The Fleischer brothers studio did incredible work. They're superman series is not only fun to watch, but artistically it's also a pleasure to look at. And what they did with three dimensional looking backgrounds in some of their Popeye cartoons is genius.
The late Roger Ebert once wrote, "Walt Disney did not invent animation, but he nurtured it into an art form that could hold its own against any 'realistic' movie." And I would agree that the medium itself shouldn't be limited to what Walt and his team of artists and successors had been doing and building on since the 1920s.
Walt Disney certainly didn't feel that his art should be limited to what had brought him success. Unfortunately, the moviegoing public of the 1940s _did_ feel that way. The "failure" of _Fantasia_ to be the biggest movie ever just to recoup its budget pigeonholed him as an artist for children (as was the case with animation more broadly) and he became very disillusioned by that, which is why he was a lot more hands-off with the movies after World War II.
@@SamAronowhe accepted his fate but he also brought his own downfall by doing fairytales which are commonly considered to be kids stuff .Also the art style was very cutesy and Walt also removed a lot of the edge from the fairytales .Heck look at Cinderella in the original book the step sisters cut there heals off to try and fit into the glass slippers
That is true. Ub Iwerks was the inventor of the multiplane camera while working at his own studio after leaving Disney in 1930. It was considered a prototype and it was originally made out of car parts.
The slight difference here is in the separation of levels to achieve a depth of focus impression and a sense of depth with a moving camera that separates image elements. While Lotte Reiniger had her cutouts on raised levels of glass, her camera was stationary. It never moved towards or away in the scenes, which is what the true Multiplane processes done by Iwerks, Fleischer, and Disney did.
@@robbiefarabee6954 Iwerks came up with a Multiplane process in the same year as Fleischer did with The Stereoptical Process. Both systems came three years before Disney's Multiplane.
@@dylandarcy1150 And in the beginning, Iwerks was a third partner with Disney until Pat Powers lured him away to have his own studio. While Walt felt a great loss with the exit of Iwerks, he was big enough to welcome him back and let him work in the Special Effects Department where his contributions help further advance the Disney Studio, winning an Academy Award for the Sodium Blue Screen process used in Alfred Hitchcock's THE BIRDS and MARY POPPINS for Disney.
I want you to know that I watch many different RUclips channels dedicated to video essays on the art of film; but your channel is by far the best put together, and the most entertaining. I love your work, keep it up!
it's weird that the first animation, made by that argentinian guy you refused to say the name, wasn't a kids cartoon or fairy tale, but a political satire
Animation wasn't looked at as mere kids entertainment back then. That's why. That stigma only really began to arise in the 60s and 70s when a lot of the stuff being made was made squarely with kids in mind.
It actually goes farther back than that. Walt Disney took animation seriously and wanted it to be seen as a pure art form (hence the existence of Fantasia and its planned-but-unrealized sequels), but even all the way back then his films were seen by critics and the general public as "kiddie" or family entertainment. It definitely got worse in the '60s, though.
@@SplendidCoffee0 Bakshi's LOTR just sucks. Better to accept it. I'm surprised the authors of the video didn't show the Balrog battle instead. "Hey, we have this media of infinite possibility, how can we use it? Well , put a 4 dollar costume on a guy and trace over it!"
I appreciate how often you talk about animation on your channel! more often, I'd have to find an animation-specific channel for these kind of videos, but I'm so glad you give it the same ammount of attention and care as your essays on live-action film
At the first Chicago Comic Con in 1975 (my first, anyway), one night was devoted to animation - and I do mean one night: something like 10-12 hours of rare animated films, provided mainly by private collectors who shared their precious reels with fans. Many of us were youngsters who had never even dreamed of the existence of films that digitizing has made so accessible, and we were pinned to our seats for hours, drunk on moving pictures.I remember seeing so many "banned" WB toons, Disney's WW2 training films and other propaganda, and intricate stop-motion films from around the world. But my favorites were the works of Fleischer Brothers, Ub Iwerks, and especially Windsor McCay, whose Gertie became a kind of meme among my friends.
