In 1939, even animation studios looked like factories. The job must have been hard on the back.
That poor guy, hammering away for hours to make a couple of seconds of wobbly video. Imagine if you could sit him down in front of a PC and show him Flash. A week of work in twenty minutes.
The Best of 2012
My picks for what was important, awesome, or worth talking about in 2012.
Fixing Match 3
For one of the most popular casual games in existence, Match 3 is actually really broken. Until one developer fixed it.
Silent Hill 2 Plot Analysis
A long-form analysis on one of the greatest horror games ever made.
Punishing The Internet for Sharing
Why make millions on your video game when you could be making HUNDREDS on frivolous copyright claims?
Tenpenny Tower
Bethesda felt the need to jam a morality system into Fallout 3, and they blew it. Good and evil make no sense and the moral compass points sideways.
Ah, the Good Old Days. I consider myself fortunate indeed to be a filmmaker in the Digital Age – our biggest problem is how to make digital content “look like film”! Thank goodness for Final Cut’s filter selections, I say.
The really sad thing is that the studios can’t produce anything close to those old animated films, in spite of having huge budgets and racks of advanced electronics. Just proves that regardless of the process, creativity is still the most important ingredient in entertainment (whether film, television, or even video games!).
Oh, and “Frost Pist!”, by the way.
your post reminds me of some documentary i saw in which they interviewed the dude who invented visicalc (the first spreadsheet program if you’re too young to remember) and how, when he first demonstrated it (maybe at the west coast computer faire?) there were some accountants whose hands were literally shaking with excitement as they wrote a check to buy a copy. . .
1939? I’m pretty sure at that time there was no color cinematography. Right? Maybe your year is wrong? Entertaining and enlightening as always, though, Shamus.
Ben
1939?
The year of Gone with the Wind and The Wizard of Oz?
Yeah, pretty sure they had colour then. ;)
(Though admittedly it’s a surprise to see it used for a little in-house documentary thingy.)
All that for a cartoon of a Russian man giving birth to a rubber chicken.
color in animation film came long before color in live action film.
Oh, I thought Gone Withe the Wind and Wizard of Oz were considerably later. Shows me wrong. Apologies.
Ben
Max Fleischer, Tex Avery, Chuck Jones.
Three greatests cartoonists that ever lived.
And while Disney had art, his characters had no character.
For example, can you name me one catch phrase from Mickey Mouse?
your post reminds me of some documentary i saw in which they interviewed the dude who invented visicalc (the first spreadsheet program if you're too young to remember) and how, when he first demonstrated it (maybe at the west coast computer faire?) there were some accountants whose hands were literally shaking with excitement as they wrote a check to buy a copy. . .
hehe.. just imagine the money that could be made if you were able to take a modern PC with a full set of software and go back in time a bunch of decades
Not to be the Luddite here, but one of the good things about the old, difficult process of making animation; it filtered out the mediocre and worse ideas. Now that it’s easy for the common person to make animation, there’s an overload of common and worse animation. Now it’s almost impossible to find the peanut in the huge steaming piles of…
Well, you get the idea.
James: You’re not wrong. The Cartoon Network is churning out huge piles of eye-damaging uglyness that will cause future generations to lampoon us.
“For example, can you name me one catch phrase from Mickey Mouse?”
That “Hoo hoo hoo!” noise he makes?
He makes a “Hoo hoo hoo!” noise?
Anyway, James Bong is right. There’s far less quality control these days. Mickey Mouse being the exception that proves the rule :-)
My wife did her graduate work in genetics. There were some laboratory procedures she would do several times per week which, in the “old days” when they were first done (about 30 years ago) took two years.
I cannot imagine what it would be like to have spent two years on something that, a few decades later, people routinely finish in a few hours. On one hand, that new level of science would not exist if it were not for people that used to do it the old way. On the other hand, two years of your work life reduced to hours!