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Showing posts with label Jetsons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jetsons. Show all posts

Friday, January 16, 2015

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Original Jetsons

BERJAYAThis is an interesting show. You can see from the layouts that real professional cartoonists are drawing it.
BERJAYAThe design and balance is good.
BERJAYAIt's a great concept- a sitcom family in space, where you make fun of all the futuristic gadgets.
BERJAYAThe only problem is, the show never took advantage of its core elements. It's way too conservative.
BERJAYAThe poses are bland, the gags are slightly silly but not outright funny and the animation is extremely conservative - even compared to the Flintstones or Yogi Bear.
BERJAYAAs a kid, I loved Hanna Barbera and anything to do with space and the future, so I watched the show a million times.
BERJAYAThis is how they hang people in the future. At least that's funny.
BERJAYAEven Carlo Vinci underanimates in this series. It makes me think that someone at the top actually told everyone to take all this great talent and the appealing designs and raw concept - but don't do anything too fun with it.

Something weird happened at HB in the 60s and to this day I can't understand how they squandered such amazing resources. I would kill to work with raw material like this.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Next

BERJAYA
BERJAYASpumco style before Spumco.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Early Flash Jetsons

Around 2,000 Spumco was running out of work and the Cartoon Network had a website. They asked me to animate some super low budget Flash cartoons using the HB characters so we agreed to 3 or 4 just so I could keep my main crew on. BERJAYAI was really looking forward to doing new HB stuff because it's one of my favorite obsessions, but sold the Ripping Friends to TV and I had to jump on that too. I went to Canada to supervise the show.
BERJAYAOne day Kevin, my producer called and said "Better take some time out and do these HB cartoons!" I didn't even have a story for this one, so I sat down with a stack of animation paper and started laying out an argument between Jane and George about Elroy's school grades.
BERJAYAAfter I had a big pile of drawings done, but no ending, I shipped them off to LA and gave them to Gabe Swarr to direct the cartoon (and another one).
BERJAYAThese first few poses have a crude ink finish-like they were badly optimized in Streamline or Flash, so I apologize for that.
BERJAYAMy early idea for Flash was to combine the early Hanna Barbera limited animation style with my own specific poses and acting style. I thought that would be the perfect use of Flash and the future of it. I was wrong, so I give up making predictions.
BERJAYASo this experiment uses very extreme poses, mixed in some calmer ones, and re-uses them all in different orders or arrangements.
BERJAYAWhat makes it different than most Flash is that there are a lot more poses to re-use. And each pose can be separated into levels (like early HB) and new expressions can be pasted onto earlier head shapes. New arms can be added to old body poses.
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BERJAYAGabe and Matt took my initial stack of layouts and added their own breakdowns and lots of new poses along the way.
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BERJAYAIt's a bit hard for me to tell exactly who did what; the one above looks like I did Jane and someone else did George, but who knows?
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BERJAYAThis breakdown of George above looks like maybe Matt?
BERJAYALooks like something out of a horror film. Ever witness family or office fights like this? This fight is inspired by fights I witnessed in the studio. We had one guy who had wild fits and tantrums and as I watched them, everything went into slow motion as I seared the images of every facial contortion and spit pattern into my memory.
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BERJAYARight here, it obviously switches away from me. It's either Gabe or Matt drawing George below.
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BERJAYAThere's that limp finger that has become a cartoon staple ever since Ren and Stimpy. (I think I stole it from Chuck Jones, but can't remember the cartoon.)
BERJAYAmy Jane and Matt's George?
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BERJAYAI love the Jetsons. The original cartoon is super boring but loaded with potential. It had great character designs, voices, backgrounds and a killer concept.

I love the idea that George thinks his job is hard work, even though he just has to push a button. I love the idea of crazy futuristic gadgets doing all your everyday things for you.

The only problem was that by 1962, the HB artists and writers were getting really bland and unimaginative and they didn't take advantage of the raw material.

I remember in 1985, I used to always try to add futuristic gags into the scenes. There was a dinner scene with the whole family and I didn't draw the characters using forks and knives like the storyboard suggested. Instead, I focused on Elroy being fed by automatic utensils that came down from the ceiling to scoop food into his mouth. I even had a chewing device grab his cheeks and mash them around while he was talking to Mom and and Dad. Another device came out of the table and pushed the food down his throat. The whole time this stuff was happening, they were all carrying on some vacuous writer's conversation and acted like none of this gizmo stuff was at all weird.


Well the fun police at H and B thought it was awful weird. They said I was crazy and ordered the director to change it all to make it boring. I couldn't figure it out. Weren't these the kind of gags the show was designed for?

By the way, it takes a lot of factors to make a cartoon work. It's not as simple as the loud-mouthed internet layman seems to think. You need a lot of things to come together at the same time to make something classic.

A good and lively crew, good characters, decent budget, not too much politics in the studio, an executive that is creative-friendly. Not to be spread too thin with too few talents on too many projects, etc.

The stars don't line up like that enough and the studios and networks are totally opposed to letting it happen.


More poses to come...