And you saw it when you should have been asleep at 2 in the morning on a school day while it's raining on PBS in some rerun of a Eastern European art Showcase from the late 70s
I had one of those for yeeeears until the Internet told me it was Kafka's "Metamorphosis of Mr Samsa", animated in moving sand, by Caroline Leaf. At least I think so, the imagery is vaguely as I remember, and the one line I remember was "I don't wanna be a cockroach!". Except in Leaf's film, there's no dialogue. So maybe that's wrong. Early '80s animated film where someone doesn't wanna be a cockroach and I think there's a fire or they die in a kitchen fire or something? Which doesn't happen in Metamorphosis. Any better-fitting films, do, PLEASE, do tell me! Won't be post-1985 and probably not even post-1982.
This is has the vibe of an obscure cartoon that would traumatize a young child who will start one of the biggest lost media searches to confirm that this was not a dream.
Students 20 years from now: "Steamed-hamism has had a significant impact on 2020's pop culture, and trends in the online world, in this essay I will..."
@@shitpostgrotto2982 It's like the visual equivalent of a jazz standard: everyone knows the visual and story beats of Steamed Hams just the sane as every jazz musician knows the chords and basic melody of Giant Steps or In The Mood, so it's a familiar framework for people to build their own artistic adventures off of.
For those who don’t know, the title «Stimlyannaya Khamonika» is a parody of the 1968 surrealist stop-motion film Glass Harmonica or «Steklyannaya Garmonika», which was the first animated film to be banned by state film censors in the USSR. This whole video is essentially a tribute to that era of Soyuzmultfilm animation.
It wasn't even an era, most 1960's cartoons were pretty down to earth It's just the unique creation of Andrey Khrjanovsky, his style is very distinctive
@xxBrokenDreams666xx I had to watch the thing to come to this conclusion, but I'm not an expert, so take my interpretation with a grain of salt. The film depicts a tension between the (what appears to be) the police and a musician who has developed a beautiful instrument that inspires the highest ideals in humanity. The musician is taken away, the instrument smashed, and the citizens who were inspired by the art are persecuted. It seems to be a pretty straightforward criticism of soviet restrictions on artistic expression and after watching it, I'm not surprised that it was censored.
As someone who grew up in 1980s USSR, this is very authentic to some weird cartoons that showed up during that time. The fact that they don't talk and carpet on the wall 🤌
@@HylianFox3 Funny thing is that you could say it is a metaphor for being a puppet subject of the communist totalitarian regime as well as the consumerist puppet of the corpocracy of the west. Maybe even deeper than that it was a metaphor for the fact of us being controlled by pure causation. We feel free when we like our strings and feel coerced when we hate them. ruclips.net/video/lV4ZnoYhwgg/видео.html
Khalmerzka: "You call pyetties burgers despite fact they are in fact fermented fish." Skininsky: "You dare question food bearing seal of approval from Komrade Stalin?!"
This is like something I would have seen as a kid in the 90’s on a public access channel at some ungodly, sleepless hour that I would years later recall and wonder if I imagined the whole thing. It’s perfect.
I 100% have a memory of being awake at like 2am as a kid and seeing something creepy like this on channel 5 (it a uk TV channel) and being freaked out.
As someone who grew up in the former USSR I can surely feel the uncanny semblance to late USSR animation. It's so well-done that one might mistake it for a genuine Soviet animation. Amazing job!
Jesus, this is so accurate. I remember as a kid that I saw this style of animation and never understood it's insanity with lack of sound effect. Just pure devilish music.
For anyone else that was wondering, the animation takes homage from Andrei Khrzhanovsky's 1968 animation "Glass Harmonica", notoriously the first animation that was banned in the USSR. Beautiful work you did here as well!
I was getting very strong Priit Pärn vibes, but he's the only artist of this style I'm really familiar with; he's probably part of a larger (extremely depressing, surreal, and unsettling) movement I'm not familiar with. Estonia borders Russia so it makes sense there'd be some influence.
I like this a lot! The german expressionist one gets points for being live action, but this one is on another level of creativity. I feel like the contrast here is way more evident: it’s in a very authentic old style, but the characters are obviously Chalmers and Skinner, plus an appearance of Krusty. The complete lack of dialogue really helps as well. Also, I love how the fire truck was not only included, but made just as jarring as it is in the original. I don’t know why it’s like that, but this replicates it perfectly.
So many style-parodies fall short of feeling authentic to the original. But not this one. If I wasn't familiar with Steamed Hams, I would have thought this was really from 1968 USSR! Amazing work! I don't know how you captured the textures so well.
@@Sopmod-py1eeIt's hard to make out but to Skinner's right...in the Simpsons episode where Gabbo was trouncing Krusty in the ratings, Krusty lost the rights to Itchy and Scratchy. So they had to air something from a former Soviet state.
So, I've studied animation history, used to run an animation blog. I am absolutely floored at how well you captured this particular style of Soviet animation. My gob, it has been smacked. My hams, WELL steamed. I don't even know you, but I am so proud of you.
Hey man, how can I study animation history online? I have studied the western and eastern art history for about a year and due to that I am very good at making compositions and I would want to know how I can do the same with animations
I had never heard of Glass Harmonica before, but I've just watched it and I love it. It's so strangely beautiful yet terrifying, which seems to have been the point as far as I can tell. (I grew up in England in the 00's/10's so I can only view it in a historical context, but I'm also an artist and a socialist, and it's just... Fascinating.) And from having watched it, this meme really does seem to have captured the combined vibe of that and the Simpsons clip.
outside of the meme, this is insanely incredible to look at. Everything about it is just perfection. Please, for the sake of art itself, keep making more.
The sound is a large part of why you like this video! Don't believe me? Try watching it with the sound off People don't show sound design enough respect and often take it for granted.
Growing up in Russia, I watched a ton of those cartoons without realizing how weird they are. You just accept stuff as a kid and move on. Now I'm 28, and this masterpiece has reached something that was hidden very very deep in my subconscious. It's so accurate, familiar and nostalgic, but at the same time it's new. I needed that. Thank you for taking me back to a weird part of my childhood.
cheers from another one born in 95, but in the other side of the world (Brazil) 👍 Over here we only had cartoons directly exported from US at that time...
@caiodecastro7956 Just to be annoyingly pedantic, I was actually born in 94 :) oh, we had a lot of cartoons from the US, I absolutely love US cartoons, I grew up with Disney and Tom & Jerry.
This was the most uncomfortable yet stylistically beautiful rendition of steamed hams I've seen. The faces, music, sound effects, and overall weirdness really made me feel nervous consistently throughout. Makes me think what real 80s soviet cartoons were like.
This one is about on point. You can check "Tyll the Giant" based on Estonian folklore made in Estonian studio that aired only once and scared a lot of kids or "There will come soft rains" based on Bradburry's short story for the taste of style. At least those one are the first that come to mind. Also there's studio Armenfilm but they prefer much more fluid animation with much more surrealism.
I actually got recommended this animation after watching "A Beginner's Guide to Soviet Animated Film" by kubricklynch. It was a very interesting watch and it's surprising how accurate this animation was to some of the styles discussed
The thing about absurd, surreal and very literal animation though is that the needs of these characters are so well realized here. Skinner's view and intimidation of Chalmers, the anxiety of not impressing your boss, the seduction of cheap and easy food, all of that is said here, and without words. Bravo. Unambiguous, unironic bravo.
The formal attire and Chalmers base design really makes this seem like it could have really been made back then. He looks like your standard party leader lol
This is insanely intense and all with no words, just the sounds of something quite possibly existentially uncanny and dramatic, the atmosphere and design of everything is definitely extremely unique for these times.
It's based on the style of Andrei Khrzhanovsky, particularly "The Glass Harmonica" (1968) which was scored by Alfred Schnittke. You can find it on YT. I also recommend Schnittke's Requiem for some truly creepy 20th c. classical music. It's a shame no one to my knowledge has used it in a horror film yet.
Ok, you seriously overdid it with this. One thing is to make a Steamed Hams memes. Doing an entire animation that looks and feels like it was made during the Soviet Union era is another thing entirely. I've never seen someone put so much effort into a meme. Kudos. You get a like from me.
