Difference between revisions of "Animation (Discussion)"
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#What studio was associated with (somewhat) abstract cartooning? What aesthetic techniques did it use to achieve this abstraction? | #What studio was associated with (somewhat) abstract cartooning? What aesthetic techniques did it use to achieve this abstraction? | ||
#How has cartooning balanced abstraction with naturalism? | #How has cartooning balanced abstraction with naturalism? | ||
− | {{Gallery|title=|width=300|height=200|lines=2|File:Fig11-11 Gerald copy.jpg|alt2= | + | {{Gallery|title=|width=300|height=200|lines=2|File:Fig11-11 Gerald copy.jpg|alt2=Screen shot from ''Gerald McBoing Boing''.|Screen shot from ''Gerald McBoing Boing''. [http://www.tcf.ua.edu/EO/DV/GeraldMcBoing-Boing_480x360.php View video.]}} |
'''Groups 7 & 3''' | '''Groups 7 & 3''' | ||
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#*What was the first made-for-TV animated cartoon? When? | #*What was the first made-for-TV animated cartoon? When? | ||
#*What aspects of made-for-TV cartoons does ''The Flintstones'' exemplify? ([http://www.tcf.ua.edu/EO/DV/Flintstones.php View video.]) | #*What aspects of made-for-TV cartoons does ''The Flintstones'' exemplify? ([http://www.tcf.ua.edu/EO/DV/Flintstones.php View video.]) | ||
− | {{Gallery|title=|width=300|height=200|lines=2|File:Fig11-16 CrusaderRabbit06.jpg|alt3= | + | {{Gallery|title=|width=300|height=200|lines=2|File:Fig11-16 CrusaderRabbit06.jpg|alt3=Screen shot from ''Crusader Rabbit''.|Screen shot from ''Crusader Rabbit''. [http://www.tcf.ua.edu/EO/DV/CrusaderRabbit.php View video.]}} |
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#*How is that difference part of the production process? | #*How is that difference part of the production process? | ||
#*How is that difference evident in how the animation looks? | #*How is that difference evident in how the animation looks? | ||
− | # | + | #*[http://www.tcf.ua.edu/EO/DV/SimpsonsHomer3.php View ''Simpsons'' 3D animation.] |
{{Gallery|title=|width=300|height=200|lines=2 | {{Gallery|title=|width=300|height=200|lines=2 | ||
− | |File:Fig11-26 Simpsons 000013.jpg|alt4= | + | |File:Fig11-26 Simpsons 000013.jpg|alt4=Screen shot from ''The Simpsons''.|Screen shot from ''The Simpsons''. |
− | |File:Fig11-27 Simpsons 000003.jpg|alt5= | + | |File:Fig11-27 Simpsons 000003.jpg|alt5=Screen shot from ''The Simpsons''.|Screen shot from ''The Simpsons''. Homer enters a new, strange dimension. |
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Revision as of 14:39, 11 October 2016
Groups 5 & 1
- What does this term mean in the context of cartooning: naturalism?
- Which filmmaker's cartoons were associated with naturalism? What technological and aesthetic techniques did he use to achieve this naturalism? What technological device did he use that is also used in Ah-Ha's music video (view video)? (A digital version of the same device is used in Son of Zorn [2016].)
- How has cartooning balanced naturalism with abstraction?
Groups 6 & 2
- What does this term mean in the context of cartooning: abstraction?
- What studio was associated with (somewhat) abstract cartooning? What aesthetic techniques did it use to achieve this abstraction?
- How has cartooning balanced abstraction with naturalism?
Groups 7 & 3
- How do made-for-TV cartoons differ from made-for-movie-theater cartoons?
- What was the first made-for-TV animated cartoon? When?
- What aspects of made-for-TV cartoons does The Flintstones exemplify? (View video.)
Groups 4 & 8
- How does digital (CGI) animation differ from conventional cell animation? In particular:
- How is that difference part of the production process?
- How is that difference evident in how the animation looks?
- View Simpsons 3D animation.
All Groups
- Describe the efficient mode of production that developed for cartoon production in the 1930s. What were its basic (1) technological and (2) economic characteristics? That is, how was cartoon production organized so that it could be profitable?
Bibliography
- Butler, Jeremy G. Television: Critical Methods and Applications. Third edition. NY: Routledge, 2011.
External links
- Animation illustrations
- Television, third edition, Chapter 11 illustrations
- Wikipedia article on "Homer3".