Milt Kahl Head Swaggles

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  • Опубликовано: 2 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 624

  • @manfellafellaman
    @manfellafellaman 5 лет назад +8373

    You ever just animate a head swaggle to flex on other animators

    • @RyukkiKinsurri
      @RyukkiKinsurri 4 года назад +490

      Old interviews with his coworkers actually said he did it to show off

    • @naraynip9984
      @naraynip9984 4 года назад +59

      Looking at you Milt Khal 😂😂😂

    • @throwachair4574
      @throwachair4574 4 года назад +234

      this is what i imagine james baxter is doing whenever he animates something rotating

    • @kuprukuula
      @kuprukuula 4 года назад +68

      @@throwachair4574 Or Miyazaki doing a flyover

    • @DiamondSG
      @DiamondSG 4 года назад +57

      Other animators: 0:13

  • @filmnutcase6206
    @filmnutcase6206 5 лет назад +6198

    Personally I'd rather go with the term "Milt Shake".

    • @toughspitfire
      @toughspitfire 5 лет назад +141

      Nah should totally call it the "Milt tilt"

    • @siskavard
      @siskavard 5 лет назад +6

      Nice

    • @edgybuttmunch2430
      @edgybuttmunch2430 4 года назад +69

      Its funny untill you realize the term “milt” means fish jizz

    • @THUNGUNS
      @THUNGUNS 4 года назад +22

      Sounds tasty

    • @jvgreendarmok
      @jvgreendarmok 4 года назад +47

      He could teach you, but he'd have to charge.

  • @BrendanOG
    @BrendanOG 5 лет назад +5475

    When you realize your favourite parts of Disney are actually one guys work.

    • @jamesbeckman7826
      @jamesbeckman7826 4 года назад +112

      Frank and Ollie were equally talented, and may have even been a tad better in terms of acting through animation, as they always got the best "parts." But those three (Frank, Ollie and Milt) were definitely the three best actors of the nine.

    • @JSmusiqalthinka
      @JSmusiqalthinka 4 года назад +64

      Tbh, the favorite parts of Disney's greatest works were all the labor of the animators, cel painters, and technicians, and not the fact that Walt owned/operated the company.

    • @BrendanOG
      @BrendanOG 4 года назад +7

      @@JSmusiqalthinka I was not talking about Walt

    • @JSmusiqalthinka
      @JSmusiqalthinka 4 года назад +26

      @@BrendanOG I know. I was just saying all the parts that make Disney films great are because of people like Milt Kahl, Frank Thomas, Art Babbit, etc., and not so much the namesake of the company they worked for.

    • @mramos7887
      @mramos7887 4 года назад +19

      James Baxter comes to mind

  • @tibipics
    @tibipics 5 лет назад +2187

    smh (swaggling my head)

  • @h3mog0blin
    @h3mog0blin 4 года назад +2361

    2:50 _AND THERE'S AN ACCURATE MIRRORED IMAGE_
    Holy crap this man was an absolute mad lad

    • @baddabaddabaddaswing
      @baddabaddabaddaswing 4 года назад +254

      I never thought about that before, my god. The precision is insane, especially since she has crooked teeth to mirror as well.

    • @ashyori9637
      @ashyori9637 4 года назад +55

      Imagine he had to do twice the work for the mirror scene.

    • @nicoka484
      @nicoka484 3 года назад +5

      Does anyone know what film this is from because it's driving me mad?

    • @LindsayTotty
      @LindsayTotty 3 года назад +24

      @@nicoka484 The Rescuers (1977)

    • @nicoka484
      @nicoka484 3 года назад +3

      @@LindsayTotty thank you!

  • @JackandSally4ever
    @JackandSally4ever 5 лет назад +1641

    I never realized how often he did it but... yeah, wow, that’s a lot.

  • @Masiyooo
    @Masiyooo 5 лет назад +2840

    Richard Williams said that, according to Milt Kahl the secret of mouth animation, which he learned during Song of the South, was in "progressing the action", not in moving the mouth. When a character talks, move them somewhere or in some way. I think the head swaggle is a great example of this principle. It looks a little excessive in a compilation like this, but in the movies themselves it never feels like that.
    Milt says its this same trick is what made Jim Henson a genius of animation, for being able to get so much character out of what is essentially a sock puppet. Henson always progressed the action when acting with the puppets.

