December 04, 2004

GOLDEN BOOK ART

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Someone in France posted an uber-cool gallery of Little Golden Book pages, featuring art by J.P. Miller, Mel Crawford and others, including the above Huck Hound story by Norman McGary and Hawley Pratt.

(via Boing Boing)


Posted by at 10:20 PM

December 03, 2004

WRITING BOOKS

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I hate to see a whole day go by without a post here. Amid and I are are busy on separate book projects this month. My postings will be a little less than normal this month - and this week in particular, as I battle several tight deadlines. Today I spent the whole day gathering all the images together for my Animated Features guide. The Peter Pan ad above has no particular signifigance to anything - just something I came across today, and I thought it was a fun thing to post.

Have a good weekend.

Posted by at 10:01 PM

December 02, 2004

PAUL JULIAN MURAL

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Our Lost Hollywood Animator Mural series continues with this beauty (above) painted by Paul Julian.

Reader Terry Guy passes along this picture and information:

The recent Cartoon Brew posts about murals reminded me of this one, which is not so cartoony, but is the work of Warner Brothers cartoons background painter/Roadrunner voice artist Paul Julian.

It may be seen in the Post Office at 202 E. Commonwealth Avenue in Fullerton, CA, close by the Amtrak station. When I was there about a year ago (when I took the accompanying picture), a document was posted on the wall below the mural (on the other side of the door from the Wanted poster), with the following text:

INFORMATION ON THE POST OFFICE MURAL
The noted California painter Paul Julian painted the large mural on display in the old Fullerton post office. Julian was born in 1914 in Santa Barbara, California. He trained with Millard Sheets and Lawrence T. Murphy at the Chouinard Art Insititute. The mural was commissioned by the Works Progress Administration (WPA). The WPA program began in 1933 at the suggestion of George Biddle, an artist who had studied with Mexican muralist Diego Rivera. Biddle persuaded President Franklin Roosevelt to institute a program similar to one the Mexican government created, to decorate government buildings. This effort sparked an artistic revolution. The program provided needy artists with work and money. This also offered artists a range of creative options, from small paintings to large murals.
This mural depicts life in Fullerton in the mid-thirties. Fullerton High students picking Valencia oranges, oil derricks, and the Fullerton airport. The artistic license taken by Paul Julian has created some controversy because the ladder shown, a three-legged type, is not the right type for picking oranges, and oranges were never packed in boxes in the field. They would have been placed into a large over the shoulder bag while being picked and then carried to the boxes, and commingled with the others.

The idea that artistic license over orange crates and ladders is controversial seems incongruous today, when we know that the term "controversy" really should be reserved for issues of great magnitude, such as Janet Jackson's Superbowl "wardrobe malfunction". On the other hand, this was Fullerton in the thirties, and they took their oranges seriously.


Posted by at 02:42 PM

fps Charity Auction

Starting tomorrow and continuing through December 10, FPS: FRAMES PER SECOND magazine will be holding an on-line charity auction, with all the profits benefiting the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation Canada. They'll be auctioning all sorts of animation-related goodies including books, DVDs, posters and pins. For full auction details, go HERE.


Posted by AMID at 10:14 AM

China - The Next Animation Boom?

Here's an interesting article from THE NEW YORK TIMES that gives some sense of the burgeoning animation industry in China. (via BoingBoing.net)

Posted by AMID at 06:47 AM

December 01, 2004

Spongebob is Missing!

This just in: There's been a rash of kidnappings of the giant inflatable SpongeBob Squarepants figures that have been placed atop Burger King outlets to promote the genial sea creature's movie. Some of the balloons have even shown up on eBay.

Personally, if I were to pilfer any figure from a fast-food joint (which I wouldn't), it would be a Big Boy or possibly a Jollibee...but those guys aren't cartoon characters.

