The seventh in a series of posts using Denis Gifford's book British Animated Films, 1895-1985: A Filmography to provide a decade-by-decade analysis of British animation's history.
Disclaimer: Although wide-ranging Gifford's book is not
perfect. He missed out several films and sometimes provided incorrect
dates or crew information. I have done my best to correct any errors
which I have found myself repeating in these posts.
As Gifford's book only covers animated films that were released into cinemas, the coming of television animation will not be covered in-depth in this post; however, as TV adverts provided a source of funding for independent work, its impact can still be seen.
Once again, we start with the
familiar names. In 1960 the
Larkins studio came out with
The Marriage, a Barclay's Bank advert for distribution in West Africa; John
Halas and Joy
Batchelor directed
Piping Hot for the Gas Council; Allan Crick, now working for Technical and Scientific Films, directed
Guilty or Not Guilty for the General Dental Council; and Bob Godfrey and his cohorts at Biographic put together
Polygamous Polonius, beginning a cycle of bawdy cartoons.
Power Train, an instructional short made by Industrial Animated Films for Ford Motors, has a credits list which serves as a cross section of early sixties animation talent: it was produced by
George Dunning, directed by Jimmy T.
Murakami, and written by Dunning, Stan Hayward and Richard Williams. Dunning, a Canadian, moved to Britain in 1956 to head a London-based branch of
UPA; this venture proved short-lived but resulted
in the founding of
TVC. One of
TVC's early works was a short comedy entitled
The Wardrobe, directed by Dunning and written by Hayward; Gifford lists it as a 1960 release but other sources identify it was being made at the tail-end of the fifties.
Also created in 1960 was the
Fanta the Elephant Series, a set of five three-minute road
safety cartoons backed by Shell and
BP. Originally made for television, they were released into cinemas in 1965. Gifford does not credit the makers of the series.
Halas & Batchelor's Hamilton the Musical Elephant.
In 1961
Halas &
Batchelor released four more films:
The History of Inventions, a collaboration with Italian animator Bruno
Bozetto;
For Better ... for Worse, for Philips;
The Wonder of Wool, for the International Wool Secretariat; and
Hamilton the Musical Elephant, the first of two cartoons starring the Hamilton character.
Bob Godfrey's The Do-It-Yourself Cartoon Kit
, which can be viewed online here.
Gifford lists
Biographic's proto-Python short
The Do-It-Yourself Cartoon Kit as being released the same year; other sources place its release in the late fifties. Also in 1960 Educational Films of Scotland - which had funded
Sir Patrick Spensthe previous decade - backed Edward and Elizabeth
Odling's Burns adaptation
Holy Willie's Prayer; while someone not credited by Gifford made
Higher Profit for the Small Dairy Farms, a promotional film for
Fisons.
George Dunning's classic The Flying Man.
In 1962 more films were directed by George Dunning at
TVC:
The Apple, a short comedy written by Stan Hayward, and the experimental
The Flying Man; meanwhile, Richard Williams directed two shorts under the banner of Williams Films:
Lecture on Man and
Love Me, Love Me, Love Me. Biographic released an animation/live-action hybrid satirising advertising,
The Plain Man's Guide to Advertising; and
Halas &
Batchelor concluded its Hamilton series with
Hamilton in the Music Festival. Beyond that the year gave us several propaganda, advertising and instructional films:
TVC's The Ever-Changing Motor Car for Ford and
The Redemption of a Retailer for Gillette; Ken Woodward's
Spaghetti Varieties for the British Macaroni Industry;
Halas &
Batchelor's The Commonwealth for the
Nuffield Foundation and the Commonwealth Institute, and
The Colombo Plan for the tenth anniversary of the Colombo Plan for Cooperative Economic Development in South and South East Asia; and Industrial Animation's
Mr. Know-How in Hot Water for the Gas Council.
Richard Williams' Love Me, Love Me, Love Me.