    • @RoyceRemix
      @RoyceRemix 5 лет назад +40

      This sounds fascinating and I'd love to understand it better; do you remember where you saw/heard Williams talking about this? Like it makes sense, especially with the Jim Henson comparison, but what does it mean from a more technical standpoint?... Would Milt lead movement with the mouth, or perhaps would mouth shape somehow inform head movement?

    • @Masiyooo
      @Masiyooo 5 лет назад +57

      ​@@RoyceRemix This was in the video lecture of Williams' "Animators survival kit". There are many clips of the lecture on youtube but I'm not quite sure if the specific part can be found.
      If you want to trust mysterious links from strangers, here's the clip. It's real low quality and the audio went out of sync for some reason when I rendered it:
      files (period) catbox (dot) moe (slash) fbu11l (point) webm
      If you don't wanna use the mysterious link, the point is to act dialogue using the movement of the head/body, not over relying on mouth action/lip sync. Frank Thomas would for example always animate the mouth last. The example given in the clip is that in the Song of the South scene the Fox says "I'm going to skin you alive", and Milt hardly animated the mouth, just a small movement of the upper lip with all the teeth gritted, and instead almost all of the delivery of the line was done by the Fox leaning forwards towards the Rabbit. Very little relevant mouth action to the syllables that were being said, but still the acting felt like the mouth matched the lines, because he "leaned into" the delivery of the line.
      You can see this well with Tigger and Shere Khan. The giant protruding lower jaw makes for very large mouth movement, and the shape of the mouth doesn't vary greatly between syllables, but the head movement ties it together and makes it believable.

    • @filmnutcase6206
      @filmnutcase6206 5 лет назад +12

      I agree with the idea of "progressing the action" but shouldn't any movement be something that's unique to the character? Milt Kahl was an an amazing animator with such smooth motion and balanced motion (largely for being an incredible draftsman), few animators in the Disney Renaissance (much less today) could even come close to the near perfect animation he made (though I'd argue James Baxter animator of Belle, Rafiki, Quasimodo, Moses and the main Horse from Spirit (as well as horse of the same name from Adventure time Character). But to me the Milt Shake this many times comes across as a little lazy and repetitive.

    • @Masiyooo
      @Masiyooo 5 лет назад +45

      @@filmnutcase6206 I think there's a good amount of character variety in the shakes. Few of the goofier characters are quite similar, but with the more serious/defined characters the way a character shakes their head is fairly different, and justified by the context of the scene.
      Madame Medusa, Shere Khan, Sir Ector are all smug/condescending/full of themselves, but their head swaggles are still distinctly different.
      It's a gimmick for sure, but I don't think it's lazy because Milt makes sure that the shake doesn't break the character. None/few of the shakes are identical/formulaic. If he just followed the same formula for each shake (same degree of turning the head, same timing, etc) then I'd agree it's lazy, but that's not the case. It's no more lazy than any other kind of secondary action.

    • @filmnutcase6206
      @filmnutcase6206 5 лет назад +3

      @@Masiyooo Well yeah I wasn't trying to say it was a deal breaker (though I can't personally that there's enough variation on the shake, though it can work very well for smuggness) it's more of a distraction, not the worse thing by any means but I do wonder if some secondary action by Mr. Kahl could've been done better, oh well.

  • @NunofYerbizness
    @NunofYerbizness 5 лет назад +1745

    "The Milt Kahl Head Swaggle" almost sounds like an underground dance move to me.

    • @nickcarter4006
      @nickcarter4006 5 лет назад +17

      New band name

    • @MrTrombonebandgeek
      @MrTrombonebandgeek 5 лет назад +19

      Or a bedroom dance move

    • @flaytrie4033
      @flaytrie4033 4 года назад +12

      MrTrombonebandgeek
      NO-

    • @Doc_Fun
      @Doc_Fun 4 года назад +9

      @@MrTrombonebandgeek I am filled with existential dread when I consider what this could possibly represent in the bedroom

    • @MrTrombonebandgeek
      @MrTrombonebandgeek 4 года назад +3

      @@Doc_Fun maybe a swing of the hips in such a way?

  • @Wack.d
    @Wack.d 4 года назад +1035

    I think my favorite part is at the end, Thomas mocking Kahl while animating a part of the script where Baloo mocks Bagheera.

