The Original Gay Porn Community - Free Gay Movies and Photos, Gay Porn Site Reviews and Adult Gay Forums

  • Welcome To Just Us Boys - The World's Largest Gay Message Board Community

    In order to comply with recent US Supreme Court rulings regarding adult content, we will be making changes in the future to require that you log into your account to view adult content on the site.
    If you do not have an account, please register.
    REGISTER HERE - 100% FREE / We Will Never Sell Your Info

    To register, turn off your VPN; you can re-enable the VPN after registration. You must maintain an active email address on your account: disposable email addresses cannot be used to register.

  • Hi Guest - Did you know?
    Hot Topics is a Safe for Work (SFW) forum.

Animation Art

EddMarkStarr

JUB Addict
JUB Supporter
Joined
Aug 30, 2015
Posts
5,982
Reaction score
1,280
Points
113
Location
Seattle
21da16b17d5a2b3f34605acacae88479.jpg


It wasn't that long ago when cartoons utilized detailed drawings, creating detailed backdrops for the foreground characters.
The 1964 Hanna-Barbera series, "Jonny Quest", brought comic book quality art to a television series. Makes me wish I had talent.


66e32f07e8612749c9aa77d27406f380.jpg
 
Animation the old fashioned way was so labour intensive, it needed vast teams of artists working all through the night. Some were talented, most were doing repetitive
jobs, copying and colouring, tedious time consuming work.
Old school animation's greatest masterpiece, just my opinion, was Tom And Jerry, The Night Before Christmas 1941
MGM had lots of money at the time and they could afford to spend whatever it took to create this sumptious visual quality. It was a wise investment as these old toons are still making a profit from them over eighty years later. Since the humour is all visual, they have been popular on TV all around the world no matter the language.
Full versions of TNBC keep getting deleted from YT for $$$ reasons, so instead use the link to the Archive;
 
Animation the old fashioned way was so labour intensive, it needed vast teams of artists working all through the night. Some were talented, most were doing repetitive
jobs, copying and colouring, tedious time consuming work.
Old school animation's greatest masterpiece, just my opinion, was Tom And Jerry, The Night Before Christmas 1941
MGM had lots of money at the time and they could afford to spend whatever it took to create this sumptious visual quality. It was a wise investment as these old toons are still making a profit from them over eighty years later. Since the humour is all visual, they have been popular on TV all around the world no matter the language.
I was never a big fan of Tom and Jerry, but I still love the Warner Brothers stuff. Can't say whether the animation was better or worse than at MGM but the directors were better. So many iconic gags.

I can't stand all the Pixar computer generated stuff. It creeps me out, especially when humans are in them. It's too close to realistic, which lends them an almost nightmarishly surreal quality.

Ren & Stimpy took mayhem of the 40's and 50's cartoons one one-upped them. John K was a true maverick.
 
Animation the old fashioned way was so labour intensive, it needed vast teams of artists working all through the night. Some were talented, most were doing repetitive
jobs, copying and colouring, tedious time consuming work.
Old school animation's greatest masterpiece, just my opinion, was Tom And Jerry, The Night Before Christmas 1941
MGM had lots of money at the time and they could afford to spend whatever it took to create this sumptious visual quality. It was a wise investment as these old toons are still making a profit from them over eighty years later. Since the humour is all visual, they have been popular on TV all around the world no matter the language.
Full versions of TNBC keep getting deleted from YT for $$$ reasons, so instead use the link to the Archive;

I still remember the Dick Tracy cartoon series from 1961 by UPA. It was pioneering the adoption of simple backdrops and limited character movements. Since it really came down to saving money, the UPA style of animation became the norm. No one took simplicity as far as Terrytoons Productions. Their cartoon series , "The Adventures of Tom Terrific", were so awful the characters didn't have consistent coloration throughout an entire episode. Even the lines representing Tom's clothes would disappear, then reappear at random. Maybe the lowest point in all of animation for television.

f55779b2d0ebc7a82c3611fd11db21fb.jpg
 
Oh no, Gene Deitch. He made 13 Tom And Jerry episodes in the sixties on a shoestring budget using Czech artists. The visual quality was so poor T&J fans call it blasphemous and yet his stories were wildly imaginative, they could have been good if they had spent any money at all making them. Greed, it ruins everything.
 
Early Hanna-Barbera cartoons, like "Ruff and Reddy", used every trick in the book to keep costs low, but the stories were always cool.

9768d4c37ea8502e9f07fe0ffebeca19.jpg


8b4fa762c32d206a0772158833714311.jpg
 
Ruff And Reddy I have never heard of. The US had lots of TV channels so there was a demand for low budget material for the hick stations as well as the good stuff for the better ones. We only had two TV choices so we could be more fussy about what we imported. If we wanted crap animation we had our own;
Captain Pugwash makes South Park look sophisticated.
 
Years ago I did a Kickstarter thing for hand drawn animation. I have always preferred it over the computer stuff.

Here is the first episode from that Kickstarter. It was made by a lot of ex-Disney artists.

 
Ruff And Reddy I have never heard of. The US had lots of TV channels so there was a demand for low budget material for the hick stations as well as the good stuff for the better ones. We only had two TV choices so we could be more fussy about what we imported. If we wanted crap animation we had our own;
Captain Pugwash makes South Park look sophisticated.

Wow, I've never seen "limited animation" quite like this! But it works when conveying a story. I don't have anything from my past that compares to Captain Pugwash.
 
Years ago I did a Kickstarter thing for hand drawn animation. I have always preferred it over the computer stuff.

Here is the first episode from that Kickstarter. It was made by a lot of ex-Disney artists.


Yes, I've heard that a group of animators want to keep mixed-media (hand drawn) animation alive in the 21st century.

MechWest is going in the opposite direction. They're all in for computer animation.

 
Yes, I've heard that a group of animators want to keep mixed-media (hand drawn) animation alive in the 21st century.

MechWest is going in the opposite direction. They're all in for computer animation.




There is rumors in my Disney groups that Disney may greenlight a hand drawn film again soon. I hope it is true.
 
How's this for a setup?

In the 1950's, RCA had gathered one of the most expansive collections of recorded music, including music for children.
RCA's collection also included fairy tales set to music, and that prompted an idea.

Instead of allowing their collection to sit in a vault, RCA contracted with animators and cartoonists to adapt the music library into broadcast ready TV animation.
The animated series was called, "Mel-O-Toons", organized by New World Productions.

Note to spare use of color and the minimalist backdrops.
A cartoon series created from recorded musical fairy tales - take a look!

 
Back
Top