously watch the new Popeye set too.

October 26, 2008 2:20 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

These cartoons are a textbook on how music can accompany animation and how it can be used to propel animation forward. There is more to be learned from a set like this than from any book written about creating animation.

If anyone really want to understand the greatness of what Carl Stalling and Milt Franklyn did in merging music with action, I suggest they play the music-only track on Disc 4 of William Lava's score for "Martian Through Georgia". Even without looking at the screen, you can guess what's going on through how Stalling and Franklyn scored it; Lava's score is mostly ominous and/or attempts to be other-worldly -- it matches the theme of the cartoon in general but rarely pauses to match the music with the exact action on-screen.

October 26, 2008 7:17 PM

Blogger Eric Noble said...

I'm glad I'm not the only one who sees "Chow Hound" as the cartoon equivalent of an E.C. Horror Comic. Thanks for writing the review. It just makes me want to buy it even more. Wonderful post.

October 27, 2008 12:00 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Mark you nailed it with this comment:

"It's ironic to me that a culture that is obsessed with sports and watches reality shows like Dancing with the Stars somehow thinks that motion is an unnecessary frill in animated cartoons.

When did animation become a synonym for stasis?"

October 27, 2008 8:52 AM

Blogger Nancy said...

Hi Mark,
It's amazing to see a great studio grow from such unprepossessing beginnings. The Boskos and Foxys are, to put it mildly, painful to watch. Somehow this group managed to come up with great characters and make some of the best animation ever done. But it's not a gradual evolution as at Disney's; it seems to spring on them all at once, probably due to the hiring of Tex Avery and Frank Tashlin as directors in the mid thirties. Warners is a directors' studio the way Disney is an animator's studio.
I'll miss this series, and am glad that they put out so many rare and unusual cartoons..including some that should have stayed rare...but that's history, folks!

October 27, 2008 9:57 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks for the review, Mark.

You said "My guess (and fear) is that we'll be inundated with no-frills sets devoted to the most famous Warner characters, leaving the lesser-known cartoons to languish in obscurity."

Truth be told, Warner cancelled the Golden Collection series last year, after reviewing sales of Vol. 5. George Feltenstein (Warner Home Video Sr. VP of Catalog) and I lobbied for one more set to get the lesser known more obscure material out there before the vault doors were completely shut. The Bosko, Buddy, propaganda and one-shot shorts on this set were selected intentionally. We might never have this chance again.

I sleep better knowing PAGE MISS GLORY, BOSKO'S PICTURE SHOW, RUSSIAN RHAPSODY -- and even NORMAN NORMAL -- amongst others included here, are restored.

If the sales are better than expected, the Golden Collections could possibly continue. So tell all your friends to buy it!

In the meantime, Warners is still restoring the library, 60 cartoons a year, and we are working to configure new packages to release on a regular basis.

October 27, 2008 1:10 PM

Blogger Duck Dodgers said...

Jerry,
after how many weeks/months WB started to make its conclusions about the sales of the fifth volume?

October 27, 2008 6:25 PM

Blogger Mark Mayerson said...

Jerry, I'm glad to hear that WB is going to continue to restore cartoons. That gives me hope that they'll eventually turn up, even if the overall package isn't as elaborate as the Golden Collections.

We all owe you a debt of gratitude for your work in helping to create these DVD sets. I really value the rarity of the material on Volume 6 and glad that you and George Feltenstein were able to do something for the hardcore fans among us.

October 27, 2008 7:43 PM

Blogger Martin Juneau said...

I wish to encourage my friends to buy the Volume 6 (and of course, the past sets) for keep survive the Warner Vaults. I was embarassing to learn that the Volume 5 (One of my favourites at my opinion) had low sales. I hope the sales of Volume 6 was fine with one-shots, Bosko, Buddy and WWII.

October 29, 2008 8:12 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Ken Harris's real name is Karyl Ross Harris. He changed his name from Karyl to Karol to Ken because people had a hard time with the spelling. He had a grandson, John Dyson.

February 22, 2012 11:55 AM

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