Damn dude, you've perfected it down to the last detail. This is EXACTLY how the Soviet so-called "adult cartoons" looked like. I didn't know about the "Steamed Hams" meme, and for a few minutes I thought this was an actual short animated movie that I could watch in the night TV (that's when they aired these cartoons in 90s and early 00s). And sound design is an pinnacle, a true art.
And then when you think it cannot be any more awesomier than it is, you notice that the faces bear likeness to Simpsobs characters too, despite being made in "Soviet mindscrew" style!
A "Glass Harmonica" version of Steamed Hams is not something I was expecting. Absolutely incredible, the part with the hamburgers instead of the coins was hilarious.
The name is "steamed hams" using English transliteration of steamed hams but conjugated to sound well in Russian, I suppose the creator knows Russian well because there's no mistakes, very nice Edit: I see you were referring to "Стеклянная гармоника", my bad
I am very impressed with this animation. Examining this critically, Chalmers represents the upper administration of the socialist state. He comes to examine what the bureaucracy (Skinner) has prepared. In order to cut costs and effort, they look towards the West for aid. The administration turns an obvious blind eye to this and continues business as usual while the proletariat (the firetruck) is expected to control the fire. I love it.
Ahh. So the west is represented by the burger. Being american fastfood. And the clown represents the western capitalist entertainment/advertisement industry.
Over the past few days I have been on something of a steamed hams binge. Almost every day I would find some new version of it. Some were amazing, others very low effort. None of them could have prepared me for this. This is something I never could have dreamed of. It feels so wrong and yet so right at the same time! I am unfamiliar with the style it’s mimicking (assuming that it is mimicking a style), but this makes me want to learn more. My god this is amazing! Great work and thanks for sharing!
I went down a rabbit-hole watching Soviet-era cartoons and you nailed it. Moody, surrealist, depressing, instilling the viewer with a sense of anxiety and dread? Definitely like a Soviet-era cartoon alright.
As someone who has not grown up in the USSR. I can still say this is a great piece of surrealist horror. Not only are the sound effects incredible but the whole atmosphere is so wierd and creepy.❤
As a historian of steamed hams, having watched all variations of the viedo under the sun, I am proud to say that this is the best I have ever come across. This is incredible
As someone who has not grown up in the USSR. I can still say this is a great piece of surrealist horror. Not only are the sound effects incredible but the whole atmosphere is so wierd and creepy.❤
One of the things I was most impressed by as a classical musician was how you managed to capture the surreal, avant-garde, and unique atmosphere of Alfred Schnittke's music. It's such a key element in making everything all fall into place.
@@temkin9298 i believe it's also called "Steamed Hamonica" in cyrillic or something along those lines in the title card, so even though I don't know what the Glass Harmonica is I figured it was riffing off something for the funny title
I enjoy how all the vocal jokes get scrapped in order to stick to the core concept of the idea. The meme gets completely transformed in order to enrich it. Cut where needed, expanded where wanted. Especially the part with the three eyed skinner introduced a completely new element that works so well this way. It was not needed for the steamed hams part, neither was it needed for the animation part in general. It was not "needed". Its a completely new interpretative element that can only survive due to the different form of expression this format chooses. Its more than a mere mockery of the original meme. Its a wonderful fusion of actual artistic expression and a current cultural phenomenom we call "steamed hams" In conclusio: this brought me great joy
I think the three-eyed Skinner segment was a commentary on the seductive allure of capitalism. That must have gone over the censors' heads. Or perhaps it wasn't overt enough.
I'd say 'will it run Doom', bad apple, steamed hams and loss are all so excellent because of the sheer amount of people who manage to keep it fresh, interesting and exciting, by constantly innovating.
As someone who has not grown up in the USSR. I can still say this is a great piece of surrealist horror. Not only are the sound effects incredible but the whole atmosphere is so wierd and creepy.
Anyone who's seen enough Russian independent animation shorts from the '70s and '80s can tell you that this particular Steamed Hams hits the mark with emulating that style.
@@annc8337 the movie that this version of the meme used as it's artistic inspiration is "Glass Harmonica" by Andre Khrzhanzovsky and probably the best spot to start. There's also "A Beginners Guide to Soviet Cinema" you can search out here on YT.
@@annc8337 Here are some shorts that are similar: ruclips.net/video/G-QlcuTjtqA/видео.html ruclips.net/video/7DUhv7lTAuk/видео.html ruclips.net/video/fYdaHaNRMKg/видео.html ruclips.net/video/qBehF-E2gX8/видео.html ruclips.net/video/DEMXQZRaMfc/видео.html
This is uncannily good. I kept reminding myself that no, you DIDN'T just remix some real Soviet cartoon to make this. Everything is completely accurate: the art style, the animation, the sound... I hope you make more stuff. You're a genius.
@@Laneous14 i never seen this cartoon in my Soviet life, i bet it one of those homemade videos of those artists who never had access to TV. Or Gorby time propaganda when all garbage was allowed to be shown. 99% of Soviet cartoons quite good, on par with Disney for sure.. Most of current Russians born after USSR was disbanded by Soviet elite..
@@Laneous14 Hah, good one. Though, I bet that most of those who appreciated this kind of "weird" and thought provoking TV programs have probably left the country a while ago, just like myself.
i love how the buildings are just simple shapes and all the noises are cold and metallic, it's like some massive fucked up machine trying to imitate a human interaction
"it's like some massive fucked up machine trying to imitate a human interaction" I think you just defined communism. Well, maybe replace the word "interaction" with "society".
@@PiousMoltar Steamed hams is a critique of all hierarchy and the way in which we put such orders above ourselves. This adaptation serves as a critique of the structures of the Soviet union. You see first in the gears which ring the doorbell looking so impractical, and then it develops and as the world becomes more absurd. You start to realize the absurdity of the normalcy to which the characters portray, why is it that in this cold industrial land they wear suits and ties and try to impress others with brunch. At the end of the day no pleasure is derived at all, and Seymour suffers a loss.
It seems OP still reads comments on this so I just want to say: Good job, and thank you for making this. It was my gateway into checking out the original and being so intrigued I needed to see even more USSR animation. Since then, I've continued searching for and falling in love with so many Soviet cartoons, some of which can be filed under "my favorite animations ever" now. And I might have completely missed this breadth of amazing and experimental work if it weren't for this video. Thank you.
For those unfamiliar with Soviet "adult" animation (animated features carrying rather serious tone, akin to "adult oriented music" concept), the author made a brilliant rendition of Andrei Khrzhanovsky works with a lot of homage moments. The title itself is reminiscent of "Glass Harmonica", a Soviet cartoon from 1968 long-banned by the censorship of that era. The overall style, lack of speech, and extensive use of music effects to imitate it is spot on. The eye sequence at 1:06 is one of the examples of the original's surrealistic style. The original cartoon is available on youtube and I definitely recommend watching it to grasp the authentic feel and simply to enjoy the masterpiece.
Wait, really?! I had no idea that the Glass Harmonica was banned! All I knew was that the music was written by the same guy who later wrote a concerto for choir (FOR CHOIR! Who the hell does that?! And he managed to make it FREAKING BEAUTIFUL!!!), Alfred Schnittke.
@@SeadogDriftwood It was indeed officially banned by the Soviet censors, who deemed the cartoon reminiscent of the Soviet society. Even after Khrzhanovsky had to insert a disclaimer that it was the "western" aka bourgeois society that was depicted in his work, the cartoon was still not allowed for screening. Crazy times and crazy government. Schnittke btw was a genius, no less. His works are eternal imho. I'm mostly familiar with his film soundtracks, but his orchestral works are also great.
@@killslay Actually, it's a pretty clever pun. The original cartoon that inspired this one is called "Glass Harmonica" which sounds in Russian as "Steklyannaya Harmonica". You can see the similarities.
