Ken F. Champin Animation

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 3 окт 2024
  • Kenneth F. Champin was an American animator and comic artist during the late 1930s to late 1970s. He is best known for his work as an animator at Warner Bros, where he animated almost exclusively for the Friz Freleng unit from 1937 to 1954 and was later regarded as a master animator by Chuck Jones.
    Ken's animation was unique from the rest of the Freleng animators, using techniques such as key-framing during dialogue scenes to keep the animation busy, employing a unique variety of smear drawings and often using held frames for takes, often to exaggerated effect. His animation style is also distinctively close to the models of layout artists Owen Fitzgerald and Hawley Pratt than any other Freleng animator of the time.
    Music used: "Cocoanut Grove" & "I Never Knew" by Teddy Wilson and "Slumming On Park Avenue" by Red Norvo & His Orchestra
    All clips are presumed and use the best available information. They were verified by a group of notable historians at the time:
    0:00 - Kit for Cat (1948)
    0:09 - Buccaneer Bunny (1948)
    0:21 - Hollywood Daffy (1946)
    0:31 - Canned Feud (1951)
    0:53 - Slick Hare (1947)
    1:05 - Canned Feud (1951)
    1:10 - Big House Bunny (1950)
    1:25 - Canned Feud (1951)
    1:30 - 14 Carrot Rabbit (1952)
    1:37 - Canned Feud (1951)
    1:42 - Pigs in a Polka (1943)
    1:58 - Daffy - The Commando (1943)
    2:08 - The Wabbit Who Came to Supper (1942)
    2:13 - The Trial of Mr. Wolf (1941)
    2:26 - Canned Feud (1951)
    2:34 - Foxy by Proxy (1952)
    2:46 - Duck Soup to Nuts (1944)
    2:56 - Back Alley Oproar (1948)
    3:16 - Snow Business (1953)
    3:39 - Bugs Bunny in King Arthur's Court (1978)
    3:54 - Snow Business (1953)
    4:06 - Duck Soup to Nuts (1944)
    4:20 - Bugs Bunny in King Arthur's Court (1978)
    4:38 - Muzzle Tough (1954)
    4:50 - Bugs Bunny Rides Again (1948)
    5:00 - The Wabbit Who Came to Supper (1942)
    5:20 - Kit for Cat (1948)
    5:27 - Yankee Doodle Daffy (1943)
    5:36 - Kit for Cat (1948)
    5:40 - Canned Feud (1951)
    5:44 - Kit for Cat (1948)
    5:49 - Canned Feud (1951)
    5:55 - Satan's Waitin' (1954)
    6:11 - Duck Soup to Nuts (1944)
    6:19 - Room and Bird (1951)
    6:23 - Spaced Out Bunny (1980)
    6:37 - Life with Feathers (1945)
    6:44 - Goo Goo Goliath (1954)
    6:48 - Wise Quackers (1949)
    6:55 - Room and Bird (1951)
    7:01 - Stage Door Cartoon (1944)
    7:11 - Hare Do (1949)
    7:14 - Tweety's S.O.S. (1951)
    7:21 - Tweetie Pie (1947)
    7:28 - Little Red Riding Rabbit (1944)
    7:42 - Tweetie Pie (1947)
    All clips belong to their respective sources. The intent of this video is to educate and provide information about animation history.

Комментарии • 14

  • @fennerguyreloaded
    @fennerguyreloaded 4 года назад +6

    Thank you so much dude!!!! I was waiting for someone to do some of Ken Champin's underrated work

  • @baxterfilms
    @baxterfilms 4 года назад +6

    As I've mentioned to you before, the shot of Porky locking Daffy in the safe in "Yankee Doodle Daffy" looks like Gil Turner. Other than that, it looks accurate to me!

  • @justincaban825
    @justincaban825 4 года назад +2

    (2:56)
    Then this scene was shown again on an episode of The Bugs Bunny Show in the 60s, which that scene also got reused again in the 1991 TV special, “Bugs Bunny’s Overtures to Disaster”.

  • @toontrainstudios8289
    @toontrainstudios8289 4 года назад +3

    You're back !!! Where have you been ?

    • @whyx3109
      @whyx3109  4 года назад +2

      Mostly sleeping, mostly work.

    • @toontrainstudios8289
      @toontrainstudios8289 4 года назад

      @@whyx3109 I understand Dude . Life can be busy sometimes.

    • @tanktank9924
      @tanktank9924 2 года назад

      @@whyx3109 I want to ask you if the camel in the Private Snafu cartoon titled "The Chow Hound" (1944) looks like Kan Champin animation? people say that the cartoon was directed by Frank Tashlin when it was actually directed by Friz Freleng, due to what the cartoon actually looks like.

    • @whyx3109
      @whyx3109  2 года назад

      @@tanktank9924 For "Chow Hound", looks like the camel is split into two different scenes. I believe Manuel Perez does the first cut (as part of a segment of shots before) while Virgil Ross finishes with the second bit. The Ken Champin scenes in "Chow Hound" are possibly around in the beginning, during the honeymoon up to the bull enlisting.

    • @tanktank9924
      @tanktank9924 2 года назад

      @@whyx3109 The beginning kind of looks like Jack Bradbury's though.