I don't feel like I just watched an 8-minute RUclips video, I feel like I just watched the first 8 minutes of a two-hour-long documentary. Very wonderfully done.
YAAAS I'm so glad you've done this! Thank you! I'm currently working on a detailed timeline of animation history as a hobby, and this is really valuable info for me.
All histories credit HUMOROUS PHASES OF FUNNY FACES (1906) as the "start" of cartoon animation, although it was more of an experiment in Stop Motion photography of line drawings and cutouts. For all practical purposes, Emile Cohl deserves the credit for being the first originator of animated cartoons since he made individual drawings to achieve movement in FANTASMGORIE (1908).
You made an error, McCay didn't know what Keyframing or Pose-to-Pose was, he animated everything "Straight Ahead". There is a nice anecdote about it, when McCay thinks he invented Pose-to-Pose but other animators were already using it for a long time
Considering that McCay's earliest animation is from 1911, and even Gertie the Dinosaur is from 1914, I'm not sure what you mean by "a long time". 5 years?
@@macsnafu Gertie wasn't in Pose-to-Pose. In 1928 he said at a party he discovered a new way of animating (Pose-to-Pose) but the rest were already using it since 1915. So 13 years I guess
I have to disagree with you on Bakshi's rotoscoping. If it was meant to achieve the same as Fleischer's rotoscoping, then I think you'd be right, but Bakshi was trying to create something uncanny with LoTR and something intense and gritty with American Pop (Fire and Ice is garbage though, I'll give you that). The technique was appropriate for those instances.
Not to mention it’s small budget (for animation) of $4 million. Rotoscoping was almost a necessity for it to achieve any movement that was remotely believable and smooth without sacrificing the more complex designs that would be necessary to separate the film from it’s extremely cartoony peers at the time.
Snappy Dragon have you seen Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust? this movie only had $1 Mio and didn't use rotoscoping whilst having amazingly detailed characters.
5:23 Take a look at this picture. Everybody remembers Walt Disney as this old tycoon. But that's not what you see in this picture. No, what you see in this picture isn't an old tycoon but a young entrepreneur, full of zest and proud of his creations.
I'd say Walt turned animation into art. Though the others certainly were art, Walt turned learning animation into something more akin to learning atelier type classical schools that do high end oil painting and portraiture. He (well, more specifically the 9 Old Men) discovered and created the nuances of getting a character to move and act right. Sleeping Beauty characters move completely different than those of Snow White since they learned even more about the craft, even if Snow White's animation was already aiming for the stars
Bakshi's LOTR rotoscoping isn't bad. It actually works really well with the theme of the story, which also combines fantastic and realistic elements. Unexaggerated rotoscoping would look bad on Superman, but in Middle Earth it has the perfect, strange "magic realism" effect.
You could make a case that Emile Reynaiud made the first animated film (even though he did it before film was invented). He invented a device to project sequential pictures to an audience and his show called Pauvre Pierrot was shown in a theater. Another Emile is a pioneer Emile Cohl, his work is shown in your video but he is not mentioned, he made Fantasmagoria, the first film created with sequential drawings on paper.
If you’re interested in rotoscoping done artistically and with stylistic intent, check out the adult animation master Ralph Backshi. His film Wizards is on RUclips and is my favorite film of his
I recommend Understanding Animation to anybody who is interested in learning more about animation history. Often, history of animation is limited to understanding it through it's technological achievements, Wells offers a more nuanced vision of animation as an art form and the sort of themes, subjects and ideas that emerged from the medium, not just what fancy cameras they got.
I enjoyed this! Had to grin when he butchers Lotte Reiniger and Carl Koch’s names and proceeds to say “for some reason I think their names are more easily pronounced “ 😅
Great video, man. Ive never seen that superman animation before, will look it up. Just wanted to say that im almost certain that the man besides Lotte Reiniger is Walter Ruttmann, her special effects creator, and not Carl Koch (who rarely animated but was in charge of the camera). Ruttmann was famous in the twenties for making short abstract animations, which are pretty neat.