This is not even a shitpost. This is literal art. You made it feel and look so authentic to those 90s USSR cartoons. Everything about this animation, from the robotic-like movements to the creepy and disturbing music, feels like a cartoon straight from the Soviet Union era. So much effort was put into this to make it look and feel authentic, and by god, it's glorious. This actually feels like those weird and odd USSR cartoons that I saw on TV as a kid. The resemblance to these animations is uncanny. It is absolutely mind-blowing at how accurate it is. To be honest, if I had never known about the 'Steamed Hams' skit, I would've probably believed that this was an old, banned Soviet Union cartoon. You nailed the vibe, the look, the feels, everything about it. This, right here... this is what blurs the line between a shitpost and an actual art form. There's an insane amount of work thrown in to make it look and feel authentic. The composition is perfect, the casts shadow like a multiplane, the illustrations are weird and odd, and the color correction is authentic. Making a Steamed Hams meme is one thing, but to make an entirely custom animation to make it look like it came straight out of the Soviet Union era is something else entirely. I have never seen such time, effort, and era-authenticity put into a shitpost like this before. Heck, I don't even know if I _can_ count this as a shitpost. That is how good this animation is. I tip my hat to you. This deserves an award.
more to like people try to remember those cartoons. because this is like 1000 times better quality-wise full real animation and the assets are created from scratch instead of pre-existing newspaper cutouts
@@Djsowuwhsih3 How about YOU get lost? You're the one coming in here shitting on me and my opinion. People like you show no respect for anyone. If you can't show respect to people, don't even think about replying. Treat others the way you want to be treated! If you don't show respect to someone, then you won't get any respect in return. This shit should have been taught to you in elementary school. Re-educate yourself on this.
It's because it's so much NEW information. When you experience something very different for the first time the experience isn't skipped over a bit in your mind like you do other things
"Стимлянная Хамоника" (Stimlyannaya Hamonika) is a surrealist Soviet animation from 1968 that tells a story about a man named Skinner who hosts his boss for dinner. The plot of the animation follows Skinner's attempts to hide the fact that he burnt the roast he was preparing for his boss. The animation features a variety of surreal elements, such as a clown juggling hamburgers as a way to represent fast food joints. Skinner is portrayed as a habitual liar, and as the story progresses, his lies become more and more elaborate. The animation has several political undertones, which were common in Cold War-era art. The character of Skinner represents the American citizen who is willing to do anything to please his superiors, even if it means lying and deceiving. The animation also criticizes American society and ways of life, which places a high value on appearances and conformity, and punishes those who do not conform. In the end, Skinner's lies catch up with him, and his house burns down as a result of his deception. The animation suggests that lying and deceit will ultimately lead to destruction and chaos. Overall, "Stimlyannaya Hamonika" is a thought-provoking piece of Soviet animation that uses surrealism to criticize the political and social norms of the time. The animation's themes of conformity and the dangers of deception still resonate today, making it a timeless work of art.
A masterpiece! Hilarious (when you know the origin) and spooky at the same time. Surprisingly looks authentic even to me, an 1980s USSR kid, and I watched a lot of cartoons like that in my childhood. I think you have managed to go beyond parody and captured the true essence and soul of that style. Fantastic job. Sound design is great too - speaking as a sound designer.
-Ты же сказал, что будет мясной хлеб? -Ох, хахах, нет, я говорил мяско в хлеб. Я так называю котлеты с булкой. -Ага. Впервые слышу такое. Где это так говорят? -Так у меня папа из Вологодской области. -Правда? У меня жена Череповчанка, и что-то не припомню, чтобы она или её радственники так говорили... -Нет-нет, папа жил на Востоке области, дальше. -Понятно... Знаешь, они очень похожи на те котлеты в булочек, которые продают по 20 копеек в столовой возле озера. -Хах, нет, это старые добрые булки по рецепту моей семьи Кожавиных, бабушка по папиной ветке рассказала как делать. -Ясно. -Извините. Мне надо отлучиться на секунду, сейчас закрою форточку и вернусь.... Оооххх, ну что же, мы немного засиделись. -Да соглашусь, ОХ ТЫ ЧТО ЗА ЧЕРТОВЩИНА ТАМ ПРОИСХОДИТ? -Первомай. -Первомай? В середине октября, в в вечернее время, торжественный парад происходит прямо у вас на кухне?! -Да. -Могу ли посмотреть? -... Прошу прощения, нет.
This has got to be one of the best steamed memes video of all time. Along with your German impressionist film one, the Jewish Megillah one, the feel-good Inc one, and the Joe Swanson one.
this is incredible and you are incredibly talented! this along with the German expressionist steamed hams are excellent displays of knowledge of film, art history and aesthetics! I would love to see more work from you!
The fact that we've moved to a point where people don't even use any of the original material is just such a wonderful thing. The animation on this was absolutely amazing!
И заметьте какая деталь: человек этот готов игнорировать и отрицать пожар, поглощающий его дом, ради одобрения со стороны социума. Поистине глубокое произведение.
Absolutely adore this, particularly with Chalmer's head getting closer w the same cadence "at this time of year, in this part of the country, localized entirely in your kitchen?"
i feel like this video has unlocked a primal childhood memory that i don’t even have. the inorganic sounds when skinner and chalmers move and speak, the way the entire outside world feels unpopulated and liminal in a way the backrooms can only hope to replicate - it’s all reached down into the pit of my soul and shaken me to my core. i have a new fear and it’s khrzhanovsky’s ‘Steamed Hams’
The original cartoon is kind of both scary and touching at the same time I recommend checking his other works, also check out Vladimir Tarasov cartoons if you're into the more psychedelic stuff
my mother was born in 1972 and grew up during the soviet union with a lot of animations like this one. when i was born she would often make us watch cartoons from the time of the soviet union and somehow this animation is really accurate in a way... idk how its so accurate... its nostalgic somehow? idk? good job to the person who made it
this was inspired by a few other old USSR animations, some shots even being referenced looks like, but nonetheless an interesting rendition. I don’t know the source or reference though but I saw a yt video called “A beginners guide to Soviet animated cinema” that showed one of these animations, maybe you’ll recognize others in that video.
@@FBGRUclipsI went looking for it and it seems to have vanished, can't find any mention of this video on the wiki page anymore. It was on just the regular wikipedia.
It was removed on the 3rd of June for some reason, here is the latest version that has the feature: en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Glass_Harmonica_(film)&oldid=1228851426
The metallic sounds as the characters move and creaky door sounds as they talk makes them feel very robotic and inhuman. This is such a surreal video and I love it.
Довольно забавно, кстати, поймал себя на мысли, что у СССР было два таких периода: 60е-ранние 70е и перестройка. Так что, можно сказать, что это, одновременно, могло быть и в том, и в том десятилетии
As a Russian, I can definitely say that steamed hams does not translate as "Стимлянная хамоника". But this phrase makes me feel a very strange feeling of nostalgia, as if I was alone at home at the age of 6, turned on the TV and a strange cartoon of unknown origin was shown on a single channel, and I carelessly lie on the sofa, looking at the wall carpet and listening to these creepy sounds, as if the mechanism is clumsily trying to repeat the real sound. Definitely, the correct translation does not cause me such terrible, but insanely familiar sensations. the author is a genius
This is an extremely high effort and quality Steamed Hams meme. Like, on par with the best I've ever seen. It perfectly captures the creepiness of some old Soviet cartoons. Honestly, if I didn't know about the meme already, I might have thought this was actually aired on Soviet television. It's really convincing. I hope this blows up
This is hauntingly beautiful for whatever reason. The sound scape, the weird stares, that feeling that you’re watching something forbidden adds to the experience
I didn't expect this to go all the way. It makes sense that this creator is an actual filmmaker, because this is of professional quality. There are no gaps in the illusion. We might well be looking at the best Steamed Hams interpretation yet.
1:03 I like how it depicts Capitalism as a clown that compares fast, easy meals to the cheap marketing and exploitation democratic corporations use. It’s like an easy way out of dinner, but it’s not for the long-term. This makes the animation banned, because it depicts capitalism as the “Easy way out” and not just plain “bad”. This truly is a work of art. Quality work, man. Let’s hope you make a living on the Tubez :3
Amazing video. Had to dislike because of your retarded stance on AI. Oh well.
lmao cope
Isn't the one who yells cope, the coper? @@GasmaskAvenger
PIN OF SHAME
PIN of Based
Yap alert ‼️
"It's a regional dialect"
"What region?"
"The caucuses"
"Well I'm from Ossetia and I've never heard anyone say that"
"No it's a Chechen expression"
Ah- AURORA BOREALIS!? AT THIS TIME OF YEAR, IN THIS PART OF GEORGIA, LOCALIZED ENTIRELY WITHIN TBILISI!?
@@Anatoli_PuntoDa.