Posted by at 10:09 PM

LEON SCHLESINGER COMICS

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I've come across several of these in my travels - and have set up a dedicated webpage for them (see the complete four panel strip of the above, here). If anyone has any more to share, or can shed further light on them... let me know.


Posted by at 09:36 AM

KRUMPET KONTEST #3

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Our final contest. The first two people with the correct answer (or what I think is the correct answer) to this question arriving in my email-box wins the dvd prize - 2003 Academy Award Winner HARVIE KRUMPET - courtesy of our friends at StudioWorks Entertainment. Today's question is:
In 1983, a clay animated short by Jimmy Picker won the Oscar. What was the name of his Oscar winning film?
The Contest is now OVER. Our winners: James Boys and Jared Chapman. The final answer: Sundae In New York


Posted by at 09:01 AM

Ben Washam (Or Mike Fontanelli?)

No reason for this post, but I just wanted to share this cool caricature of animator Ben Washam by fellow Chuck Jones unit animator Abe Levitow. Click on the drawing to read Washam's 'Cartoonist of the Month' profile from the April 1960 edition of the West Coast animators' union newsletter.

Ben Washam


Posted by AMID at 04:44 AM

November 30, 2004

JANET KLEIN

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Once again this Thursday night - and every first Thursday of the each month - Jerry Beck will be the opening act for Janet Klein & Her Parlor Boys at the Steve Allen Theatre in Hollywood.

Janet and her boys play authentic 20s jazz music live, and I start the proceedings by providing about 45 minutes of vintage musical shorts and cartoons in glorious 16mm monophonic movie projection. It's a lot of fun - and if you are in the area, I highly recommend you check out the program. This month I'm showing Fleischer, Terrytoons and Harman-Ising goodies along with some zany live action rareties. Janet and her band are amazing! Here's a clip of her singing Yiddish Hula Boy in the style of a Max Fleischer Screen Song! Join us!

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2nd, 2004, 8:00 pm
The STEVE ALLEN THEATRE

4773 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood
(West of Vermont, across from Barnsdale Park)
$15 323-666-4268 for reservations
More info at www.janetklien.com


Posted by at 10:30 AM

KRUMPET KONTEST #2

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Good day. Here is day two of our contest (which ends tomorrow). The first two people with the correct answer (or what I think is the correct answer) to this question arriving in my email-box wins the dvd prize - 2003 Academy Award Winner HARVIE KRUMPET - courtesy of our friends at StudioWorks Entertainment. Today's question is:
In 1990, two clay animated shorts by Aardman's Nick Park were nominated for the Oscar. What was the name of the film that won?
The Contest is now OVER. Today's winners were Michael Nusair and Todd Jacobsen. The answer was : Creature Comforts


Posted by at 09:00 AM

TUESDAY MORNING INSPIRATION

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Posted by at 12:40 AM

November 29, 2004

More Cartoon Murals

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Cartoon Brew reader Marc Crisafulli responded to my recent post about cartoon murals with an additional mural (see above) that he saw offered for auction at eBay. This one included cartoon work by Milt Gross, Percy Crosby, George McManus, and others, along with some pin-up art. Sadly for us, it was created for a popular speakeasy, so it's a few decades too late to see it in its original location.

On the other hand, New York's the Palm Restaurant, which I need to get to someday, is alive and thriving--and its walls feature work by everyone from Billy De Beck to Carmine Infantino. (The Palm's other branches have walls festooned with cartoons, too, although at the Boston location, at least, some beloved characters are seriously off-model.) Here's the Palm's page on its wall art, with a short article by R.C. Harvey.