    • @cloudybookcase9189
      @cloudybookcase9189 4 года назад +18

      Lol

    • @reginaldforthright805
      @reginaldforthright805 Год назад +11

      It really is completely ridiculous how much kahl overuses it

    • @kaninekodiak
      @kaninekodiak 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@reginaldforthright805this is a 3 minute compilation out of the literal hundreds of minutes he animated. fuck off lmao

  • @nickcarter4006
    @nickcarter4006 5 лет назад +687

    Something I always loved about Disney movies that I never knew was a thing until 3 minutes ago

    • @nickcarter4006
      @nickcarter4006 5 лет назад +5

      God and I LOVE that this came up as under the Jazz topic

    • @nickcarter4006
      @nickcarter4006 5 лет назад +7

      And you know I watch this and think, why did they EVER think Jungle Book needed to be remade??

    • @bxvtriz
      @bxvtriz 3 года назад

      same!! but when i read “disney head swaggles” i intuitively mimicked one, bc they were ingrained in my mind even if i didnt realize it was an item!

    • @geministrial950
      @geministrial950 2 месяца назад

      ​@@nickcarter4006 To be fair the Jungle Book remake is one of the "better" ones

  • @TylerMcNamer
    @TylerMcNamer 4 года назад +436

    He really wanted the audience know that the characters were talking. Don't just move the mouth, move the head too!

  • @TheSoulvian
    @TheSoulvian 5 лет назад +1459

    I have a fondness for this kind of head-swaggling. It's very... show-offy though. In that classical Disney way. As in "yes, I could just move the head from point A to point B like a normal animator but instead I will have the character shake it back and forth as he turns it in a way that's still complimentary to the motion." It's very unrealistic. Nobody moves their head like that in real life. And yet is somehow makes the character feel real because it sort of captures the complexity of real movement and constantly reminds you how 3-dimensional and solid the head is. It's the kind of movement you can't really imitate with a design that isn't volumetric. It's kind of musical.

    • @RoyceRemix
      @RoyceRemix 5 лет назад +67

      I agree that it's great animation and adds a lot more dynamics to a dialogue scene, including the accompanied follow-through animations of hair, jewelry, etc. And while these dynamics may have often times been the purpose of the movement, I would argue that it's not necessarily unrealistic, in general.. Everyone has different mannerisms, some people talk with their hands a lot, or use a lot of facial movement, while others don't... and also consider that culture plays a role, as it did with the way people SPOKE in America in the 30s-60s (word choice and tone/cadence alike), and I think if you watch movies from that period you'd see that mannerisms were similarly different in general. These things are half of what I personally enjoy about movies from the mid 1900s, both animation and live-action.

    • @NotSomeone68
      @NotSomeone68 5 лет назад +85

      No one moves like that in real life? I would argue that people are always jiggling, fidgeting, or shifting in some manner. No one holds perfectly still.

    • @tahutoa
      @tahutoa 4 года назад +36

      But. But _I_ do that in real life. I mean, I learned it from watching Tigger as a kid, but "life imitates art" is still life, so...

    • @Dumbsterfyre
      @Dumbsterfyre 4 года назад +19

      There actually is a real-life equivalent of the swaggle in india! An interesting video by Drew Binsky introduces and documents a few examples, dubbed ‘the indian head wobble.’

    • @DireBeastRexYT
      @DireBeastRexYT 4 года назад +1

      @@tahutoa I grew up with Milt's work in all my favourite disney movies so I... actually do move my head a lot when I talk and now I know where I learned it as a kid xD

  • @crowskinned
    @crowskinned 5 лет назад +320

    tigger's waggles are my favourite!!

    • @yukowolfang8645
      @yukowolfang8645 4 года назад +11

      "And just look at that preposterous chin!"

    • @GreySeashell-j3m
      @GreySeashell-j3m 4 года назад +2

      Yeah! When I read the title It immediately brought me back to tigger.

  • @jungschiffer8423
    @jungschiffer8423 4 года назад +302

    As a child, I watch old Disney movies just for the head swaggle. I always found it interesting, how those little bob of their head convince me that the 2D drawings are not just character, but as if they are living person. It's magic how so much personality is delivered through a simple movements. What is crazier is the fact only Milt Kahl can do this, and it have become his trademark.