Croc yup. he was part of the same group of german avant garde artists reiniger and koch were into -from which there were also fischinger, wegener, weill and brecht, among others; pretty ironic, when ruttmann later went on to direct propaganda documentaries on nazi weaponry under riefenstahl
Croc she was certainly almost completely devoted to fairytales, but she got her beginnings by making special effects for The Golem, credit sequences for Fritz Lang... she was also going to make an animated sequence for the Madame Bovary movie directed by Renoir -Renoir was a good friend of Carl Koch and when he was attacked in fascist italy and fled the country Koch was left to finish the movie Renoir started. Id say that despite making quite conservative stories based on childrens stories Lotte Reiniger's movies had a lot of technique and artistry to them. Achmed is almost certainly her best movie, imo, because of the effects and how fresh and creative it must have been in its time
there is an earlier film than all these. It's "un bon bock" from france in 1888 by emile reynaud. Also by him is "pauvre pierott" from 1891. the later one is on u-tube.
So wait wait wait, why then is Snow White so often credited as the first animated feature film? Is it simply a matter of better marketing, or is there a set of caveats and qualifiers that make that statement true?
it was the first that was marketable and was a hit with the general public. EVERYBODY watched snowwhite, but earlier feature films were obscure, experimental and, to be honest, quite forgetable, though revolutionary. They changed animation foverever, while snowhite changed cinema forever, that's the difference.
it's also probably the most lucrative animated feature film at the time given how widely it was screened and for how long. It got animation taken more seriously by a lot of folks
yes, as I mentioned in the comments, the first animated movie was a political satire of all things, so you can see why Snow white was the one that stood out
Nickolas Barmenkov Early animated films had a huge impact on cinema, popeye and betty boop were icons well before snow white hit the screen, and those are just minor examples. Yes they were short films but they were treated like feature length films at the time and had full house showings all over the western world. Now Snow White did indeed have a dramatic effect on the industry, but it showed a bit to late to say that it changed cinema. It was the result of a change, not the cause of a change.
Well, this was interesting. It seems pretty weird that animators come up with these ground breaking ideas, but winds up treating their coworkers like "mit!"
I can understand why you might describe the rotoscoping present in some of the films of Bakshi as that which 'sucks', but honestly I think Bakshi is going for something a little different in his animation...also, the monetary constraints which seemed to plague his films...
Disney taking credit for the multiplane camera is not a steal or plagiarism case. As the same time Reiniger developed her film, Disney was occupied with running his Laugh-o-Gram's cartoon shorts, subsequently losing the studio to bankruptcy, then establishing the Disney Brothers' Studio in 1923 and producing Alice comedies. There isn't any recorded incident of Disney or his immediate team traveling to Germany, much less "spying" on Reiniger in her garage studio. The multiplane camera and animation desk is a case of simultaneous invention, where people invented similar devices within the same time frame. During that time (1920s - 1930s) the communication and information media that we have today did not exist and the developments made by animation studios were kept secret, so as not to give an advantage to the competition. There are multiple cases of simultaneous invention, including the radio, modern flush toilet, calculus, theory of evolution, telephone, and theory of relativity. It was only attributed to a person when they visites the patent office. Walt wanted to make his first feature film as realistic as possible, so while he already had a patent for a mounted camera on a table he called the Art of Animation, he needed a camera with more freedom to move. So it was refined by introducing the ability to adjust the position of the camera itself, making it technically superior than any other version and making Disney's multiplane camera the most sophisticated and technologically advanced of that time, creating a beleiveable sense of perspective and depth.
*Chuckle Everyone knows that Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was the first cel-animation feature-length film. When people think of animation, they almost inevitably think of cel-animation because that has historically been the most common and most popular. Everything from stop-motion models to cardboard cutouts on light projectors to 3D models are types of animation, but inked and painted cels are the one that people first think of when you say Animated Film. Today however, pretty much only Japanese anime try to maintain the aesthetic and style of inked and painted cel-animation (even though most if not all of it is done digitally on a computer now).
