Jacobs81Payne

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The hint of childhood past, George Pal’s pioneering 3D animation While this is written by me, among my sons is hollering at me to come look at yet another YouTube Poop cartoon. He believes they're hilarious. I can’t stand them! When he demands I watch eight or one… with him, I have to inquire if they're a group of unintelligible screaming, screeching comments and scrape repeats of exactly the same line twenty times in a row. “Well,” he generally responds, “there’s some,” which means ninety -percent of it's just sound. Is this the state of animation that is creative? When Flash animation began popping up, I was amazed. Hell, when the first Tron came out, I was blown away, as was all of nerdom. The first Star Wars film made crowds believe we could fly into oblivion in space and blast aliens. How straightforward and clumsy they all look now with the improvements in internet cartoon. Computer animation has become the stuff of dreams. What would someone in the 1970s think of Avatar? By the same token, what would YouTube Poop-loving adolescents think of Davy and Goliath or Art Clokey’s Gumby? While barely Avatar (Clokey used the income from Davy and Goliath to fund his work on Gumby) it was adored by millions for decades, and still is! As it pertains to special effects and animation in films, most people will think of Ray Harryhausen. His stop motion, rubber and armature figures were frightening and audiences in the 1950s marveled at how “ real” his creatures appeared. http://celebritynews.io/kate-hudson-split-from-matt-bellamy-revealed/ However, among the first innovators of stop motion animation was a man named George Pal (Harryhausen was really an employee and was mentored by George Pal). Seeing among his features, each about six or seven minutes in length, was amazing not only because the motion is so smooth, but he didn't use clay or armature figures, each figure, each limb, each hand and finger were carved from wood and while arms may have swiveled in their own shoulder sockets, to see the amount of motion in these animated features will get a fan out of even my darling YouTube Poop-loving son. Pal’s first feature cartoon, “Ship of Ether” (1934), highlighted his ability to make easy stop motion animation using wooden puppet kinds… George Pal — produced Gy

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