Some more old faces turned up again in 1963. The Grasshopper Group, an independent outfit which had begun animating in the fifties, released three shorts:
A Short Spell, a drawn-on-film animation themed around the alphabet;
The Rejected Rose, about the rivalry between a painter and a musician in love with the same girl; and
Victoria's Rocking Horse, about a little girl who steals a horse from a merry-go-round. Meanwhile, Bubble and
Squeek creator George Moreno Jr. collaborated with Fred Thompson on the
Merry Music Shop series:
Bumble Bee Fair,
The Land of Birthday Toys,
Little Mr. Robin,
The Little Swiss Whistling Clock,
Thunderclap Jones and
Jack O' Diamonds.
Halas & Batchelor's Automania 2000.
World Wide released a couple of films that year: John Reed's
Your Digestion and Ken Woodward's
Your Hair and Scalp, both for Unilever. A company
called De La Rue Films made
House Warming, a promotional film
for Thomas
Potterton Ltd.; and Industrial Animation made a second Mr. Know-How film for the Gas Council,
Mr. Know-How in All Round Comfort. And, of course,
Halas &
Batchelor continued to produce shorts:
Pulmonary Function, an instructional film for
Boehringer-
Ingelheim;
The Showing up of Larry the Lamb and
The Tale of the Musician, based on
SG Hulme Beaman's characters (later used on television in the seventies); and
Automania 2000, a satire on car culture which is today amongst the studio's best-remembered works.
Halas & Batchelor's Ruddigore
, which I posted more about here.
Over the rest of the decade
Halas &
Batchelor produced
Man in Silence, based on the drawings of Augustin
Ibarola;
A Midsummer Nightmare,
satirising modern obsessions with television;
The Axe and the Lamp, based on Peter Breughel's 16
th century painting;
Flurina, an Anglo-Swiss co-production about a girl rescuing a small bird from an eagle;
Bolly, about a character in space;
To Our Children's Children's Children, a musical cartoon; the instructional films
Flow Diagram,
The Question,
Functions and Relations,
Linear Programming,
Topology,
Metrication,
Matrices and
What is a Computer; and the anti-smoking film
Dying for a Smoke. Alongside these was
Ruddigore, a fourth feature-length production and Britain's second mainstream animated feature.
Jimmy T. Murakami's The Insects.
TVC's productions from these years include
The Insects, a short by Jimmy T.
Murakami;
Discovery Penicillin, an instructional film for the foreign office;
The First Adventure of Thud and Blunder and its seven sequels for the National Coal Board;
Charley, a George Dunning short about a
shapeshifting boy;
Tidy Why, a propaganda film promoting National Anti-Litter Week;
The Chair, a comedy short directed by Bill
Sewell;
Discovering Radar, by Jim Duffy and John Fletcher;
Hands, Knees and Boomps-a-Daisy, another National Coal Board film; and
Cod Fishing, another Bill
Sewell short. But the best- remembered of
TVC's sixties works is, of course,
Yellow Submarine, the second British animated feature of the decade and a
bona fide classic. George Dunning also directed
The Ladder away from
TVC.
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Yellow Submarine
, almost certainly the best-known British animation of the decade.
Meanwhile, the Biographic group made several more shorts:
A Productivity Primer,
The Rise and Fall of Emily Sprod,
Alf, Bill and Fred,
Aquarius,
Be Careful Boys,
Goldwhiskers,
Springtime for Samantha,
Quodlibet and
The Trend Setter. Bob Godfrey also directed several shorts under the banner of Godfrey Films:
Rope Trick,
What Ever Happened to Uncle Fred and
Two Off the Cuff.
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The Rise and Fall of Emily Sprod.
The
Larkins studio continued to focus on propaganda and promotional films:
The Sure Thing, for the British Insurance Association;
The Banking Game,
The Bargain,
Titi and the Woodman,
Henry Philpott,
Who'll Pay My Mortgage? and
The Curious History of Money, for Barclay's Bank;
Dream Sound, for Shell;
Johnny and the D.K. Robot, for the Oral Hygiene Service;
Small Boats, for the British National Export Council;
Refining, for
BP; and
Cool and Calculating, for Midlands Bank.
Richard Taylor's Don't Talk to Strangers
uses a style mimicking chidren's drawings.