Also, the claims that Walt Disney was a d*ck are largely overblown, otherwise his friend and collaborator Ub Iwerks wouldn't have voluntarily chosen to come back to work with Walt as his head of Special Effects department. Such ad hominems are typically made by people who are trying to undermine Walt because they are angry that he's the most famous of classic animation directors.
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That multiplane camera system is brilliant. Fascinating video as always!
It goes to show you Walt gets way too much credit at times.Yes he was brilliant but he gets far to much credit for shit
six years ago, back when Second Thought was fun
The Fleischer brothers studio did incredible work. They're superman series is not only fun to watch, but artistically it's also a pleasure to look at. And what they did with three dimensional looking backgrounds in some of their Popeye cartoons is genius.
The late Roger Ebert once wrote, "Walt Disney did not invent animation, but he nurtured it into an art form that could hold its own against any 'realistic' movie." And I would agree that the medium itself shouldn't be limited to what Walt and his team of artists and successors had been doing and building on since the 1920s.
Walt Disney certainly didn't feel that his art should be limited to what had brought him success. Unfortunately, the moviegoing public of the 1940s _did_ feel that way. The "failure" of _Fantasia_ to be the biggest movie ever just to recoup its budget pigeonholed him as an artist for children (as was the case with animation more broadly) and he became very disillusioned by that, which is why he was a lot more hands-off with the movies after World War II.
@@SamAronowhe accepted his fate but he also brought his own downfall by doing fairytales which are commonly considered to be kids stuff .Also the art style was very cutesy and Walt also removed a lot of the edge from the fairytales .Heck look at Cinderella in the original book the step sisters cut there heals off to try and fit into the glass slippers
Walt Disney didn't invent the multiplane camera ! Lotte Reinenger did, Disney perfected the idea
Perfected fantastically
That is true. Ub Iwerks was the inventor of the multiplane camera while working at his own studio after leaving Disney in 1930. It was considered a prototype and it was originally made out of car parts.
The slight difference here is in the separation of levels to achieve a depth of focus impression and a sense of depth with a moving camera that separates image elements. While Lotte Reiniger had her cutouts on raised levels of glass, her camera was stationary. It never moved towards or away in the scenes, which is what the true Multiplane processes done by Iwerks, Fleischer, and Disney did.
@@robbiefarabee6954 Iwerks came up with a Multiplane process in the same year as Fleischer did with The Stereoptical Process. Both systems came three years before Disney's Multiplane.
@@dylandarcy1150 And in the beginning, Iwerks was a third partner with Disney until Pat Powers lured him away to have his own studio. While Walt felt a great loss with the exit of Iwerks, he was big enough to welcome him back and let him work in the Special Effects Department where his contributions help further advance the Disney Studio, winning an Academy Award for the Sodium Blue Screen process used in Alfred Hitchcock's THE BIRDS and MARY POPPINS for Disney.
I want you to know that I watch many different RUclips channels dedicated to video essays on the art of film; but your channel is by far the best put together, and the most entertaining. I love your work, keep it up!
it's weird that the first animation, made by that argentinian guy you refused to say the name, wasn't a kids cartoon or fairy tale, but a political satire
Animation wasn't looked at as mere kids entertainment back then. That's why. That stigma only really began to arise in the 60s and 70s when a lot of the stuff being made was made squarely with kids in mind.
It actually goes farther back than that. Walt Disney took animation seriously and wanted it to be seen as a pure art form (hence the existence of Fantasia and its planned-but-unrealized sequels), but even all the way back then his films were seen by critics and the general public as "kiddie" or family entertainment. It definitely got worse in the '60s, though.
Not weird at all considering that Gulliver’s travels is a political satire that is often mistakenly labeled as a children’s book.
Studley D. Muffin
How exactly?
Ike Okereke
How what?
My personal favourite Animator is Terry Gilliam, even though is technique is simplistic.
(rotoscoping that sucks)
*shows lotr*
THEM'S FIGHTIN' WORDS
This guy takes swings at Ralph Bakshi? Oh hell no, brother
Main characters are great examples of rotoscoping, imho. But everybody else pretty much suck, due to budget and time constraints.
omi god but it is
@@SplendidCoffee0 Bakshi's LOTR just sucks. Better to accept it. I'm surprised the authors of the video didn't show the Balrog battle instead. "Hey, we have this media of infinite possibility, how can we use it? Well , put a 4 dollar costume on a guy and trace over it!"
Marcos Nogueira don’t tell me what to do.
I appreciate how often you talk about animation on your channel! more often, I'd have to find an animation-specific channel for these kind of videos, but I'm so glad you give it the same ammount of attention and care as your essays on live-action film
Yes, I know that's not Earl Hurd. My apologies. Dunno how I made that mistake...
1:52 And that's not Gerdie the Dinosaur -- that's his cousin
@@omi_god I hope you're being ironic... :,)
@@omi_god Christ what a crouch
In a manner of personal preference...you referred to someone better.
I'd really like it if you did a series on the history of animation. Also can we get a video essay on my boy Ray Harryhausen.
ILRH
Windsor McCay's studio is in my neighborhood in Sheepshead Bay. It's still there as a normal residential house, across the street from a supermarket.
Snow White might not have been the first full length animated film, but none that came before it even approached its brilliance.
Would love a deeper dive into animation!
Great video Andrew. I found this fascinating and couldn’t believe how soon it ended
i really like the way your video essays are going
I know this is an old video, but as an aspiring animator, this channel is so interesting and motivating! 💞 Please never stop making videos!
What an incredible video. Informative, entertaining, and well presented. Probably your best one yet.
I’ve been really into animation lately and this taught me soooo much. Great video!! I loved it.
Beautiful and unique style as always
At the first Chicago Comic Con in 1975 (my first, anyway), one night was devoted to animation - and I do mean one night: something like 10-12 hours of rare animated films, provided mainly by private collectors who shared their precious reels with fans. Many of us were youngsters who had never even dreamed of the existence of films that digitizing has made so accessible, and we were pinned to our seats for hours, drunk on moving pictures.I remember seeing so many "banned" WB toons, Disney's WW2 training films and other propaganda, and intricate stop-motion films from around the world. But my favorites were the works of Fleischer Brothers, Ub Iwerks, and especially Windsor McCay, whose Gertie became a kind of meme among my friends.
This channel has a lot of great vids but this is my favorite I've seen. Clean presentation for some wonderful information. Thanks for making this.
I don't feel like I just watched an 8-minute RUclips video, I feel like I just watched the first 8 minutes of a two-hour-long documentary. Very wonderfully done.
If you like that, I am sure you will find others you may like better and learn more from.
YAAAS I'm so glad you've done this! Thank you! I'm currently working on a detailed timeline of animation history as a hobby, and this is really valuable info for me.
Very well made and very interesting! Personally, I had always thought that "Fantasmagorie" was the first animated film.
All histories credit HUMOROUS PHASES OF FUNNY FACES (1906) as the "start" of cartoon animation, although it was more of an experiment in Stop Motion photography of line drawings and cutouts. For all practical purposes, Emile Cohl deserves the credit for being the first originator of animated cartoons since he made individual drawings to achieve movement in FANTASMGORIE (1908).
It’s like Christmas morning Everytime royal ocean drops a new video
I'm an animator for children's series, and I love your videos that focus on animation! Keep up the wonderful work.
Early animation is something I have a deep passion for. Thank you so much for this amazing video!
You are blowing my fucking mind with these videos. Keep 'em coming! Can't possibly get enough.
"Worldwide"
I guess the West is the world.
Joke aside, short and sweet summary.