It's actually a Cossak term, of course Chalmers hasn't heard it
@@britisheasmapping-n2v May I see it, Comrade?
@@gnnascarfan2410Nyet.
This is the kind of thing you see on TV once as a kid and then it gets stuck in your head and you don’t know if it was real or a dream.
Like free speech in soviet countries. Today many ruZZians thinks they had it, but it was dream. Just like free speech in today ruZZia.
Like most of the interstitial cartoons on Sesame Street. Like the pinball "1234, 5, 6789, 10 11 12."
And you saw it when you should have been asleep at 2 in the morning on a school day while it's raining on PBS in some rerun of a Eastern European art Showcase from the late 70s
“The Clock Man” on Nickelodeon.
I had one of those for yeeeears until the Internet told me it was Kafka's "Metamorphosis of Mr Samsa", animated in moving sand, by Caroline Leaf. At least I think so, the imagery is vaguely as I remember, and the one line I remember was "I don't wanna be a cockroach!". Except in Leaf's film, there's no dialogue. So maybe that's wrong.
Early '80s animated film where someone doesn't wanna be a cockroach and I think there's a fire or they die in a kitchen fire or something? Which doesn't happen in Metamorphosis. Any better-fitting films, do, PLEASE, do tell me! Won't be post-1985 and probably not even post-1982.
i love how skinner just opens his mouth and creaks like a rusty hinge
It reminded me of one of the Salad Fingers episodes, the one where a child ends up in an oven by "an accident".
That's because of capitalism
@aelix56 you missed the point entirely.
@@Mister_Belvidere You can't buy love
You also can’t buy a new sense of humour, but you still need to find one.
the episode was so banned to the point where the only voice actors they could afford were chairs, who could only screech when dragged on the floor
This is has the vibe of an obscure cartoon that would traumatize a young child who will start one of the biggest lost media searches to confirm that this was not a dream.
Sounds like me alright
Especially since there were MANY cartoons like that
I love comments like this.
It has the same vibe as The Clockman short.
Like candle cove
@@scapegoat1313 yeah
Steamed Hams has transcended being a meme and has become an artistic movement.
it unironically is. it's conquering all kinds of art forms.
Students 20 years from now: "Steamed-hamism has had a significant impact on 2020's pop culture, and trends in the online world, in this essay I will..."
It’s something so recognisable that people can do some whack stuff with it and it can still be understood, and that’s great
@@shitpostgrotto2982 It's like the visual equivalent of a jazz standard: everyone knows the visual and story beats of Steamed Hams just the sane as every jazz musician knows the chords and basic melody of Giant Steps or In The Mood, so it's a familiar framework for people to build their own artistic adventures off of.
I agree 8000%
I can’t believe we’re at this point with steamed hams parodies now. Legitimately incredible
a high point for sure
Steamed hams isn't some Discord meme or a trollface, it has become something greater
Parody ? It’s a tribute
I think the hitler one was more amazing honestly. And was pleased to see it wasn't hammered with backlash.
We've gone full steamed.
It’s actually fucking mental seeing just how elaborate some of these alternate Steamed Ham skits have become.
Someone needs to make a film fest around it.
@@Jupiter-T dawgy I would fly cross-country to go to Gathering of the Steamed Hams a/k/a SHAMfest
I too, would make great haste to attend this unforgettable luncheon of hams
Steamed Hams Inc. is my favourite
@NOVA_299 this is the best one by far! Give this man the $10000
For those who don’t know, the title «Stimlyannaya Khamonika» is a parody of the 1968 surrealist stop-motion film Glass Harmonica or «Steklyannaya Garmonika», which was the first animated film to be banned by state film censors in the USSR. This whole video is essentially a tribute to that era of Soyuzmultfilm animation.
It wasn't even an era, most 1960's cartoons were pretty down to earth
It's just the unique creation of Andrey Khrjanovsky, his style is very distinctive
This is something the simpsons would do if it still was a smart show
Why was it banned?
That makes this version even more amazing.
@xxBrokenDreams666xx I had to watch the thing to come to this conclusion, but I'm not an expert, so take my interpretation with a grain of salt.
The film depicts a tension between the (what appears to be) the police and a musician who has developed a beautiful instrument that inspires the highest ideals in humanity. The musician is taken away, the instrument smashed, and the citizens who were inspired by the art are persecuted.
It seems to be a pretty straightforward criticism of soviet restrictions on artistic expression and after watching it, I'm not surprised that it was censored.
This is an actually wonderful piece of animation. I commend your determination to your overly elaborate and artful shitposts.
@@sovietunion6530 you and Germany literally were enemies 😂😂😂😂
In Russia shit posts you!
The only two Russian comedians I know are Yakov. And Eugene Mirman.
As someone who grew up in 1980s USSR, this is very authentic to some weird cartoons that showed up during that time. The fact that they don't talk and carpet on the wall 🤌
What do you mean they don't talk?
@@mikehodder1137 They produce musical instrument sounds instead of the usual human speech sounds.
@@mendelovitch The weird marionette-style clicking they made as they walk around is what made my skin crawl.
@@HylianFox3 Funny thing is that you could say it is a metaphor for being a puppet subject of the communist totalitarian regime as well as the consumerist puppet of the corpocracy of the west. Maybe even deeper than that it was a metaphor for the fact of us being controlled by pure causation. We feel free when we like our strings and feel coerced when we hate them.
ruclips.net/video/lV4ZnoYhwgg/видео.html
As someone who did not grow up in 1980s USSR, im confused and frightened what in the world is this video
Khalmerzka: "You call pyetties burgers despite fact they are in fact fermented fish."
Skininsky: "You dare question food bearing seal of approval from Komrade Stalin?!"
“Why is there smoke coming oven Seymour?”
*metal scraping noise*
“I see.”
Why is smoke coming oven, Semourski?*
In Soviet Russia, oven comes out of your smoke 😂
Is there a lore reason why there is smoke in the oven? Is the oven a smoker??
Why IS there smoke coming oven?
@@redstoneBLOCK42069 is the smoke stupid?
This is like something I would have seen as a kid in the 90’s on a public access channel at some ungodly, sleepless hour that I would years later recall and wonder if I imagined the whole thing. It’s perfect.
Yes! PBS!
You'd make a post about it on r/lostmedia and there would be a crazed attempt to find it by the internet. It would even appear on Whang's channel.
I 100% have a memory of being awake at like 2am as a kid and seeing something creepy like this on channel 5 (it a uk TV channel) and being freaked out.
@@sovietunion6530 cringe
could have been on MTV's oddities back in the early 90's...
As someone who grew up in the former USSR I can surely feel the uncanny semblance to late USSR animation. It's so well-done that one might mistake it for a genuine Soviet animation. Amazing job!
Так это же пастиш на советский мультфильм 1968 года "Стеклянная гармоника".
'Worker and Parasite'
This is some straight up David Firth shit. This is utterly horrific, I can't even fathom waking up in the morning and watching this.
@@friendofp.24 If the dissolution of the Soviet Union didn’t traumatize you as a kid then this shit most definitely will
AKNOU PFP!!!
Jesus, this is so accurate. I remember as a kid that I saw this style of animation and never understood it's insanity with lack of sound effect. Just pure devilish music.
Some of the Soviet cartoons look so creepy because of the lack of budget. The country was recovering from WW2 for decades
D E L I G H T F U L L Y D E V I L I S H
For anyone else that was wondering, the animation takes homage from Andrei Khrzhanovsky's 1968 animation "Glass Harmonica", notoriously the first animation that was banned in the USSR.
Beautiful work you did here as well!
Is it still banned in modern Russia?
no
@@aetheralmeowstic2392 _What_ modern Russia?
@@TheGreenReaperSo it is banned in Ukraine?
I was getting very strong Priit Pärn vibes, but he's the only artist of this style I'm really familiar with; he's probably part of a larger (extremely depressing, surreal, and unsettling) movement I'm not familiar with. Estonia borders Russia so it makes sense there'd be some influence.
I like this a lot! The german expressionist one gets points for being live action, but this one is on another level of creativity. I feel like the contrast here is way more evident: it’s in a very authentic old style, but the characters are obviously Chalmers and Skinner, plus an appearance of Krusty. The complete lack of dialogue really helps as well. Also, I love how the fire truck was not only included, but made just as jarring as it is in the original. I don’t know why it’s like that, but this replicates it perfectly.
