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Post a Comment On: Mayerson on Animation

"Directing Animation"

5 Comments -

1 – 5 of 5
Blogger Steven Hartley said...

Animation must be just more than a drawing, but there is probably a lot of understanding to know, I'd probably get confused with the timing and all that.

November 20, 2010 12:17 PM

Blogger Eric Noble said...

Very interesting and thoughtful review. I would like to see an author break down one of the classic cartoon to see how the director made the picture work. That way future animators and directors know what is involved and how to handle aesthetic decisions. I love reading your posts Mr. Mayerson. You give me a lot to think about.

November 20, 2010 12:31 PM

Blogger David B. Levy said...

Thanks for the thoughtful review, Mark!

I'm of the feeling that no one book can do it all, so my focus was on the aspect of directing animation that had never been discussed before. If you're going to bother writing a book, you might as well fill it with information no other book contains. My feeling is that the "hole" you speak of, is covered in just about every other animation book to different degrees. Similarly, "making of" features on DVDs show the entire creative process of directing animation projects. So why go where everyone has gone before?

Yet, I also cover what creative skills are required of the animation director, as well as how to develop those skills.

The people skills and relationship building I write on is not only important to growing into a career as a director, but also critical to scoring a first opportunity to direct. You and I can name many brilliant animation creators/directors who ignored people skills and relationship building only to lose their shows or studios. This is serious stuff and there's so little training available in these areas. That's the "hole" I saw and tried to fill.

Thanks again for the review. I visit your blog several times a week. There's always insightful observations and great information here.

November 21, 2010 2:14 PM

Blogger Michael Sporn said...

I'm not sure I can think of ANY book that actually talks about the directing aspect of animtion regarding, specifically, the craft of filmmaking. There are a lot of animation books, but none that talks directly to Directors. You have to go to books on directing live action for most of the meat.

November 21, 2010 4:40 PM

Blogger David B. Levy said...

Hi Michael and Mark,
To back up my point, check out Tony White's second book "Animation from Pencils to Pixels" from several years back. It covered the ENTIRE process (from the director's point of view) of making a modern day animated short from concept to final render. Eric Goldberg's Animation Crash Course has a ton of stuff on how to break layout and stage a scene. Often that's the first step of directing where you break down a script and begin to make little thumbnail planning sketches. More directing nuts and bolts is found in Kit Laybourne's "The Animation Book" and Howard Beckerman's "Animation, The Whole Story." Add to that the amount of directing from script to screen info that you see on just one Pixar DVD chock full of extras and you have a lot of information already out there. My book honed in on what was NOT out there at all.

November 22, 2010 10:51 AM

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