Easily one of the best of the channel... and also one of the best of the year, and 2018 is only beginning.
There is a really good episode of the BBC's "Arena" from 1985 that is all about early animation. It's on YT for anyone interested.
You made an error, McCay didn't know what Keyframing or Pose-to-Pose was, he animated everything "Straight Ahead". There is a nice anecdote about it, when McCay thinks he invented Pose-to-Pose but other animators were already using it for a long time
archive.org/details/recollectionsofr00huem (Source)
which page?
page 59/60
Considering that McCay's earliest animation is from 1911, and even Gertie the Dinosaur is from 1914, I'm not sure what you mean by "a long time". 5 years?
@@macsnafu Gertie wasn't in Pose-to-Pose. In 1928 he said at a party he discovered a new way of animating (Pose-to-Pose) but the rest were already using it since 1915. So 13 years I guess
3:13 That is not Earl Hurd, that is Frank Thomas.
Its like Every Frame A Painting was rasied from the dead. Love your vids man!
ive always loved your choice of classical music. i actually played that haffner mozart symphony! beautiful video as always mr saladino hats off to you
Another amazing and informative video. Support this man on Patreon dammit!
I have to disagree with you on Bakshi's rotoscoping. If it was meant to achieve the same as Fleischer's rotoscoping, then I think you'd be right, but Bakshi was trying to create something uncanny with LoTR and something intense and gritty with American Pop (Fire and Ice is garbage though, I'll give you that). The technique was appropriate for those instances.
Not to mention it’s small budget (for animation) of $4 million. Rotoscoping was almost a necessity for it to achieve any movement that was remotely believable and smooth without sacrificing the more complex designs that would be necessary to separate the film from it’s extremely cartoony peers at the time.
Snappy Dragon have you seen Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust? this movie only had $1 Mio and didn't use rotoscoping whilst having amazingly detailed characters.
@@mjrhmekssh How do you know the budget was 1 million?
very nice! shows that you love doing this stuff....
picture of "Earl Hurd" is actually Frank Thomas, one of Disney's nine old men. if you look closely you can see the robin hood drawing
I wish this was at least three times as long.
Great work on what's presented though!
Your videos on animation are amazing man, they are so insightful and well thought out
“Gag reels for younger audiences”
Felix committed suicide by drinking gasoline in his first film, and often had alcohol in his cartooms
Gag reels for morbid younger audiences.
5:23 Take a look at this picture.
Everybody remembers Walt Disney as this old tycoon. But that's not what you see in this picture.
No, what you see in this picture isn't an old tycoon but a young entrepreneur, full of zest and proud of his creations.
i loved this. and the way it was narrated and written reminded me of Kurt Vonnegut. well done, sir
Old animation will never get old to me
Ever since I discovered him, Winsor McCay has been one of my very favorite artists, a true virtuoso talent!
I'd say Walt turned animation into art. Though the others certainly were art, Walt turned learning animation into something more akin to learning atelier type classical schools that do high end oil painting and portraiture. He (well, more specifically the 9 Old Men) discovered and created the nuances of getting a character to move and act right. Sleeping Beauty characters move completely different than those of Snow White since they learned even more about the craft, even if Snow White's animation was already aiming for the stars
That’s not Earl Hurd at 3:14.
That’s Disney Animator Frank Thomas working on Robin Hood in the early 1970’s.
Bakshi's LOTR rotoscoping isn't bad. It actually works really well with the theme of the story, which also combines fantastic and realistic elements. Unexaggerated rotoscoping would look bad on Superman, but in Middle Earth it has the perfect, strange "magic realism" effect.
You could make a case that Emile Reynaiud made the first animated film (even though he did it before film was invented). He invented a device to project sequential pictures to an audience and his show called Pauvre Pierrot was shown in a theater. Another Emile is a pioneer Emile Cohl, his work is shown in your video but he is not mentioned, he made Fantasmagoria, the first film created with sequential drawings on paper.