The original? You mean the Simpsons? I never knew there was a fire truck at the end of Steamed Hams
It looked like the firefighters were the Beatles. The fire engine legs are very reminiscent of monty python
@Google user interesting, thanks
Both are so great! I love how this meme gets better and better every year!
стимонные хамы
So many style-parodies fall short of feeling authentic to the original. But not this one. If I wasn't familiar with Steamed Hams, I would have thought this was really from 1968 USSR! Amazing work! I don't know how you captured the textures so well.
Made by the same studio who brought us Worker and Parasite. :)
You need to see the german expressionism one. Pure shitpost art.
I love that nod to Worker and Parasite at 2:12. Incredible work.
what is that?
@@Sopmod-py1eea Soviet style spoof of Itchy and Scratchy
@@Sopmod-py1eeIt's hard to make out but to Skinner's right...in the Simpsons episode where Gabbo was trouncing Krusty in the ratings, Krusty lost the rights to Itchy and Scratchy. So they had to air something from a former Soviet state.
Endut! Hoch hech!
You're an odd fellow but you steam a good ham
So, I've studied animation history, used to run an animation blog. I am absolutely floored at how well you captured this particular style of Soviet animation. My gob, it has been smacked. My hams, WELL steamed. I don't even know you, but I am so proud of you.
It's basically just one director's style, Andrey Khrzhanovsky
Hey man, how can I study animation history online? I have studied the western and eastern art history for about a year and due to that I am very good at making compositions and I would want to know how I can do the same with animations
So you can say...
He steamed a good ham
Read the description. It is Soviet animation from 1968.
@@rhetoric5173 You are jocking right?
I could literally hear it:
2:32 At this time of year?
2:34 In this part of the country?
2:35 Localized entirely within your kitchen?
This was powerful
Yeah.
@@cuteshark7261 may i see it?
@@electricheisenberg5723 no
*Our kitchen
fucking what?
i love how everything about this video is just one big reference to The Glass Harmonica, a short film made in 1968 by Andrei Khrzanovsky
I did not expect to see the parody on Стеклянная Гармоника based on the steamed hams meme.
The best possible content.
Can you write what it's called in English. This meme has made me interested in what the original material is
@@atul1991ful Glass Harmonica
Was filmed in 1968.
I don't know if it's available in English, though.
@@ОлегЕршов-м3с thanks for the reply, i'll try looking for it
I had never heard of Glass Harmonica before, but I've just watched it and I love it. It's so strangely beautiful yet terrifying, which seems to have been the point as far as I can tell. (I grew up in England in the 00's/10's so I can only view it in a historical context, but I'm also an artist and a socialist, and it's just... Fascinating.)
And from having watched it, this meme really does seem to have captured the combined vibe of that and the Simpsons clip.
@@Sakkeru96 The movie is a critic to socialism thou, taht's why the ban and the exile to the director
outside of the meme, this is insanely incredible to look at. Everything about it is just perfection. Please, for the sake of art itself, keep making more.
What about the music/ sound design...
The sound is a large part of why you like this video! Don't believe me? Try watching it with the sound off
People don't show sound design enough respect and often take it for granted.
Growing up in Russia, I watched a ton of those cartoons without realizing how weird they are. You just accept stuff as a kid and move on. Now I'm 28, and this masterpiece has reached something that was hidden very very deep in my subconscious. It's so accurate, familiar and nostalgic, but at the same time it's new. I needed that. Thank you for taking me back to a weird part of my childhood.
i would be creeped out if i found out i was watching this as a kid
@@eskimokid666 as a Russian I watched a lot of these as a kid and now I'm creeped out as an adult, so your reaction would be 100% on point.
@@eskimokid666 I mean, I was probably creeped out, but I wasn't able to fully comprehend why, I thought it was just something I didn't get.
cheers from another one born in 95, but in the other side of the world (Brazil) 👍
Over here we only had cartoons directly exported from US at that time...
@caiodecastro7956 Just to be annoyingly pedantic, I was actually born in 94 :) oh, we had a lot of cartoons from the US, I absolutely love US cartoons, I grew up with Disney and Tom & Jerry.
I feel like they'd ban it because they'd interpret 1:00 and onward to speak about the life in, and possibly escaping to the west
This was the most uncomfortable yet stylistically beautiful rendition of steamed hams I've seen. The faces, music, sound effects, and overall weirdness really made me feel nervous consistently throughout. Makes me think what real 80s soviet cartoons were like.
This one is about on point. You can check "Tyll the Giant" based on Estonian folklore made in Estonian studio that aired only once and scared a lot of kids or "There will come soft rains" based on Bradburry's short story for the taste of style. At least those one are the first that come to mind.
Also there's studio Armenfilm but they prefer much more fluid animation with much more surrealism.
Check out Soviet version of Alice sometime
The power to investigate lies within your reach…
Not from USSR, but still '80s Eastern Bloc: Treasure Planet (1982) from Bulgaria is a trip and a half. I love it to bits.
I actually got recommended this animation after watching "A Beginner's Guide to Soviet Animated Film" by kubricklynch. It was a very interesting watch and it's surprising how accurate this animation was to some of the styles discussed
The thing about absurd, surreal and very literal animation though is that the needs of these characters are so well realized here. Skinner's view and intimidation of Chalmers, the anxiety of not impressing your boss, the seduction of cheap and easy food, all of that is said here, and without words. Bravo. Unambiguous, unironic bravo.
Chalmers: Silently asks about the burning oven
Skinner: "AÄÆ"
Chalmers: *Understandable, have a nice day*
Typical human interaction
i like to think he was fending chalmers off with an intimidating screech
Makes me think Chalmers is scared shitless of Skinner
It looked like Super Nintendo Chalmers simply silently went "nope" and got the heck out of there.
The formal attire and Chalmers base design really makes this seem like it could have really been made back then. He looks like your standard party leader lol
This is insanely intense and all with no words, just the sounds of something quite possibly existentially uncanny and dramatic, the atmosphere and design of everything is definitely extremely unique for these times.
It's based on the style of Andrei Khrzhanovsky, particularly "The Glass Harmonica" (1968) which was scored by Alfred Schnittke. You can find it on YT. I also recommend Schnittke's Requiem for some truly creepy 20th c. classical music. It's a shame no one to my knowledge has used it in a horror film yet.
Ok, you seriously overdid it with this. One thing is to make a Steamed Hams memes. Doing an entire animation that looks and feels like it was made during the Soviet Union era is another thing entirely. I've never seen someone put so much effort into a meme.
Kudos. You get a like from me.
W O W, a l i k e?! YifuckingE
This is based on Glass Harmonica- 1968.
wowzers
A WHOLE FUCKING LIKE?! That's so heckin' generous! I have a bullet for you in exchange, just give me your location!
the 2000's called, they want their buzzword back
@@antonvlasov2092 hey nerd, 2001 called😆😆
They said something happened to two towers
Damn dude, you've perfected it down to the last detail. This is EXACTLY how the Soviet so-called "adult cartoons" looked like. I didn't know about the "Steamed Hams" meme, and for a few minutes I thought this was an actual short animated movie that I could watch in the night TV (that's when they aired these cartoons in 90s and early 00s). And sound design is an pinnacle, a true art.
And then when you think it cannot be any more awesomier than it is, you notice that the faces bear likeness to Simpsobs characters too, despite being made in "Soviet mindscrew" style!
someone put so much effort into this and I truly appreciate it
A "Glass Harmonica" version of Steamed Hams is not something I was expecting. Absolutely incredible, the part with the hamburgers instead of the coins was hilarious.
The name is "steamed hams" using English transliteration of steamed hams but conjugated to sound well in Russian, I suppose the creator knows Russian well because there's no mistakes, very nice
Edit: I see you were referring to "Стеклянная гармоника", my bad
It's crazy how they were able to convey the fear and horror and temptation in the faces of the characters
(cartoon parody based on Glass Harmonica 1968)
I am very impressed with this animation. Examining this critically, Chalmers represents the upper administration of the socialist state. He comes to examine what the bureaucracy (Skinner) has prepared. In order to cut costs and effort, they look towards the West for aid. The administration turns an obvious blind eye to this and continues business as usual while the proletariat (the firetruck) is expected to control the fire.
I love it.