    • @moriahmanwaring755
      @moriahmanwaring755 4 года назад +13

      I think this is one of the reasons why I like 2D animation so much better than 3D. It has more life and personality, and more of the personal touch of the animators.

    • @theremycrocks6861
      @theremycrocks6861 4 года назад +3

      Me too bro this is what ignited my love for animation

    • @gersoncuevas8137
      @gersoncuevas8137 10 месяцев назад +1

      Remember the creepy nanny in earlier Simpsons seasons? When she threatens Bart.
      Yea
      Like that.

    • @WizardOfHumor1989
      @WizardOfHumor1989 8 месяцев назад

      When my sisters and I (who were close in age) used to watch these classic Disney vhs I could detect recycled images/scenes/cameos/Easter eggs. Probably the first time I saw film elements.

  • @Danielle81895
    @Danielle81895 5 лет назад +3714

    What kills me in neither animals or humans move their head THIS MUCH so it's not even realistic it's just a flex

    • @kylestroup3077
      @kylestroup3077 4 года назад +458

      And yet he passes it off as realistic

    • @Tigressa101
      @Tigressa101 4 года назад +384

      Actually it is somewhat realistic, not for animals though because of course animals don't talk. Some people have this head waggle when they talk, some don't. My mother's ex-boyfriend had a shake of the head waggle when he disliked something and tried to communicate why he disliked it. All depends on who you meet.

    • @garrettnichols2152
      @garrettnichols2152 4 года назад +139

      If you’re looking for a real-life example of head swaggles like this, just look at anyone from India when they’re talking about something that makes them happy. (At least, that’s what it reminds me of, and closely resembles a live-action version of the Milt Kahl swaggle)

    • @TylerMcNamer
      @TylerMcNamer 4 года назад +249

      Good animation does not need to be realistic.
      It needs to be believable.

    • @ernovincze2900
      @ernovincze2900 4 года назад +32

      For animals, they do such head swaggles when they are shaking something off their fur.

  • @heffylumi
    @heffylumi 5 лет назад +473

    Milt actually had his own term for characters he liked to use this for, as heard in the Disney Family Album episode featuring interviews with him. He refers to how he made Sir Ector in Sword in the Stone a "wobblehead" - I think it's cute that he owned it like that lol

    • @shifukoala5543
      @shifukoala5543 4 года назад +13

      I'm imagining how it went:
      *In the middle of Disney old men meeting room*
      "Ah-ah-ah! I take dibs designing this character! ....hm? Yeah, i need their head to waggle"

  • @schmavenb.7141
    @schmavenb.7141 5 лет назад +268

    oh hey, he does draw some pretty sharp elbows

    • @brianbuckley1345
      @brianbuckley1345 5 лет назад +39

      Why did I go back and watch the video again to look at the elbows?

    • @popisdeadisagoodsong9997
      @popisdeadisagoodsong9997 3 года назад +4

      Kahl's sharp elbows reminds me of how sharp Jamie Hewlett drew his wrists and elbows when Gorillaz was just starting out.

  • @Oecobius33
    @Oecobius33 4 года назад +100

    Out of context this movement looks almost obvious & repetitive, but it's awesome how it suits each character's acting & personality in the moment. It doesn't feel like Kahl repeating himself because it always adds so much to the scene!
    And when we hear the voices, the animation plays off them so naturally.

    • @megamage911
      @megamage911 3 года назад +7

      I was thinking exactly this. Despite him insisting to always do this, it never comes off as forced, he always does it in a way that fits in.

    • @princessthyemis
      @princessthyemis Год назад

      Yeah!!!!

  • @jonafun0516
    @jonafun0516 4 года назад +112

    I think it works so well at being the characters to life because it’s an exaggeration of body language, much like stage actors have to over emphatically express everything. By giving a broader range of movement, it adds depth to the communication through body language.

  • @sapphirewingthefurrycritic985
    @sapphirewingthefurrycritic985 4 года назад +218

    He did this to show off because there weren't many who could pull this off.

    • @oldie.no.79
      @oldie.no.79 2 года назад

      There wasn’t ANYONE who could pull it off***

    • @reginaldforthright805
      @reginaldforthright805 Год назад

      I mean its pretty basic. I think any competent animator could do a head shake but why would you

    • @raydhen8840
      @raydhen8840 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@reginaldforthright805 you need to understand character anatomy/proportions to do this effectively. Not to mention understand their personality as well as each swaggles is different for each character. No, it's not as "basic" as you think.