Posted by at 09:20 PM

SAM COBEAN WEBSITE

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Willoughby's Magic
Hat (1943)
The family of cartoonist Sam Cobean have just set up a new website, Sam Cobean's World, featuring many of his cartoons, biographical information, photos, articles and obituaries. Included in the site are over 200 photos of Cobean's original drawings from the collection owned by his estate. They have been organized into a browseable photo gallery. Family member Dan Loomis says:
"We hope to make Sam Cobean as well known by current generations as he was in the 1940s-50s. His untimely death in July, 1951, was a sad loss to the world of humorous cartooning."
Cobean became a successful magazine panel cartoonist after World War II. Prior to the war Cobean had been an inbetweener and storyman at Disney, then joined Screen Gems in the early forties writing some of the best cartoons that studio ever produced - including the lengendary WILLOUGHBY'S MAGIC HAT, WAY DOWN YONDER IN THE CORN plus several other classic Fox & Crow shorts.


Posted by at 04:55 PM

POPEYE SCRAPS THE J---!

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Funniest thing I've seen in weeks!

Camp Chaos imagines Popeye going anime - a hallucinatory cross between Dragonball Z, Star Blazers and the one-eyed, spinach packin' sailor man. Hilarious!

Check it out HERE before someone gets wise.

(Thanks to reader Christopher Merrit for the link)


Posted by at 04:40 PM

JOHN PARR MILLER (1913-2004)

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The NY TIMES posted this sad news today:
John Parr Miller, an early animator for Walt Disney whose later art adorned best-selling children's books, including those in the popular Little Golden Books series, died on Oct. 29 on Long Island. He was 91 and lived in Manhasset, N.Y.
Best known as J.P. Miller, the illustrator of several incredible Little Golden Books, Miller's art is still influential to a new generation of animators artists. His "Little Red Hen" is still in print and considered a classic. "Lucky Mrs. Ticklefeather," "Little Pee Wee" "The Little Golden Funny Book", "The Marvelous Merry-Go-Round", "Tommy's Wonderful Rides", "The Circus ABC" and many others, define the Little Golden Book style. These books, all done in the late 1940s and early 50s, are prime examples of the stylized modern commercial art of the era - and a huge influence on many of today's best animators (including Spumco), leading cartoonists and commercial designers.

According to the Times obit:

John Parr Miller found himself in Hollywood during the Depression, with a widowed mother, need of a job and a portfolio from Grand Central Art School, which he had attended for a little more than two years. He found work in the story department at Disney Studio in 1934... In 1937 he was one of only three artists asked to start the studio's character model department. According to studio archives, he helped create characters for Disney "Pinocchio," "Fantasia" and "Dumbo." He left Disney for military service in World War II, when he made training films for the Navy. After the war, Golden Books recruited him and several other Disney veterans to enliven children's books for a mass market, to go beyond the bland Dick and Jane primers of yore. Mr. Miller continued his work as a freelance artist until about 10 years ago.

Posted by at 10:38 AM

KRUMPET KONTEST #1

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Our new contest (for today through Wednesday). The first two people with correct answer (or what I think is the correct answer) to this question arriving in my email-box wins the dvd prize - 2003 Academy Award Winner HARVIE KRUMPET - courtesy of our friends at High Fidelity Media. Today's question is:
In 1974, a clay animated short won the Oscar. What was the name of that film?
The Contest is now OVER. The winners were Robert J. Reynolds and Alan Hershey. The answer is: CLOSED MONDAYS by Will Vinton and Bob Gardiner.

Posted by at 09:00 AM

Monday Morning Inspiration

WORKING DOLLARS is a John Sutherland industrial film from the mid-'50s that can be downloaded for free at Archive.org. Unfortunately the film print is awful - scratched up, spliced and faded - and one can only imagine how much cooler a clean print of this film would be. The film's super-appealing designs and layouts are by Bernie Gruver (1923-1985) and the solid animation is by Emery Hawkins, George Cannata and Jim Pabian. I don't know much about Gruver, but his design sense is terrific. At Playhouse Pictures, where he worked from the late-'50s through the mid-'60s, he designed the very distinctive Friskie Puppies spots, and then Gruver worked with Bill Melendez for many years on the PEANUTS specials including the classics like A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS and IT'S THE GREAT PUMPKIN, CHARLIE BROWN. Here's a look at Gruver's Friskies designs:

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Posted by AMID at 03:08 AM

November 28, 2004

Popeye's Darkest Hour

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I can't imagine how awful Mainframe's CG Popeye looks in motion, but these stills are disgusting enough. Frank Panucci, who posted the frame grabs on Animation Nation and has had the misfortune of watching this, describes the CG sailor man as follows: "Popeye's face, as designed, textured, and animated in 3D by Mainframe, looks like a big bald scrotum." Compare to the beautiful graphic shapes in the hand-drawn shorts, then go wash your eyes and never speak of this aesthetic monstrosity again.


Posted by AMID at 02:05 PM

More Thoughts on the Spongebob Movie

SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS MOVIE

THE SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS MOVIE isn't THE INCREDIBLES, and I don't mean that in a negative way. The film has a simpler goal: make the audience laugh for an hour-and-a-half. And laugh I did, quite frequently throughout the movie, though it's interesting to note that the laughter was typically because of either the dialogue ("My eyes! My eyes!") or a humorous situation (Spongebob and Patrick's hand-knee slap-jive). There were only three instances during the entire film where I laughed because of the drawings and animation: when Spongebob is "drunk" from ice cream, when Patrick and Spongebob are trying to suppress themselves from singing the "Goofy Goober" song in the biker's bar, and when Patrick and Spongebob are drying out under the heat of a lamp. In these few sequences, the awesome visual potential of the movie became apparent and the characters rose above their clumsy '80s DiC-throwback designs to actually deliver on the promise of a cartoony animated feature created by artists. Granted, the rest of the film had funny drawings as well, more than entire seasons of a lot of animated TV series, but the cartoon acting was so inventive in the three aforementioned sequences as to make the rest of the film's poses and expressions seem downright pedestrian. Perhaps one day we'll see an animated feature that isn't afraid to entertain with drawing and animation for a full 90-minutes. Until then, SPONGEBOB is a half decent start towards that goal.

Other brief observations...

> I realize that the dedication at the end of the film - Jules Engel (1909?-2003) - is because SPONGEBOB creator Stephen Hillenburg is a graduate of Engel's Experimental Animation program at CalArts. Nonetheless, it is ironic that a film with such garish and slapdash color styling would be dedicated to Engel, the artist who introduced the "Color Styling" credit at UPA and who was a proponent for the intelligent use of color in animated cartoons.

> The brief stop motion bit in the film was animated by Screen Novelties founders Seamus Walsh and Mark Caballero and their frequent collaborator Chris Finnegan. It was a pleasantly spontaneous moment in a film that was too heavily plot-driven and bogged down with linear storytelling. David Edelstein put it best in his review of the film for SLATE: "I like my SPONGEBOB a little less lumbering, a little more free-associational, without that big, heavy anchor of a story structure to weigh him down." The film's characters are too silly and unique for the conventional trappings of Hollywood storytelling; we never believe that Spongebob and Patrick are in any real danger, so consequently, the scenes with the villains - Plankton, Dennis the Hitman, etc. - are the most tiresome and unnecessary. Had the filmmakers simply created a light-hearted adventure about Spongebob and Patrick embarking on a quest to become men, and thrown in a few more non sequiturs (Patrick in fishnet stockings and heels was a nice touch), the film would have been plenty more entertaining; the potential was there for this film to become a YELLOW SUBMARINE for the Nick generation.

> Apparently, former cast members of the TV sitcom COACH make really solid animation voice actors. Bill Fagerbakke's Patrick the Starfish is one of the most entertaining cartoon voices I've heard in a long time, the perfect blend of idiocy and heart, and Craig T. Nelson's understated performance as Bob Parr in THE INCREDIBLES was the voice acting surprise of the year. Now it's Jerry Van Dyke's turn to amaze us with his vocal chops...

Posted by AMID at 12:57 AM