Eric didn't actually animate on "Superior Duck", but he did the voices of Porky Pig and the Martian. The clip you posted from the short is Greg Duffell's animation. What's interesting about those later Chuck Jones cartoons is that even at 80+ years old, Jones was still very hands-on with the directorial side of things. A couple years previously he had relied more on people like Tom Ray to do the timing and animation hand-outs. Will Finn, who animated on "Chariots of Fur", told me that Jones went in and timed the cartoons himself, right down to the frame. He is also pretty sure that Chuck did the animation hand-outs himself.
Thats amazing info! And thanks for the corrections :) i had the voice part in the script but i took it out cause it said he did speedy Gonzales too, but i couldn’t find that character in the 3 shorts, so i took the whole thing out just in case my source was wrong . Ill definitely add this info to the next correction episode:)
@@Dizographies he also did the voices of Tweety, Marvin The Martian and Speedy and did one line for Bugs when Eric did Looney Tunes: Back In Action, for which he was also the animation director
A character that you guys could cover, if you talk about Eric Goldberg’s work in Fantasia 2000, is the free-wheeling Flying John, modeled after the late journalist and Disney historian John Culhane (February 7, 1934-July 30, 2015).
well thats an awesome piece of info that I wish I knew when I wrote the script. I'm actually releasing the Eric Goldberg fantasia episode next week, but i didn't include any of that :/ I'll definitely save this for the corrections video for 2023 though!!
@@Dizographies I’m glad you guys are covering his work on Fantasia 2000. Also, you should do a video on John Culhane (RIP), cause he was extremely passionate about the history of Disney animation and served as a visual reference for 2 characters: the aforementioned Flying John in Fantasia 2000 and the bumbling Mr. Snoops in The Rescuers.
I hope you guys cover his work on Rhapsody in Blue in Fantasia 2000. That’s the first animation of his I ever saw and it’s awesome, especially in regards to its origin.
Actually when I made this episode It ended up being 30-40 min long, so I cut it in half. The other half is all edited except for an introduction, but we had to change narrators....so I'll have to put it out soon with a explanation intro as to why the narrators change. Also I'm not sure what character I should put it under, the three Disney movies that are covered is Fantasia 2000, Winnie the Pooh (2011), and Princess and the Frog 🤔. Thank you for reminding me. I remembered that happened but I couldn't remember to who.
@@Dizographies True. There’s not really a character you could use for Rhapsody in Blue. Still, it’s a nice segment that has a great production history.
Taking over smaller companies' property (think Jay Ward and Jim Henson) and then presenting their names in the supposed style of Walt Disney's signature is oddly jarring and irritating.
Eric didn't actually animate on "Superior Duck", but he did the voices of Porky Pig and the Martian. The clip you posted from the short is Greg Duffell's animation. What's interesting about those later Chuck Jones cartoons is that even at 80+ years old, Jones was still very hands-on with the directorial side of things. A couple years previously he had relied more on people like Tom Ray to do the timing and animation hand-outs. Will Finn, who animated on "Chariots of Fur", told me that Jones went in and timed the cartoons himself, right down to the frame. He is also pretty sure that Chuck did the animation hand-outs himself.
Thats amazing info! And thanks for the corrections :) i had the voice part in the script but i took it out cause it said he did speedy Gonzales too, but i couldn’t find that character in the 3 shorts, so i took the whole thing out just in case my source was wrong . Ill definitely add this info to the next correction episode:)
@@Dizographies he also did the voices of Tweety, Marvin The Martian and Speedy and did one line for Bugs when Eric did Looney Tunes: Back In Action, for which he was also the animation director
Lady’s pedigree the making of lady and the tramp I like Eric Goldberg
AMAZING keep up the good work!!
Thank you!
I'd love to meet him. He sounds like a great guy with lots of stories of tell about his animation work.
AMAZING
A character that you guys could cover, if you talk about Eric Goldberg’s work in Fantasia 2000, is the free-wheeling Flying John, modeled after the late journalist and Disney historian John Culhane (February 7, 1934-July 30, 2015).
well thats an awesome piece of info that I wish I knew when I wrote the script. I'm actually releasing the Eric Goldberg fantasia episode next week, but i didn't include any of that :/ I'll definitely save this for the corrections video for 2023 though!!
@@Dizographies I’m glad you guys are covering his work on Fantasia 2000. Also, you should do a video on John Culhane (RIP), cause he was extremely passionate about the history of Disney animation and served as a visual reference for 2 characters: the aforementioned Flying John in Fantasia 2000 and the bumbling Mr. Snoops in The Rescuers.
Idk if you listen to Dis-Order, but you gotta do an ep of Wilfred Jackson hehe.
I hope you guys cover his work on Rhapsody in Blue in Fantasia 2000. That’s the first animation of his I ever saw and it’s awesome, especially in regards to its origin.
Actually when I made this episode It ended up being 30-40 min long, so I cut it in half. The other half is all edited except for an introduction, but we had to change narrators....so I'll have to put it out soon with a explanation intro as to why the narrators change. Also I'm not sure what character I should put it under, the three Disney movies that are covered is Fantasia 2000, Winnie the Pooh (2011), and Princess and the Frog 🤔. Thank you for reminding me. I remembered that happened but I couldn't remember to who.
@@Dizographies True. There’s not really a character you could use for Rhapsody in Blue. Still, it’s a nice segment that has a great production history.
@@speedracer2008 Agreed! It has such an interesting story. I’ll figure something out… look to see it coming out in the next couple months :D
cool
Taking over smaller companies' property (think Jay Ward and Jim Henson) and then presenting their names in the supposed style of Walt Disney's signature is oddly jarring and irritating.