    • @lurking5018
      @lurking5018 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@raydhen8840Yeah those are things any competent animator should have lol

    • @TheKyrix82
      @TheKyrix82 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@lurking5018 Those are things they know NOW, because of his work.

  • @MissArtsy
    @MissArtsy 4 года назад +83

    I love how every animator puts there own unique details in there animations that's what makes these movies so special

  • @otttis
    @otttis 4 года назад +51

    3:06 I find this especially funny since Kahl's head swaggles were a flex to other animators. So Thomas imitation swaggle feels like a form of mocking to Kahl's flexing.

    • @reginaldforthright805
      @reginaldforthright805 Год назад +3

      Thomas thought Kahl was insincere. They basically hated each other.

    • @reginaldforthright805
      @reginaldforthright805 9 месяцев назад

      @@Sandalleno33-uw2ix read the nine old men by John canemaker

    • @SobiTheRobot
      @SobiTheRobot 5 месяцев назад +5

      And it's funny how much it matches how Baloo is mocking Bagheera, as here, Frank Thomas IS also mocking Milt Kahl.

  • @xtrafries123
    @xtrafries123 2 года назад +19

    I really like how his animation artstyle has little to none line cleanup. Gives the entire animation a sketch book feel.

    • @giuliabianco8425
      @giuliabianco8425 2 года назад +13

      Yeah, this was a time when xerox became all the rage because of its reduced cost, iirc. Instead of actually inking the cels they just photocopied them away, which meant you could see the pencil strokes in motion. It's rough but charming in its own way.

    • @reginaldforthright805
      @reginaldforthright805 Год назад +2

      @@giuliabianco8425haha. The drawings are better in this era than any other because cleanup never captures the animators accurately. Loses the subtleties of expression and volume.

  • @pinklemonegg
    @pinklemonegg 4 года назад +89

    These comments: meh it's unrealistic
    The video: several animals talking and wearing clothes and also a wizard

    • @jvgreendarmok
      @jvgreendarmok 3 года назад +5

      It's the plausible impossible!

  • @amk4739
    @amk4739 4 года назад +68

    Milt: Draws endless head swaggles
    Other Animators: Weird flex but ok

  • @awkwardcupcake3395
    @awkwardcupcake3395 4 года назад +18

    Its such a fun, whimsical stylistic choice that really contributes to classic Disney's charm. The fact that he did it to stunt on em makes it even better lol

  • @inactiveaccount8105
    @inactiveaccount8105 4 года назад +22

    "Oy, Milt. We need you to come swaggle this head would'ya?"

  • @IL_801
    @IL_801 4 года назад +24

    God. I always wondered what made the humans in aristocats so charming (aside from the general delightful and quirky design), it's this lifelike, whimsical shaking of the heads. I feel like so many unasked questions of mine have been answered.
    What a pro.

  • @Dooger414
    @Dooger414 5 лет назад +293

    Nobody:
    Milt Kahl: *shakes head*

  • @NextLevelEntertainment
    @NextLevelEntertainment 4 года назад +45

    I never realized how much their heads, well, swaggled until now. Like wow.

  • @Topself24
    @Topself24 5 лет назад +97

    I’m gonna be honest that shit looks very difficult to animate

    • @hauntedshadowslegacy2826
      @hauntedshadowslegacy2826 5 лет назад +41

      You'd be 1000% right. Dude pissed off other animators cuz he raised the bar so high with his 3D head waggles. On PAPER, nonetheless.

    • @TheKyrix82
      @TheKyrix82 6 месяцев назад +5

      It was next to impossible to animate. He wasn't just the best at it, he was one of the only ones who could do it at all

  • @IngeniousOutdoors
    @IngeniousOutdoors 5 лет назад +246

    Lol seems excessive when you put it all in a compilation.

    • @IngeniousOutdoors
      @IngeniousOutdoors 4 года назад +17

      @Axtwyt Starkiller obviously, or i wouldnt have made the distinction that its seems excessive when COMPILED.

  • @KeyleeTamirian
    @KeyleeTamirian 4 года назад +13

    Those animations by the end, i love their rough lines, it makes everything look so unique.

  • @vintagefan3759
    @vintagefan3759 5 лет назад +92

    It feels like they rotoscoped these scenes. Surprised that they weren't; really impressive stuff from one the 9 ol' men.