Ahh. So the west is represented by the burger. Being american fastfood. And the clown represents the western capitalist entertainment/advertisement industry.
Wow I like your interpretation
Genuinely impressive take
that's... quite a political take for this animation. i like it.
I disagree, I think it's the other way around!
Over the past few days I have been on something of a steamed hams binge. Almost every day I would find some new version of it. Some were amazing, others very low effort. None of them could have prepared me for this. This is something I never could have dreamed of. It feels so wrong and yet so right at the same time! I am unfamiliar with the style it’s mimicking (assuming that it is mimicking a style), but this makes me want to learn more. My god this is amazing! Great work and thanks for sharing!
I went down a rabbit-hole watching Soviet-era cartoons and you nailed it. Moody, surrealist, depressing, instilling the viewer with a sense of anxiety and dread? Definitely like a Soviet-era cartoon alright.
As someone who has not grown up in the USSR. I can still say this is a great piece of surrealist horror. Not only are the sound effects incredible but the whole atmosphere is so wierd and creepy.❤
Feels just like communism
Yeah, sure, they're all like this because Soviet Russia was inhabited by demons lol
Hush, westerner
@@ghoulbuster1 Sheesh 😂 I love how cartoonishly dreadful you all think the USSR was. Also, please define Communism for me
That is ridiculous. Only some soviet animation is surreal and depressing, most of it is not like that at all.
This is some creepy, surreal, disturbing nightmare fuel. I love it.
So... like a typical Soviet cartoon?
@@WalterWhiteFromTheBlock it’s a simpsons parody
No, the AI generated one is unsettling as ALL HELL.
@@WalterWhiteFromTheBlock Not all soviet cartoons.
Why did I decide you watch this at 5am 😭😭😭
This isn't a meme. This is... actual art.
Bruh now the zoophile talking
Enartete Kunst, yes
@@luciferpunk2606od, Arno Brecker sucks ass. Boring shite for toolbags like you. Follow your leader. You know how he ended up.
@@luciferpunk2606 Can you do better
It is a meme whether or not you know what a meme is :(
The wall-carpet is a nice touch.
As a historian of steamed hams, having watched all variations of the viedo under the sun, I am proud to say that this is the best I have ever come across. This is incredible
I love how enough time has now passed since this meme first came about that you can be considered a "historian" of steamed hams 😂
My favorite is probably Steamed Hams Inc. but this is definitely way up there
I'm a steamed hamoligist, and although this one does not provoke the most laughter, it is by far the most artistic
As someone who has not grown up in the USSR. I can still say this is a great piece of surrealist horror. Not only are the sound effects incredible but the whole atmosphere is so wierd and creepy.❤
The Nazi Germany one is quite lovely.
Every steamed hams video this channel makes is absurdly top-tier.
Bruh it's insane how accurate this is, this legit feels like some of the weird soviet cartoons I saw on TV as a kid
(cartoon parody based on Glass Harmonica 1968)
Vova Bars?
@@WhiteStripesStripiestFan yes
How old are u?
I'm so glad we have your perspective, it feels so alien to typical depictions... I'm undeniably American so it's cool to learn from
The cartoonist was sent to the gulag for counter-revolutionary depiction of steamed hams.
One of the things I was most impressed by as a classical musician was how you managed to capture the surreal, avant-garde, and unique atmosphere of Alfred Schnittke's music. It's such a key element in making everything all fall into place.
He really did didn't he? 😊 it sounds just like Schnittke, with those semi-haphazard notes. How it's almost "scary".
dude finally someone who knows Schnittke!! His works are so under-appreciated imo
@@senyorjunyor7350his tuba mirium is the best tuba mirium
I would've never expected to see The Glass Harmonica turned into a Simpsons meme, but here we are.
Burger multiplication gave it away ;D
@@temkin9298 i believe it's also called "Steamed Hamonica" in cyrillic or something along those lines in the title card, so even though I don't know what the Glass Harmonica is I figured it was riffing off something for the funny title
With music by Shnittke included
I enjoy how all the vocal jokes get scrapped in order to stick to the core concept of the idea. The meme gets completely transformed in order to enrich it. Cut where needed, expanded where wanted. Especially the part with the three eyed skinner introduced a completely new element that works so well this way.
It was not needed for the steamed hams part, neither was it needed for the animation part in general. It was not "needed". Its a completely new interpretative element that can only survive due to the different form of expression this format chooses.
Its more than a mere mockery of the original meme. Its a wonderful fusion of actual artistic expression and a current cultural phenomenom we call "steamed hams"
In conclusio: this brought me great joy
I’m very glad it brought you joy.
I think the three-eyed Skinner segment was a commentary on the seductive allure of capitalism. That must have gone over the censors' heads. Or perhaps it wasn't overt enough.
This is why humanism is silly
@@UnbannedAgain
Yes, and you call this phenomenon “steamed hams” despite the fact it is obviously grilled
0:54 Chalmers was probably more upset at Skinner being a kulak and holding all that meat from the common collective.
The extent to which this meme has developed over time is fucking incredible.
There is no better meme than Steamed Hams.
Have you heard of Bad Apple
@@SynoPTLsteamed hams is still better
I'd say 'will it run Doom', bad apple, steamed hams and loss are all so excellent because of the sheer amount of people who manage to keep it fresh, interesting and exciting, by constantly innovating.
big guy for you is always king
It’s literally an unforgettable luncheon
i love how you can pinpoint chalmers’ aurora borealis rant without him ever saying anything
You can actually pinpoint the second Skinner's crazy explanations are torn in half!
This is both artistic and terrifying beyond belief.
Yet I couldn't look away.
this is the based off the 1968 cartoon "the glass harmonica" and that film is essentially 1 big acid trip
@@johnmonroe8557 this animation reminds me of the Protect and Survive films from the UK in teh 1970’s.
As someone who has not grown up in the USSR. I can still say this is a great piece of surrealist horror. Not only are the sound effects incredible but the whole atmosphere is so wierd and creepy.
I've already seen some USSR's 20 century cartoons and this replicates so damn well the style. Good job man
Anyone who's seen enough Russian independent animation shorts from the '70s and '80s can tell you that this particular Steamed Hams hits the mark with emulating that style.
I'd like to look into it, but don't know where to start, can you please recommend some animation films/shorts in this sort of style?
@@annc8337 the movie that this version of the meme used as it's artistic inspiration is "Glass Harmonica" by Andre Khrzhanzovsky and probably the best spot to start. There's also "A Beginners Guide to Soviet Cinema" you can search out here on YT.
@@annc8337 Here are some shorts that are similar: ruclips.net/video/G-QlcuTjtqA/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/7DUhv7lTAuk/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/fYdaHaNRMKg/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/qBehF-E2gX8/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/DEMXQZRaMfc/видео.html
(cartoon parody based on Glass Harmonica 1968)
Oh yes indeed. It's absolutely on the mark.
This is uncannily good. I kept reminding myself that no, you DIDN'T just remix some real Soviet cartoon to make this. Everything is completely accurate: the art style, the animation, the sound... I hope you make more stuff. You're a genius.
Some people are just a cut above the rest of us lol
The inclusion of the firetruck solidifies it's place in steamed history.
The firemen look like Carl, Kirk, Ned, and Moe.
It's been a while since I saw something quite so unnerving and, frankly, terrifying. Bravo sir, bravo.
This is a masterpiece. I grew up on these cartoons, and let me say: you got both the visual style and the directing spot on.
@@sovietunion6530 oh shut up you. Your spotting OUR watching time
This is garbage and you guys trying to sell it us as it is masterpiece. Conartists trick, same ol shame you all.
You all growing up with these cartoons explains a lot about current Russians...
@@Laneous14 i never seen this cartoon in my Soviet life, i bet it one of those homemade videos of those artists who never had access to TV. Or Gorby time propaganda when all garbage was allowed to be shown. 99% of Soviet cartoons quite good, on par with Disney for sure.. Most of current Russians born after USSR was disbanded by Soviet elite..
@@Laneous14
Hah, good one. Though, I bet that most of those who appreciated this kind of "weird" and thought provoking TV programs have probably left the country a while ago, just like myself.
i love how the buildings are just simple shapes and all the noises are cold and metallic, it's like some massive fucked up machine trying to imitate a human interaction
"it's like some massive fucked up machine trying to imitate a human interaction"
I think you just defined communism. Well, maybe replace the word "interaction" with "society".