This guy needs more subscribers. Dang.
This was dope to watch
3:13 actually that's Frank Thomas, one of Disney's Nine Old Men!
If you’re interested in rotoscoping done artistically and with stylistic intent, check out the adult animation master Ralph Backshi. His film Wizards is on RUclips and is my favorite film of his
The only thing that itched me was the audible logo at the beginning. Those missed lasso :'(
This is f_cking awesome.
AMAZING VIDEO!
Thank you!
5:20 i think stereoptical process is better
I recommend Understanding Animation to anybody who is interested in learning more about animation history. Often, history of animation is limited to understanding it through it's technological achievements, Wells offers a more nuanced vision of animation as an art form and the sort of themes, subjects and ideas that emerged from the medium, not just what fancy cameras they got.
That was interesting Andrew.
Was waiting to hear some Ub Iwerks praise, dude was a genius when it came to character animation
And now boss baby is nominated for an oscar in the animated category
I enjoyed this! Had to grin when he butchers Lotte Reiniger and Carl Koch’s names and proceeds to say “for some reason I think their names are more easily pronounced “ 😅
3:13 That's not Earl Hurd, that's Frank Thomas.
Wonderfully informative.
Great work man!
Great video, man. Ive never seen that superman animation before, will look it up. Just wanted to say that im almost certain that the man besides Lotte Reiniger is Walter Ruttmann, her special effects creator, and not Carl Koch (who rarely animated but was in charge of the camera). Ruttmann was famous in the twenties for making short abstract animations, which are pretty neat.
Croc yup. he was part of the same group of german avant garde artists reiniger and koch were into -from which there were also fischinger, wegener, weill and brecht, among others; pretty ironic, when ruttmann later went on to direct propaganda documentaries on nazi weaponry under riefenstahl
Croc she was certainly almost completely devoted to fairytales, but she got her beginnings by making special effects for The Golem, credit sequences for Fritz Lang... she was also going to make an animated sequence for the Madame Bovary movie directed by Renoir -Renoir was a good friend of Carl Koch and when he was attacked in fascist italy and fled the country Koch was left to finish the movie Renoir started.
Id say that despite making quite conservative stories based on childrens stories Lotte Reiniger's movies had a lot of technique and artistry to them. Achmed is almost certainly her best movie, imo, because of the effects and how fresh and creative it must have been in its time
Very informative, but I wish you had said a little something about each of the seven animated features that preceded "Snow White."
there is an earlier film than all these. It's "un bon bock" from france in 1888 by emile reynaud. Also by him is "pauvre pierott" from 1891. the later one is on u-tube.
So wait wait wait, why then is Snow White so often credited as the first animated feature film? Is it simply a matter of better marketing, or is there a set of caveats and qualifiers that make that statement true?
it was the first that was marketable and was a hit with the general public. EVERYBODY watched snowwhite, but earlier feature films were obscure, experimental and, to be honest, quite forgetable, though revolutionary. They changed animation foverever, while snowhite changed cinema forever, that's the difference.
it's also probably the most lucrative animated feature film at the time given how widely it was screened and for how long. It got animation taken more seriously by a lot of folks
yes, as I mentioned in the comments, the first animated movie was a political satire of all things, so you can see why Snow white was the one that stood out
Nickolas Barmenkov
Early animated films had a huge impact on cinema, popeye and betty boop were icons well before snow white hit the screen, and those are just minor examples. Yes they were short films but they were treated like feature length films at the time and had full house showings all over the western world.
Now Snow White did indeed have a dramatic effect on the industry, but it showed a bit to late to say that it changed cinema. It was the result of a change, not the cause of a change.
It was the first cell animated feature film
"rotoscoping that sucks" (text on the bottom of some really cool looking video)
"Do shut up, Andrew."