    • @klg9549
      @klg9549 5 лет назад +16

      Yeah a bunch of these I never even noticed were his trademark, I assumed it was something the voice actors had done in recording and was thrown in.

  • @TeamSoSWoW
    @TeamSoSWoW 5 лет назад +63

    look at all em' swaggles

  • @guytorie
    @guytorie 4 года назад +40

    As a kid I just thought this was a quirky Disney style of character movement that all the animators in the company knew how to do. I never realized it was one dude flexing on the rest of the Disney staff

    • @reginaldforthright805
      @reginaldforthright805 Год назад +2

      It was one guy with cerebral palsy whom the other animators begrudgingly tolerated since he was one of the “nine old men” and very cantankerous.

  • @animuauntie
    @animuauntie 4 года назад +8

    The insane thing toe is how many different emotions these head waggles can convey: anxiety, smugness, panic, excitement, exasperation, bashfulness, even Medusa's super fake attempt at motherly sympathy. And you can see that in the subtle changes in the speed, degree, and angle of the waggle.

  • @enicole1203
    @enicole1203 6 месяцев назад +3

    Just saw a fb post about this and had to look it up. It's so fun to learn that something I never gave much thought to turns out to be an absolute beast flex among people who understand animation. 😂

    • @NoLegsOnTheBed
      @NoLegsOnTheBed 6 месяцев назад +2

      I think we must've seen the same meme!

  • @Lobotomobillionaire
    @Lobotomobillionaire 4 года назад +5

    This is a very specific form of nostalgia I never knew I had

  • @alisathemushroom9923
    @alisathemushroom9923 4 года назад +6

    I immediately thought of several other films when I see the ones from the Jungle Book, and they showed up afterwards. These swaggles brought/bring so must character and awesomeness

  • @1classikai
    @1classikai 4 года назад +27

    Man you gotta have a REAL good understanding of your characters’ proportions to be able to do this effectively

  • @videonmode8649
    @videonmode8649 4 года назад +6

    It's extra work but it breathes THAT MUCH life into the animation!

  • @EC2019
    @EC2019 2 года назад +1

    I never noticed this. But this really is a defining characteristic of the older Disney style, 1st and 2nd gen. They all did it. It's as characteristic as the particular voice actors or the scratchy black Xerox lines and noise.

  • @mynameismathew
    @mynameismathew 5 лет назад +16

    This is probably why I shake my head so much now.

  • @ViciousFoolery
    @ViciousFoolery 4 года назад +6

    This honestly probably explains why I shake my head when I talk.

  • @FeatherineFeather
    @FeatherineFeather 4 года назад +1

    Most of the time head swaggles always look out of place or just awkward but here it feels super natural.

  • @peekaloo12
    @peekaloo12 2 года назад +3

    I just realized that it's because of this dude that I do a little head swaggle when I'm talking, even as an adult.

  • @BenNelson-zl6lj
    @BenNelson-zl6lj Месяц назад +1

    I love the Cuphead vibe of the music you picked out for that video.

  • @penngheeney
    @penngheeney 2 года назад +3

    I was today years old when I learned that Tigger was a Shere Khan stuffy.

  • @MichiriKyuurin
    @MichiriKyuurin 4 года назад +5

    Milt Kahl animating head swaggles is basically just him head swaggling at everyone.

  • @wormsalad9964
    @wormsalad9964 3 года назад +3

    this man just couldn't stop flexing

    • @FrizFreddy1994
      @FrizFreddy1994 3 года назад

      Should he not have? They don't call him the world's greatest animator for nothing.

  • @atticusgrey
    @atticusgrey 4 года назад +6

    1:18 and 1:28. These are my favorites. I love the secondary movement of Thomas O'Malley's ear and how it moves in the opposite direction of his head until it has time to catch up, it's just such a fun little detail. And I (I know I'm saying love again but) love the way the old man moves his head up so drastically, and then back down again. Ugh I love Milt Kahl's work so mUCH

  • @theconfusedvampire
    @theconfusedvampire 4 года назад +15

    Ever since I got into digital art, I can't help but be impressed by this. It's tons of work for an amazing expressive effect that isn't even worth it.
    I feel like I'm watching an animator sing "Anything You Can Do I Can Do Better" to himself and it's great.

  • @RoyalCube
    @RoyalCube 4 года назад +9

    He really flexed on everyone THAT much 😂

  • @0kieD0kiee
    @0kieD0kiee 4 года назад +2

    I’ve always loved that trademark swaggle!! It ads so much character and personality to the animation

  • @talynhastime9343
    @talynhastime9343 4 года назад +3

    As soon as I learned of this fact I began to tell it to anyone who would listen, and I’m glad that others found it as neat as I do.

  • @02protoman
    @02protoman 4 года назад +1

    Animation is a constant flex on others, don’t forget

  • @leandrorobles3200
    @leandrorobles3200 3 года назад +4

    The 13th basic principle of animation, that never made to the book: the head swaggle.

  • @carlthomas5307
    @carlthomas5307 10 месяцев назад +1

    This is why I miss hand drawn animation. The Nine Old Men had a distinctive style and approach to animating characters and Milt Kahl’s drawings definitely stood out with the “head swaggles”.

  • @winterwindle1160
    @winterwindle1160 3 года назад +3

    this little action was such an influence on me as a child that i would actually do this while talking, and sometimes i still do. crazy how a little thing like that has an impact (albeit tiny and subconscious) on how i act as an adult.

  • @naut7845
    @naut7845 2 года назад +2

    No one usually moves their head this much while they speak but in animation it’s almost necessary with how much character and emotion it can bring out. Absolutely excellent

  • @WizardOfHumor1989
    @WizardOfHumor1989 8 месяцев назад +2

    A couple other examples of Milt Kahl head swaggles you forgot to include was:
    -Peter Pan (1953) was when Peter disciplined the lost boys shaking his head saying “we’ll I’m surprised you blockheads!”
    -Lady and the Tramp (1955) when Trusty talks about his grandpappy old reliable and asks if he don’t recollect mentioning him before. Also when Tramp imitates a woman screaming “Stop that racket you’ll wake the baby!”.

  • @johnprudent3216
    @johnprudent3216 7 месяцев назад

    Beautiful how he gave his animation such natural personality and mannerisms. It never looked like he was following some animator’s handbook; more like he learned then perfected the technique to the point he truly made it his own.

  • @joshh9431
    @joshh9431 5 лет назад +13

    That’s what I really love about Milt Kahl’s Animation.

  • @jaimecarlton6993
    @jaimecarlton6993 2 месяца назад

    Those shakes made the mood in each character and I loved it as a kid

  • @beastofedelwood1473
    @beastofedelwood1473 4 года назад +2

    Finally knowing why so many old Disney characters shake their heads around is so satisfying

  • @Johnny-dz6vl
    @Johnny-dz6vl 3 месяца назад +2

    Real animation Brilliant " Nuff Said "

  • @laceyhoeferlin
    @laceyhoeferlin 4 года назад +2

    This got me thinking about all the had waggles in The Secrets of a Nimh. It's such a little thing we don't notice but such a flex/trademark we know to love

  • @lobotzindiegoantesnesslope6004
    @lobotzindiegoantesnesslope6004 4 года назад

    Man these movements, these small HUGE! Details, thats why it feel so natural and magical

  • @june2420111
    @june2420111 11 месяцев назад

    These are all my favorite characters and cartoon movies as a child. I didn't know it was a single animator responsible for them!!! That's amazing.

  • @JohnnyTyrant
    @JohnnyTyrant 4 года назад +1

    This man has head swaggled his way through my childhood and i love it.

  • @qdkdicja10
    @qdkdicja10 4 года назад +2

    The movements are so convincing that I, after watching for a minute and a half, had to do a little head waggle myself to realize that we don’t really do that that often. Reality check was necessary 😂

  • @alinewman2462
    @alinewman2462 4 года назад +1

    i love that in old disney movies animate the slightest movements, and each character moves like water

  • @DJBSharpMusic
    @DJBSharpMusic 23 часа назад

    This and the exaggerated arm movements from Robin Hood were my two favorite animations.

  • @GoldenGrenadier
    @GoldenGrenadier 5 лет назад +7

    Hannah Barbara cartoons always do a cheaper version of this by bobbing the head up and down when a character is talking. By always I mean every single time a character speaks.

  • @SarahSchreck
    @SarahSchreck 4 года назад +1

    Frank's imitation waggle has me CACKLING

  • @agoosecalledxaro6679
    @agoosecalledxaro6679 6 месяцев назад

    I now realize one of the reason I love some of these films so much is because this little detail is in them, and it is amazing.