@@PiousMoltar Steamed hams is a critique of all hierarchy and the way in which we put such orders above ourselves. This adaptation serves as a critique of the structures of the Soviet union. You see first in the gears which ring the doorbell looking so impractical, and then it develops and as the world becomes more absurd. You start to realize the absurdity of the normalcy to which the characters portray, why is it that in this cold industrial land they wear suits and ties and try to impress others with brunch. At the end of the day no pleasure is derived at all, and Seymour suffers a loss.
"welcome to the USSR comrade"
"all the noises are cold and metallic"
seymour's voice is literally a chair sliding on a tiled floor lol
As this is indeed a parody of both steamed hams and glass harmonica, the noises are indeed cold and metallic mostly cause of the glass harmonica bit.
Krusty: "....What the hell was that!?"
Endut! Hoch Hech!
Der Deutsches :)
I came here looking for this exact comment. I was not disappointed.
damn you beat me to this punch line
Lol i was about this say that.
It seems OP still reads comments on this so I just want to say:
Good job, and thank you for making this. It was my gateway into checking out the original and being so intrigued I needed to see even more USSR animation.
Since then, I've continued searching for and falling in love with so many Soviet cartoons, some of which can be filed under "my favorite animations ever" now. And I might have completely missed this breadth of amazing and experimental work if it weren't for this video. Thank you.
You’re welcome. My work here is done!
For those unfamiliar with Soviet "adult" animation (animated features carrying rather serious tone, akin to "adult oriented music" concept), the author made a brilliant rendition of Andrei Khrzhanovsky works with a lot of homage moments.
The title itself is reminiscent of "Glass Harmonica", a Soviet cartoon from 1968 long-banned by the censorship of that era. The overall style, lack of speech, and extensive use of music effects to imitate it is spot on. The eye sequence at 1:06 is one of the examples of the original's surrealistic style.
The original cartoon is available on youtube and I definitely recommend watching it to grasp the authentic feel and simply to enjoy the masterpiece.
Wait, really?! I had no idea that the Glass Harmonica was banned! All I knew was that the music was written by the same guy who later wrote a concerto for choir (FOR CHOIR! Who the hell does that?! And he managed to make it FREAKING BEAUTIFUL!!!), Alfred Schnittke.
@@SeadogDriftwood It was indeed officially banned by the Soviet censors, who deemed the cartoon reminiscent of the Soviet society. Even after Khrzhanovsky had to insert a disclaimer that it was the "western" aka bourgeois society that was depicted in his work, the cartoon was still not allowed for screening. Crazy times and crazy government.
Schnittke btw was a genius, no less. His works are eternal imho. I'm mostly familiar with his film soundtracks, but his orchestral works are also great.
@@TheKiller1922 Are you familiar with the concerto for choir?
I thought that said "Hamonica" at the start and wondered if it was a pun or actually the Russian for hamburger
@@killslay Actually, it's a pretty clever pun. The original cartoon that inspired this one is called "Glass Harmonica" which sounds in Russian as "Steklyannaya Harmonica". You can see the similarities.
This is not even a shitpost. This is literal art. You made it feel and look so authentic to those 90s USSR cartoons. Everything about this animation, from the robotic-like movements to the creepy and disturbing music, feels like a cartoon straight from the Soviet Union era. So much effort was put into this to make it look and feel authentic, and by god, it's glorious. This actually feels like those weird and odd USSR cartoons that I saw on TV as a kid. The resemblance to these animations is uncanny. It is absolutely mind-blowing at how accurate it is. To be honest, if I had never known about the 'Steamed Hams' skit, I would've probably believed that this was an old, banned Soviet Union cartoon. You nailed the vibe, the look, the feels, everything about it. This, right here... this is what blurs the line between a shitpost and an actual art form. There's an insane amount of work thrown in to make it look and feel authentic. The composition is perfect, the casts shadow like a multiplane, the illustrations are weird and odd, and the color correction is authentic. Making a Steamed Hams meme is one thing, but to make an entirely custom animation to make it look like it came straight out of the Soviet Union era is something else entirely. I have never seen such time, effort, and era-authenticity put into a shitpost like this before. Heck, I don't even know if I _can_ count this as a shitpost. That is how good this animation is.
I tip my hat to you. This deserves an award.
more to like people try to remember those cartoons.
because this is like 1000 times better quality-wise
full real animation
and the assets are created from scratch instead of pre-existing newspaper cutouts
@FB3Network Get lost kid.
@@Djsowuwhsih3 How about YOU get lost? You're the one coming in here shitting on me and my opinion. People like you show no respect for anyone. If you can't show respect to people, don't even think about replying.
Treat others the way you want to be treated! If you don't show respect to someone, then you won't get any respect in return. This shit should have been taught to you in elementary school. Re-educate yourself on this.
@@chonchjohnchmfw 90s ussr cartoons
@@chonchjohnch This person is likely lying. I'm getting that vibe from the majority of the people who "grew up watching stuff like this"
Fun fact: it lasts only three minutes but feels like it lasts for ages...
only the first time though
Jesus so true
feels like a neverending nightmare
Like most things in Soviet Russia...
It's because it's so much NEW information. When you experience something very different for the first time the experience isn't skipped over a bit in your mind like you do other things
Genuinely a beautiful take on one of the greatest comedy scenes of all time. Bravo.😊
"Стимлянная Хамоника" (Stimlyannaya Hamonika) is a surrealist Soviet animation from 1968 that tells a story about a man named Skinner who hosts his boss for dinner. The plot of the animation follows Skinner's attempts to hide the fact that he burnt the roast he was preparing for his boss.
The animation features a variety of surreal elements, such as a clown juggling hamburgers as a way to represent fast food joints. Skinner is portrayed as a habitual liar, and as the story progresses, his lies become more and more elaborate.
The animation has several political undertones, which were common in Cold War-era art.
The character of Skinner represents the American citizen who is willing to do anything to please his superiors, even if it means lying and deceiving. The animation also criticizes American society and ways of life, which places a high value on appearances and conformity, and punishes those who do not conform.
In the end, Skinner's lies catch up with him, and his house burns down as a result of his deception. The animation suggests that lying and deceit will ultimately lead to destruction and chaos.
Overall, "Stimlyannaya Hamonika" is a thought-provoking piece of Soviet animation that uses surrealism to criticize the political and social norms of the time. The animation's themes of conformity and the dangers of deception still resonate today, making it a timeless work of art.
@@INDIE505 He is joking lmao
@@INDIE505Yep
I imagined this comment delivered by a guy in a suit on TCM at 3am.
Isn’t that literally every society? (I’m American so I really wouldn’t know LMAO)
Thank you ChatGPT
A masterpiece! Hilarious (when you know the origin) and spooky at the same time. Surprisingly looks authentic even to me, an 1980s USSR kid, and I watched a lot of cartoons like that in my childhood. I think you have managed to go beyond parody and captured the true essence and soul of that style. Fantastic job. Sound design is great too - speaking as a sound designer.
(cartoon parody based on Glass Harmonica 1968)
-Ты же сказал, что будет мясной хлеб?
-Ох, хахах, нет, я говорил мяско в хлеб. Я так называю котлеты с булкой.
-Ага. Впервые слышу такое. Где это так говорят?
-Так у меня папа из Вологодской области.
-Правда? У меня жена Череповчанка, и что-то не припомню, чтобы она или её радственники так говорили...
-Нет-нет, папа жил на Востоке области, дальше.
-Понятно... Знаешь, они очень похожи на те котлеты в булочек, которые продают по 20 копеек в столовой возле озера.
-Хах, нет, это старые добрые булки по рецепту моей семьи Кожавиных, бабушка по папиной ветке рассказала как делать.
-Ясно.
-Извините. Мне надо отлучиться на секунду, сейчас закрою форточку и вернусь.... Оооххх, ну что же, мы немного засиделись.
-Да соглашусь, ОХ ТЫ ЧТО ЗА ЧЕРТОВЩИНА ТАМ ПРОИСХОДИТ?
-Первомай.
-Первомай? В середине октября, в в вечернее время, торжественный парад происходит прямо у вас на кухне?!
-Да.
-Могу ли посмотреть?
-... Прошу прощения, нет.