;-)
Fantastic video dude not gonna lie
fantastic video =)
altough as a german I have to break it to you: you murderd the pronounciation of "Koch" :D
Cheers from Germany =)
Sören
Trembich Moving Moments Sie können halt nicht unser "ch" oder "r" nachmachen 😂
Would love to hear your research materials,i.e the books,films and readings your went through to make this
Beautiful
Well, this was interesting. It seems pretty weird that animators come up with these ground breaking ideas, but winds up treating their coworkers like "mit!"
That was really cool :3
Nice Job!
I appreciate the Richard Williams diagram
Today with a fraction of this effort and money we can do much better.
And we dont.
I'd have liked to see an animated satire of Hipolito Yrigoyen
What about Pauvre Pierrot from 1894?
Isn't that the first cartoon?
Good point, but there isn't a lot of frames in it to allow for fully fluid mouvement, does it?
I believe Reiniger actually used the multiplane camera for prince achmed
I love the rotoscoping in lord of the rings
Wish i could show them how far technology had come. We’re trully living in a world of ‘magic’ more and more as time goes by and technology progresses
Awesome video!
Awesome video!!!
7:03 what film is this from? Subtitles dont show the title
Great video sir.
Why is Tony Zhou working here now?? Well It doesn't matter it's another great video
he's the guy who made every frame a painting. which is considered the best video essay channel on films, but he suddenly stopped producing content
it's a joke, this guy's name is Andrew
He wrote a whole essay on why he stopped. He does work for Criterion Collection now
Can you link me to that video? I never saw it
Jacob Brown its note a video it a post on his patreon page
I can understand why you might describe the rotoscoping present in some of the films of Bakshi as that which 'sucks', but honestly I think Bakshi is going for something a little different in his animation...also, the monetary constraints which seemed to plague his films...
So. Lotte was the first to create the multiplane camera. Disney ripped it off and claimed it as his own.
Disney taking credit for the multiplane camera is not a steal or plagiarism case. As the same time Reiniger developed her film, Disney was occupied with running his Laugh-o-Gram's cartoon shorts, subsequently losing the studio to bankruptcy, then establishing the Disney Brothers' Studio in 1923 and producing Alice comedies. There isn't any recorded incident of Disney or his immediate team traveling to Germany, much less "spying" on Reiniger in her garage studio. The multiplane camera and animation desk is a case of simultaneous invention, where people invented similar devices within the same time frame. During that time (1920s - 1930s) the communication and information media that we have today did not exist and the developments made by animation studios were kept secret, so as not to give an advantage to the competition. There are multiple cases of simultaneous invention, including the radio, modern flush toilet, calculus, theory of evolution, telephone, and theory of relativity. It was only attributed to a person when they visites the patent office.
Walt wanted to make his first feature film as realistic as possible, so while he already had a patent for a mounted camera on a table he called the Art of Animation, he needed a camera with more freedom to move. So it was refined by introducing the ability to adjust the position of the camera itself, making it technically superior than any other version and making Disney's multiplane camera the most sophisticated and technologically advanced of that time, creating a beleiveable sense of perspective and depth.
*Chuckle
Everyone knows that Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was the first cel-animation feature-length film. When people think of animation, they almost inevitably think of cel-animation because that has historically been the most common and most popular.
Everything from stop-motion models to cardboard cutouts on light projectors to 3D models are types of animation, but inked and painted cels are the one that people first think of when you say Animated Film.
Today however, pretty much only Japanese anime try to maintain the aesthetic and style of inked and painted cel-animation (even though most if not all of it is done digitally on a computer now).
This sounds like the guy from Every New Frame A Painting.
Were the Fleischer Superman shorts Rotoscoped? I didn't know that.
7:16 what the hell is that film? with the windmill
Also, the claims that Walt Disney was a d*ck are largely overblown, otherwise his friend and collaborator Ub Iwerks wouldn't have voluntarily chosen to come back to work with Walt as his head of Special Effects department.
Such ad hominems are typically made by people who are trying to undermine Walt because they are angry that he's the most famous of classic animation directors.
true.
Content is on point I have to add your channel link to my “Best RUclips Channels of 2018” video
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