Monday, 29 April 2013
Bob Godfrey's Great
Great (1976) is one of the late Bob Godfrey's most acclaimed films, winning an Oscar for best animated short. It's not hard to see why: this comedy biography of Isambard Kingdom Brunel manages to cram a great deal of wit and invention into its half-hour running time, making use of drawn animation, Gilliamesque cut-out animation, treated live action and a small bit of rotoscoping alongside plenty of laugh-out-loud moments.
I remember that Bob Godfrey's family recently tried to get a pay-per-view service for his films off the ground, and so are understandably strict about letting his work leak onto YouTube without their permission. I sometimes get requests from people asking me to provide copies of the films I cover on this blog, but I'm afraid that, in the case of Great, the answer will be a definite no.
I wish the Godfrey family the best of luck in introducing a new generation to classic animation such as this on their own terms.
Wednesday, 24 April 2013
Laura Heit's Animation Sketchbooks
Thames & Hudson sent me a copy of their new book Animation Sketchbooks, edited by Laura Heit. The book collects samples from the sketchbooks of over fifty international animators, eight of whom hail from the United Kingdom: Luis Cook, Suzanne Deakin, Jonathan Hodgson, Stephen Irwin, Osbert Parker, David Shrigley, Paul Vester and Run Wrake.
Some of the work is familiar. All of Jonathan Hodgson's sketches are related to Wonderland: The Trouble with Love and Sex, so anyone who has seen that documentary will recognise some characters; Stephen Irwin's chapter, meanwhile, focuses on his storyboards and layout ideas for Horse Glue and The Black Dog's Progress, allowing us to see those films formulated in front of us. Run Wrake's sketchbook pieces could easily be mistaken for frames from his films, with chunky marker drawings overlapping with collages of found images.
At the other end of the scale we have Paul Vester's section. I am familiar with Vester's work primarily through his homage to classic Hollywood animation Sunbeam and the offbeat but still broadly traditional Abductees. His sketches turn out to be remarkably loose, with even Sunbeam represented by a simple, abstract image.
The artists all have their own individual methods of keeping their sketches together. Suzanne Deakin contributes a few pages consisting primarily of quick thumbnail character studies, while David Shrigley's artwork is resolutely minimalist, the little square and circle people of New Friends being the dominant motif. Osbert Parker turns stills from fifties crime films into photocollages, creating the aesthetic which fed into his noir shorts such as Yours Truly. Luis Cook keeps his sketches on densely-packed pages alongside rows of scrawled-out notes ("give a better sense of gritty realism") and a few oddities which clearly have stories behind them, such as a neat table of various Aardman directors' fingerprints.
Hopefully I don't seem provincial in focusing on the British artists showcased in this book. I do so simply because UK animation is the focus of this blog; the real joy of reading Animated Sketchbooks is sampling the wealth of work from around the world, from the striking woodblock-like art of Simone Massi and Regina Pessoa to J J Villard's primary coloured felt-tip renditions of H.R. Pufnstuf, Leatherface and other pop culture figures.
With more than three hundred pages of art by its raft of contributors, Animated Sketchbooks is a welcome look at the creative process behind contemporary animation.
Tuesday, 23 April 2013
Public information films from 1969: pelican crossings, fog and smog
Yet more public information films; this batch all comes from 1969. Here's Pelican Pedestrians, introducing the new pelican crossings.
Beware Fog tells people not to create smog by burning rubbish in foggy weather.
Finally, the similarly-themed Prevent Smog. This time, smog is personified as a sinister hooded figure - any relation to the Spirit of Dark and Lonely Water, I wonder?