Чтож, Семен, странный ты человек, но, должен сказать, мяско у тебя что надо!
Простите, а что это и откуда?
Поправока: разобрался! Действительно смешно :D
Спасибо, товарищ, я давно так не смеялся
@@cosmo_daft the simpsons - steamed hams
Well made adaptation!
This has got to be one of the best steamed memes video of all time. Along with your German impressionist film one, the Jewish Megillah one, the feel-good Inc one, and the Joe Swanson one.
this is incredible and you are incredibly talented! this along with the German expressionist steamed hams are excellent displays of knowledge of film, art history and aesthetics! I would love to see more work from you!
Wait, this is the same guy who did the german expressionism one?!
@@Damian_1989 yes
The fact that we've moved to a point where people don't even use any of the original material is just such a wonderful thing.
The animation on this was absolutely amazing!
идеальная аллегория желания человека поддерживать свой образ самого себя перед вышестоящими!
Brilliant
I could not agree more... What did you say?
@komunaka 100 million 😊 1991
И заметьте какая деталь: человек этот готов игнорировать и отрицать пожар, поглощающий его дом, ради одобрения со стороны социума.
Поистине глубокое произведение.
YOOOO U ARE SO RIGHT
Absolutely adore this, particularly with Chalmer's head getting closer w the same cadence "at this time of year, in this part of the country, localized entirely in your kitchen?"
This felt like the most uncomfortable dinner I've ever been to
A truly unforgettable luncheon
i feel like this video has unlocked a primal childhood memory that i don’t even have. the inorganic sounds when skinner and chalmers move and speak, the way the entire outside world feels unpopulated and liminal in a way the backrooms can only hope to replicate - it’s all reached down into the pit of my soul and shaken me to my core.
i have a new fear and it’s khrzhanovsky’s ‘Steamed Hams’
The original cartoon is kind of both scary and touching at the same time
I recommend checking his other works, also check out Vladimir Tarasov cartoons if you're into the more psychedelic stuff
Kafkesque
@@OCinneide PilotRedSun-esque
It was a normal cartoon style in the Eastern Bloc. I watched east german movies and it was always scary
Welcome to the childhood of most Europeans.
Man, that felt more unsettling than Salad Fingers. Even the way Skinner talked was eerie lol, good job
Thanks. That’s quite the compliment.
Not just me getting David Firth vibes then 😁
This had Hubert Cumberdale written all over it!
it had a very uncomfortable feel to it
Omg, you have mastered the Soviet animation style. a beautiful reference of the glass harmonica!
my mother was born in 1972 and grew up during the soviet union with a lot of animations like this one. when i was born she would often make us watch cartoons from the time of the soviet union and somehow this animation is really accurate in a way... idk how its so accurate... its nostalgic somehow? idk? good job to the person who made it
this was inspired by a few other old USSR animations, some shots even being referenced looks like, but nonetheless an interesting rendition. I don’t know the source or reference though but I saw a yt video called “A beginners guide to Soviet animated cinema” that showed one of these animations, maybe you’ll recognize others in that video.
nu pogodi is goooood
@@lingualinquirer6165 Just yesterday someone said to me "Кто не любит Ну Погоди?"
Dude you're featured on the wiki for the original Glass Harmonica film! Massive props to you, this was amazing!
which wiki?
@@FBGRUclipsI went looking for it and it seems to have vanished, can't find any mention of this video on the wiki page anymore. It was on just the regular wikipedia.
@@Exchanger2008 i looked too, yeah, its not there. That sucks.
@@FBGRUclips yeah, esspecially because i remember seeing it
It was removed on the 3rd of June for some reason, here is the latest version that has the feature:
en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Glass_Harmonica_(film)&oldid=1228851426
Tyrone, you are creating easily the most advanced steamed hams parodies in human history
You misspelled nightmare
The metallic sounds as the characters move and creaky door sounds as they talk makes them feel very robotic and inhuman. This is such a surreal video and I love it.
Every time I think this meme is dead, I find someone has created a masterpiece. This is incredible work. All I can say is ENDUT! HOCH HECH!
What the hell was THAT?!
I am SO IMPRESSED by how hard you nailed the style! Soviet era cutout animation is very specific and difficult and you got it perfectly.
Великолепно! Стиль позднесоветской мультипликации схвачен просто до мелочей.
Да, столько пародий на СССР где всегда кажется что что-то не то, но тут мужику удалось действительно уловить дух времён
Довольно забавно, кстати, поймал себя на мысли, что у СССР было два таких периода: 60е-ранние 70е и перестройка. Так что, можно сказать, что это, одновременно, могло быть и в том, и в том десятилетии
Не пойму, автор русскоговорящий? Канал полностью на английском
This is so f***ing cool. You've really successfully captured the style and feel of those old banned artistic soviet animations.
As a Russian, I can definitely say that steamed hams does not translate as "Стимлянная хамоника". But this phrase makes me feel a very strange feeling of nostalgia, as if I was alone at home at the age of 6, turned on the TV and a strange cartoon of unknown origin was shown on a single channel, and I carelessly lie on the sofa, looking at the wall carpet and listening to these creepy sounds, as if the mechanism is clumsily trying to repeat the real sound. Definitely, the correct translation does not cause me such terrible, but insanely familiar sensations. the author is a genius
That's because the author used a parody version of the "Glass Harmonica" title.
i cant understand the message of the movie. could you please help?
@@aldob5681 it's originally comes from a Simpsons episode which then someone remake in Soviet Russia-style cartoons
@@aldob5681 It is in the description.
к сожалению, сегодня русские вместо того, чтобы создавать мультфильмы метафизики, заняты убийством украинцев
😞
This is scarier than any horror movie ever made. It's truly nightmarish.
Welcome to the world of arthouse Soviet animation
If you want more of this horror I recommend such gems as "Potets", "His Wife a Hen" and "Pereval"
alot of the scenes are taken from the 1968 film "glass harmonica" or Стеклянная гармоника by Andrei Khrjanovsky
"taken"
(cartoon parody based on Glass Harmonica 1968)
Esp. the part with Krusty.
This is an extremely high effort and quality Steamed Hams meme. Like, on par with the best I've ever seen. It perfectly captures the creepiness of some old Soviet cartoons. Honestly, if I didn't know about the meme already, I might have thought this was actually aired on Soviet television. It's really convincing. I hope this blows up
This is hauntingly beautiful for whatever reason. The sound scape, the weird stares, that feeling that you’re watching something forbidden adds to the experience
It's a solid reason to be proud of humanity. Two giant cultural and artistic mindsets making a handshake afore our own eyes.
Kudos to the Artist/s!
Kudos to the AI-rtists
This is a literal version of hell in Arts. 😨💊🤏
@@theinquisitor7191 ?
@@theinquisitor7191 Could you please share with us your prerequisites for an Artwork to be described as hell spawn? Just for better understanding
@@theinquisitor7191 And one of those pills please, for the sake of science :)
The fact that there's still new Steamed Hams videos, and they keep getting better is incredible.
This parodical soviet cartoon has almost the same vibe as gmod animation with coherent randomness
meanwhile, in WWII Germany ruclips.net/video/zY17_nraW68/видео.html
I didn't expect this to go all the way. It makes sense that this creator is an actual filmmaker, because this is of professional quality. There are no gaps in the illusion.
We might well be looking at the best Steamed Hams interpretation yet.
2:50 I have to go now. My planet needs me.
Man, this level of dedication to research and execution is seldom seen outside productions with a substantial budget. Absolutely amazing!
I have been watching Soviet animation since I was about 12 years old and you captured its essence PERFECTLY, my sincere congratulations
1:03
I like how it depicts Capitalism as a clown that compares fast, easy meals to the cheap marketing and exploitation democratic corporations use. It’s like an easy way out of dinner, but it’s not for the long-term.
This makes the animation banned, because it depicts capitalism as the “Easy way out” and not just plain “bad”. This truly is a work of art.
Quality work, man. Let’s hope you make a living on the Tubez :3
I mean yes. But that’s also just Krusty from the show who owns the burger chain so it’s not really making a stretch of any kind.
it’s literally just a clown with some burgers
@@imspinny well he said because of “criticism” in the short the animatic was banned. I figured this was the part that he meant.
@@imspinny in the original it was a Jew.
Fag