One
Larkins animator, Richard Taylor, set up his own company: Taylor Cartoons. This outfit made
Demonstration, a comedy about contemporary demonstrators;
Uhuru, which poked fun at British colonialism; and
The Revolution, another piece of political commentary. Taylor also advertised
Barclays Bank with
The Rise of Parnassus Needy and
The Pilgrim, and promoted the National Wool Textile Export Corporation with
The Princess and the Wonderful Weaver. But in 1969 Taylor Cartoons made two films teaching children basic
safety -
Tell Mummy and
Don't Talk to Strangers - and it is with such public information films that Richard Taylor became associated. The same year he also made
G.I.G.O.: Garbage in Garbage Out, another
Barclays ad, this time at
Millbank Films.
Nicholas Spargo's public information film Dinosaur.
Another animator working on public information films was Nicholas
Spargo of Nicholas Cartoons, who made
Genius Man and
Dinosaur for the Central Office of Information and
The Air Show for Atlas
Copco. He would later create
Willo the Wisp for TV.
A prolific independent animator of the period was Derek Phillips, future creator of the 1983 series
Aubrey. His shorts of the period were
Universal Cycle,
Work of Art,
The Fan,
A Fable,
Clever,
Square,
The Greater Community Animal,
A Passing Phase,
In Popular Demand,
The Line,
Same but Different,
Credit,
Clean,
Perfect,
Round and Round,
Handyman,
Oops! and
Mine All Mine. Gifford lists the production company behind Derek Phillips' shorts as "Phillips", but his films should not be confused with the numerous animated shorts backed by Philips Electrical such as 1966's
Barbarota, made by Reg Lodge of World Wide Pictures.
Peter See made a 1967 short entitled
The Professor for Rank Short Films; the same year director Dick Horn collaborated with writer Stan Hayward on
Fairy Tale, Errol le Cain directed the Richard Williams-produced
The Sailor and the Devil and Bernard Queenman made
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, sponsored by Argo Records in America.
In 1969 Antony Donaldson and Robert Graham collaborated on
Soft Orange, an experimental film made using wax; "Erotic images with an undertone of menace", says the
British National Film Catalogue. The same year C. Griffith, F. Langford and Ken Gray of Eothen Films animated
The Travellers and the Thieves, based on two West African folktales; and Wyatt - Cattaneo Productions (named after producer Ron Wyatt and director Tony Cattaneo) made
I Love You, written by Stan Hayward, and
Package Deal, a United States Lines advert.
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A Mug's Game, or, How to Squash a Lemon Head.
As far as other promotional and educational films of the sixties go, the Scottish Educational Film Association made a 1965 film,
Simple Simon, as a reading excercise for small children;
A Mug's Game was a somewhat unusual public information film from 1967 discouraging children from throwing rubbish on railways and featuring stop-motion puppets against drawn backgrounds; Alan Pendry directed
The Polyolefins for the Shell Film Unit; Derek Stewart made
The Right Knight for Bovis; Joan Garrick animated
What Exactly Is a Program? for International Computers; Norman Hemsley directed the 1967 stop-motion film
The Furry Folk on Holiday (which, starring the cult figure of Tufty Fluffytail, taught children how to keep safe near roads and at the seaside); and Bob Privett, who had worked for Halas & Batchelor, directed
Automatic Fare Collection and You for British Transport Films.
A couple of independent animators who would achieve acclaim in later years started out in the late sixties: Paul Vester directed
Anima and
Repetition, while Alison De Vere (aside from working on
Yellow Submarine, in which she was immortalised as the model for Eleanor Rigby) made
Two Faces. And finally, the BFI funded two more films: Mel Calman's
The Arrow and Abu Abraham's
No Arks. Both directors were well-known for the social commentary of their newspaper cartoons, and their animations continued the themes of their printed work.
Abu Abraham's No Arks.
This takes us to the end of the sixties, remembered by some as a golden age of animation in the UK; it was certainly a good decade for short men with big noses. Only two more decades are covered by Gifford's book; in the penultimate post in this series I'll be looking at the animation of the seventies.
Other posts in this series: