
I'm looking forward to the PE edition.
.I'm guessing Ariel's prince hasn't seen Pinocchio in a long time because it really is a wonderful film.
I think terrible is a bit harsh...Just like I know Atlantis: the Lost Empire is a terrible movie despite my love for it.
Yes, because the best way to judge anything is to watch it in 5 to 10 minute chunks with inferior video quality on YouTube.Ariel'sprince wrote:I already re-watched clips on YouTube and the animation is just slow,the film is just slow and boring.
I agree. I re-watched Atlantis recently and was surprised that it wasn't as horrible as I remembered. It's still a failure in many respects, but it wasn't "terrible."I think terrible is a bit harsh...
I agree that both Groove and Stitch were very well animated films.I personally like to judge animation based on the original pencil animation drawn by the animator, before it is coloured, enhanced and cleaned-up. Hence, I think one can find great animation in the simplest of character models. I'm referring to simplicity here because Emperor's New Groove and Lilo & Stitch were criticised for their animation as not being up to standard. The critics normally cite a lack of detail in the characters. So what!? It's the way a character moves that counts, not how many wrinkles you can draw on his face! If detail was really the issue, then anime would win the animation crown because your average Miyazaki film is ten times more detailed than a Disney animated feature. That doesn't mean it's superior. American animation simply differs from Japanese animation, that's all. They both have their merits.
The former. I agree that the raw animation is what is being judged. I think the 'poster boy' for the Golden Age animators is Tytla; colleagues stress how powerful his original animation drawings of Chernabog were. This actually demonstrates the disadvantage of applying all the chiaroscuro and sfumato to the animation in 'Fantasia' - some of these original qualities are lost. That's probably why the animators loved the xerox process so much.Julian Carter wrote:MagicMirror, you've said that the animation of the earliest Disney films is generally superior to that of the later ones. By later ones, I take it you're referring to the 50s features. I have to ask though, by superior animation do you mean the movement of the character animation is better, in that it's more life-like or has more spark and verve to it? Or are you referring to the fact that it seems films like Cinderella or Peter Pan have a blander look?
Agreed, though I think most of these films use the limitations to their advantage stylistically. 'Cinderella' doesn't use shadows all the time but that means that, when it does, it ensures quite a powerful dramatic moment.Let me explain myself. A Snow White still would reveal the rouge on Snow's cheeks, a white/grey line around her hair, giving it a soft look, and many shadows. Basically, a lot of finishing touches to the cels which go beyond simply inking the outlines and painting the insides. The same goes for Pinocchio, Fantasia or Bambi. But looking at a feature film like Cinderella I can't help but notice that those 'luxuries' were no longer administered. Alice, Peter and Lady all seem to suffer the same fate, and I seriously doubt that the exclusion of these refinements were simply an artistic or stylistic choice. If they were deliberate, however, then I'd guess it was because of the flat nature of Mary Blair's artwork (though I personally don't feel Blair radically influenced the look of certain films ... she seems to be reflected in the little things. I think Alice is the most Blairish Disney film. Cinderella and Peter Pan aren't always that obvious).
I love the animation in 'Lilo and Stitch' and 'Groove' as well. Lilo's particularly well done and, as you say, with a very simple design. The characters in 'Groove' are deliberately stylized and angular and I agree that that does not detract from the animation. Particularly Yzma!I personally like to judge animation based on the original pencil animation drawn by the animator, before it is coloured, enhanced and cleaned-up. Hence, I think one can find great animation in the simplest of character models. I'm referring to simplicity here because Emperor's New Groove and Lilo & Stitch were criticised for their animation as not being up to standard. The critics normally cite a lack of detail in the characters. So what!? It's the way a character moves that counts, not how many wrinkles you can draw on his face! If detail was really the issue, then anime would win the animation crown because your average Miyazaki film is ten times more detailed than a Disney animated feature. That doesn't mean it's superior. American animation simply differs from Japanese animation, that's all. They both have their merits.
A story necessity - had they been menacing in appearance, Pinocchio would never have been taken in by them. They were imposing and creepy when they needed to be, later on.Disney's Divinity wrote:It's the design that bothers me mostly (Stromboli and the Coachman are menacing in intention, though silly in design).
Whatever.Escapay wrote:Yes, because the best way to judge anything is to watch it in 5 to 10 minute chunks with inferior video quality on YouTube.Ariel'sprince wrote:I already re-watched clips on YouTube and the animation is just slow,the film is just slow and boring.
The cat has a lot of similarities to Dopey (which by the way is my least favorite dwarf), as most people probably have noticed.Dudealadude wrote:And a fox and a cat as con men - imagine!
The sequence with all the clocks is one of my favorites in the film. I think they were all designed by Albert Hurter, with actual models constructed by Joe Grant and company. Hopefully there will be extensive galleries of all this sort of thing on the DVD - I was very disappointed with the tiny galleries on the 101 Dalmatians' DVD.Pinocchio is a masterpiece, and one of the most impressive animated movies ever made. I once said in a discussion in another forum that I was very impressed with the fact that everything was done by hand, including all the toys in Gepettos home. Another poster replied something like "Duh, not impressive at all, I have seen CGI movies where objects are much more realistic."
Yeah, what the Disney studio was able to achieve during those years have never been repeated, and never will, at least not using the same equipment used then.The sequence with all the clocks is one of my favorites in the film. I think they were all designed by Albert Hurter, with actual models constructed by Joe Grant and company. Hopefully there will be extensive galleries of all this sort of thing on the DVD - I was very disappointed with the tiny galleries on the 101 Dalmatians' DVD.