The Animation Show

10 June, 2008

First off, I have to say that, while I love The Lyric, the projection on this was disappointing. Remind me not to see anything you guys are showing on DVD, okay? Also, matte your screen properly please, and put up something black behind your silvers so that I don’t get doubled text and bounceback glare. It’s annoying, and I’m spoiled rotten.

And now, on to the show. Which was also disappointing, but my expectations were WAY up after the last three. I suppose that MTV’s involvement was never going to bode well. I’m just gonna address each piece in order, I suppose. Though there are a couple of pieces that will get their own post later, as well.

Psychotown (Oranges):
Clever in the way that Australian animation tends to be- you are laughing, and you are not quite sure why. It could be the accents.

Burning Safari:
The animation wasn’t good enough to justify the one-liner of a gag that it turned out to be. Sad, because it had potential.

Yompi, the crotch-biting sloup:
From the people who brought you Ricky, even more obnoxious claymation. Ricky was funnier though. Much funnier. I do appreciate the work that goes into any sort of claymation, but can’t it have a payoff?

Operator:
This was honestly incredibly clever, well animated, expressive, and mildly touching. I really, really enjoy intra-frame reactions, and the cat was a clever one. Animation is exceptionally good at pulling off this sort of gag.

Mr. Scwartz, Mr. Hazen, and Mr. Horlocken:
The animation was exceptional for the most part, especially the POV bits. And the story made me laugh, though the end shot didn’t really need to happen. I could’ve done without certain extra MSPaint looking bits, but mostly it was really lovely.

Love Sport: Paintball:
Completely pointless and completely entertaining.

Angry Unpaid Hooker:
Falls in the Home Movies school of really amusing, deliberately poorly animated stories about complete misunderstandings. I love it.

Psychotown (Therapy):
The first mini-sode was cute, this one was brilliant.

Blind Spot:
The tendency of animation to exploit sight gags and little else notwithstanding, this piece was absolutely brilliant. Subtle, properly built-up, incredibly well animated. The interplay of the seen and the not seen is a lovely comment on the idea of filmmaking and the frame/window that is the screen. I’ll have more on this later.

Jeu:
In the first installation of The Animation Show, Georges Schwizgebel’s piece La Course à l’abîme utterly astounded me. His painted-on-glass animations are transcendent and mesmerizing, and compete with the work of Stacy Steers in terms of sheer devotion to the craft of animation. Again, there will be more on this piece later. Suffice it to say, I was blown away.

Prof. Nieto Show Ep. 1:
There is a good idea here. A great idea, even. But the execution is sorely lacking. At any rate, I look forward to seeing how Nieto evolves.

Voodoo:
Clever, light, and funny. Not much to it, but it was well animated and it made me laugh.

John and Karen:
Nick Park, by way of Creature Comforts, already did this sort of thing. And much better. It was sweet, but not much to look at.

(I didn’t catch the name of the next piece because the titles were HORRID):
It was about chickens. That’s about all I recall. Chickens in a race to see who can make it to the pressure cooker first. Not offensive, not memorable.

Key-lime Pie:
OK, death has a retractable scythe hidden inside a tommygun. I can get behind this. Kind of an amusing take on vice/virtue. The animation was very lovingly done.

Raymond:
Fabulous. Reminds me a bit of last year’s City Paradise. Very very well done, and incredibly funny. I’ll have to watch it again, of course, but I really liked what I saw.

Forgetfulness:
Totally charming. The animation (is that AfterEffects? I think it is) was a bit choppy, but nothing terrible. And I really enjoy the collision of animation and spoken poetry.

Psychotown (Coup):
Ok, so the first one was clever, the second one brilliant, and this one is astoundingly funny. Because re-creating the scene in The Wild Bunch where they all die… great idea.

Hot Dog:
Plympton’s little dog just tries so damn hard. I love Bill’s combination of utterly charming pencil animations and incredibly subtle lewdness. Well, occasionally subtle. Sometimes not so subtle.

USAvich:
So goddamn obnoxious that I want to remove my eyeballs and soak them in lye.

Western Spaghetti:
I lack fondness for PES. I don’t know quite why. I think perhaps it is my annoyance with the lack of depth displayed. Someone so clever ought to be going a little further than the visual riffs he seems stuck in.

This Way Up:
This piece owes a bit to Tim Burton, but it stands alone incredibly well. I love the pacing of it. Much less MTV than a lot of the other pieces, much more conducive to thought.

And that’s a wrap. I am disappointed that Don and Mike seem to be playing to their new-found MTV audience, because I hardly think that these are the best animated films to be found. And the programming was choppy at best- things could’ve been organized a bit better. But I thank them for it anyhow, because seeing Jeu was worth the rest.

The Animation Show

4 Responses to “The Animation Show”

  1. ben said:

    Usually I just ignore criticism I take issue with, but since we’ve met and chatted a little I feel comfortable enough to speak my mind.

    When opening an independent theater, sometimes people have to do it on a budget just to make it fly at first. And because of those budget constraints some compromises are necessary. Now 95% of our films are on 35mm. The other 5% on digital. Since we don’t have a lot of money for auto-matting and silver screens we needed to form some priorities. So we chose to format our theater for 35mm with limited digital. Otherwise we would not be open due to the extra 100 grand that would be necessary to make an sufficient digital system.

    Second, The Animation Show is in about 10 different formats, so regardless of our formatting flexibility there would still be some shorts in little boxes on the screen and others that fill the whole thing.

    That’s my rant. If you want more info, I’ve got more, but I’m already kind of sick of typing. But we will see you next time.

    Ben

  2. Now For Wrath/Now For Ruin said:

    Eh, You’re not spoilt rotten. You just know there’s more to projection than throwing an image onto a screen. It’s hard not to comment on projection, especially if it’s digital vomitus. real projection is a lost art for sure.

  3. libi said:

    Ben: You can take every bit of criticism re: your projection with a grain of salt, because I really am spoiled. However, The Animation Show isn’t the only thing to have been matted poorly. Also, you really can fix almost all of the screen problems by putting up black felt behind the screens. I’ve had to do the same.

    I really, absolutely appreciate every bit of work you guys do. I swear. I am just nitpicky and obnoxious.

  4. Ben said:

    so I just watched this (I’m a bad theater owner) and I have to admit, I still hate short films. I think the only one I liked was the paintball one because it was hysterical, but other than that, I found them all trite, tedious and, for the most part, inane.

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