As Mel Blanc explained, in the '30s-'50s, it took 250 people 9 months to make a fully animated 6 minute cartoon. Even today with computer drawn animation it takes about the same amount of time.
These people are so skilled, most people could'nt do that with the best animation program money can buy. You can tell a major difference in the old cartoons and the new versions of them. Am I the only one who notices that.
This must have been around the time "The Reluctant Dragon" was released. Note the footage from the film there (Fred Moore animating Goofy, Donald explaining the camera process, etc.).
Incrivelmente admirável e respitável o processo de produção de animação de antigamente! As técnicas e o capricho empregados pela equipe corroboravam para um resultado de produção incrível e bem estimado! Amo muito tudo isso!
Wow, I would have loved to have worked at Disney Studios back then. Such an atmosphere of promise and pioneering a new way of education and entertainment.
No, I am with you. It is amazing what they did back then. Such skill, patients, and determination. Today, computers have minimized the need for those traits. I will take Steamboat Willie over The Incredibles any day.
Wow. Is that what they did back then? Now we don't use drawing animating anymore. Now we just draw them on the computer. Back in the 20s it must have took them Months and months just to creat one episode or movie.
It's actually a mix of different sources. A good many scenes are from the 1937 film that the studio made for RKO on the making of Snow White at the Hyperion Avenue studio. Indeed also the footage from The Reluctant Dragon, plus additional footage. Even though Kimball SEEMS to draw the Goofy scene, the animation draft credits this scene to "Steve Bosustov (Woolie)". This leads me to believe that it was animated by Woolie Reitherman, but the "person to see" about this was Bosustov, OR Bosustov animated it under Woolie's supervision.
All those processes provide tangible evidence that they deserve to be called legends
As Mel Blanc explained, in the '30s-'50s, it took 250 people 9 months to make a fully animated 6 minute cartoon. Even today with computer drawn animation it takes about the same amount of time.
These people are so skilled, most people could'nt do that with the best animation program money can buy. You can tell a major difference in the old cartoons and the new versions of them. Am I the only one who notices that.
This must have been around the time "The Reluctant Dragon" was released. Note the footage from the film there (Fred Moore animating Goofy, Donald explaining the camera process, etc.).
Incrivelmente admirável e respitável o processo de produção de animação de antigamente! As técnicas e o capricho empregados pela equipe corroboravam para um resultado de produção incrível e bem estimado! Amo muito tudo isso!
Verdade
The ending music is the same music used in many of Donald Duck's 1940s cartoons.
THIS IS THE BEST UA-cam VIDEO EVER!!!!!!!
Wow, I would have loved to have worked at Disney Studios back then. Such an atmosphere of promise and pioneering a new way of education and entertainment.
No, I am with you. It is amazing what they did back then. Such skill, patients, and determination. Today, computers have minimized the need for those traits. I will take Steamboat Willie over The Incredibles any day.
Actually, we still use paper and pencil animation.
Awesome overview of how our animated classics/stories are brought to life, in the always growing traditional method.🎯✏🐭🎥🏢🌠 Stay safe everyone!
Seven acres? I thought the Burbank studio was over 50 acres!
Wow. Is that what they did back then? Now we don't use drawing animating anymore. Now we just draw them on the computer. Back in the 20s it must have took them Months and months just to creat one episode or movie.
7:28 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
YEAR FILM WAS MADE! ??
شكرا لكم
Actually, that's just footage edited from "The Reluctant Dragon". Goofy, in this case, was actually drawn by Ward Kimball.
It's actually a mix of different sources. A good many scenes are from the 1937 film that the studio made for RKO on the making of Snow White at the Hyperion Avenue studio. Indeed also the footage from The Reluctant Dragon, plus additional footage. Even though Kimball SEEMS to draw the Goofy scene, the animation draft credits this scene to "Steve Bosustov (Woolie)". This leads me to believe that it was animated by Woolie Reitherman, but the "person to see" about this was Bosustov, OR Bosustov animated it under Woolie's supervision.
Boy I sure love to follow my dreams of doing animation
+T Videshow Same here.
I wish he also went over the process of the coice actors too
Andrew Auld's The Little Mer-Mouse (1990)
are either of these versions available on dvd?
Sorry, my mistake!
Legal
500mil persn LOL