  • @Varrbariouss
    @Varrbariouss 3 года назад

    You know how hard it is to lip sync and to do it while the head is moving like that, amazing, i never get tired of watching this

  • @drsunshine1959
    @drsunshine1959 4 года назад +1

    What an incredible artist Milt Kahl was. His work inspired generations of animators.

  • @Jazzmern
    @Jazzmern 4 года назад +2

    hot damn i knew he did the head swaggles bit i never did really absorb in that he really did it all the time

  • @SurrealKeenan
    @SurrealKeenan 5 лет назад +30

    googled this guy. Looks exactly like I imagined he would

  • @casualcallie7195
    @casualcallie7195 4 года назад

    Now this is all I'm gonna pay attention to any time I go back to watch these movies

  • @sandyknowles5638
    @sandyknowles5638 4 года назад

    fantastic comp. this work is insane. perhaps key to disney nostalgia

  • @DangerAngelous
    @DangerAngelous 2 года назад

    I definitely remember this from the handful of old Disney tapes I grew up with

  • @jefgirdler7232
    @jefgirdler7232 6 месяцев назад

    Man it’s so ABSURDLY expressive tho. That’s how people’s heads move! It’s a perfect pairing to the lines being spoken. Especially the last example of Baloo’s mocking tone. Like… those voice actor’s lines probably wouldn’t have landed so well without this one trick. Damn, what a flex.

  • @Konkata
    @Konkata 2 года назад

    What I love about the Swaggle is that it adds definition to the characters emotion. The Swaggle matches the scripts motion and expression perfectly with added sass and intensity to what the character is seeing and feeling.

  • @guard3745
    @guard3745 4 года назад

    Never really thought about this before. Crazy how such a small motion could become such a defining feature of a style. Love it!

  • @natewatson6962
    @natewatson6962 3 года назад +1

    "milt... did you throw in another head swaggle?"
    milt: *irl head swaggle while still working*

  • @pauldeddens5349
    @pauldeddens5349 4 года назад +1

    Got to love how a single man so subtly injected tons of life and emotion and realism into every traditionally animated disney movie with a technique people wouldnt even realize is there until you point it out.
    Its like CGI work, people build entire cities from scratch so well, you dont even know the shot isnt on location.

  • @NostalgiaArtist
    @NostalgiaArtist Год назад

    i love the milt kahl swaggle. it makes character's feel like they're in their own heads, full of themselves, or the intensity of how the feel wracks their whole body. it feels like every character has their own "tempo". it's very cool

  • @Adamant_Adam
    @Adamant_Adam 4 года назад +1

    to this day, whenever I have an animation in my head I always add in a head wiggle. Now, I know who to thank for that

  • @pyppuspice8807
    @pyppuspice8807 4 года назад +1

    i love this, it gives it more life and expression to the characters

  • @gorlheck5574
    @gorlheck5574 4 года назад

    Man I felt ready to cry after having to animate a turnaround of a head, yet he’s OUT HERE DOING THIS WAAAAATTT

  • @pastel.persephone5879
    @pastel.persephone5879 4 года назад

    HOW did i never notice this before!!?? and they always seem like they are natural to each character.

  • @juneru2
    @juneru2 10 месяцев назад

    It's cool when an animator has a trademark like this! Animators don't get enough credit, that's just how it goes, but it's subtleties like Milt's head swaggles that make his scenes identifiable to him.

  • @theonionqueen3519
    @theonionqueen3519 4 года назад +2

    Do y’all realize how impossible this was? How bloody talented Milt really was?

  • @chelseawhite7117
    @chelseawhite7117 4 года назад

    Well, I’ll never be able to un-see this now, but it does deserve to be recognized!

  • @nateolmsted22
    @nateolmsted22 2 года назад

    I know very little about the world of animation. Today I saw a random suggested post talking about the legendary swaggle and why it's so amazing... now I'm obsessed. Milt Kahl was a BAMF. Flexing on the world with something most people will never fully appreciate or even understand

  • @nimloc1670
    @nimloc1670 4 года назад +1

    The head swaggle helps the characters emphasize what they're saying while simultaneously making them come off as even more sarcastic and pretentious. It's also extremely satisfying