My favorite episode of "Fractured Flickers" was where they trashed the silent version of "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" with Lon Chaney. He was converted to a football cheerleader named "Dinky Dalton" IIRC. A real hoot...
The lady you're referring to is June Foray, George, one of the best cartoon voice actors ever. Yes, she was the voice of 'Rocky', as well as every female from princesses, to witches.
She also did voices for most of the other studios since the 50's, and is still very much alive and well.
I'm not sure that they never rehearsed, though there was clearly a free spirit atmosphere that June may have been 'embellishing' a bit. As far as I know, Jay Ward never did a voice, and 'Doris' would have been June herself.
I'm headed for the east coast for a week or so, and will gladly turn the board over to other subjects. I really don't plan on being so long winded , or 'know it all'-one post just seems to lead to another.
Flickers' again. George's memories are sharper than mine. It was also produced by Jay Ward, and used the same actors (June Foray, Paul Frees, Bill Scott) as in the Ward cartoons.
Created by the great minds that concocted the Rocky & Bullwinkle show, Jay Ward and Bill Scott, "Fractured Flickers" takes esoteric and better-known silent movies featuring greats such as Charlie Chaplin and Douglas Fairbanks and uses them as the foundation for a most unusual homage. Catch all 26 episodes of this highly entertaining series, a must for film history buffs and viewers who feed on pop history.
I agree with you, the Warner Bros. cartoons were far and away the better cartoons for animation. I can still crack up watching a good Road Runner-Wile E Coyote cartoon. It was the way they depicted the laws of physics tormenting poor Wile E. whenever he had some scheme to get the road runner all figured out. A rocket on his back and wearing roller skates.... using a tree bent over as a slingshot... whatever... and he hadn't figured on the extra acceleration or something.
Rocky and Bullwinkle is much more entertaining to me now than it was then though I haven't seen an episode in years. Hey Kathy... here's that link you couldn't hear placed on another site. Click HERE! and go on and take a guess. So far George is the only one and it looks like he knew it.
As far as Warner Bros vs Jay Ward cartoons-Keep in mind that the great Warner cartoons were made for the movie theater, at a much higher budget, and with full animation.
Rocky and Bullwinkle was made for television, with limited budgets and animation, and really should not be compared as far as animation quality.
Bullwinkle, ( as well as other early tv cartoons , Yogi Bear for example)were extremely successful solutions to the limitations set before them. They weren't trying to out Bugs Bugs Bynny-they were just trying to be funny.
And, as is often the case, many of the artists , writers, and actors, spent time at
several studios, and learned to work within the boundaries given them-and it has not changed to this day.
And even as crude as the animation was in Rocky and Bullwinkle, is was lightyears ahead of what Ward and Co. had been doing previously in "Cursader Rabbit". As I remember, they were like paper cutouts that were moved around a little for the "animation" part. I don't remember exactly, but it was really crude, that I know...
Of course, if you're looking for BAD animation, I have two words for you: Clutch Cargo. Rather than have animators work at making lips move, they actually filmed actors speaking the lines and superimposed their lips on the characters. Even that wouldn't have been so bad had the lips been facing the same way as the cartoon character!
Oh, and did anyone else watch the old Krantz cartoons featuring Marvel super-heroes? They were more slide shows than actual cartoons, with the same scenes being used repeatedly and characters moving against backgrounds as if they were one picture sliding over another.
Ah, to be a kid again, where such things didn't matter!
'Space Angel" also had the superimposed lips, tho 'Clutch Cargo' is the classic example. I used to watch Clutch every morning before school, and I have vivid memories of being creeped out, especially by the kid, Spinner. The lips were always so wet looking, with glimpses of tongue.
The Marvel Super Heroes cartoons were done as cheap as is humanly possible, yet I have an affection for them. Forget animation, they were basically moving slide shows, but they shot the art right from the comic books,so alot of the great Jack Kirby, and Gene Colan art was unfiltered.
It was shoddy tho, and a little off setting when they would take say, the Hulk's head out of context from another artist, and throw it in, mish mashing art styles, and anything actually animated was ridiculous.
They did fill in alot of blanks for Marvel's world for me though. I also dug the theme songs. Oddly, they didn't feature Marvel's 2 biggest properties, Spider-Man, and Fantastic Four, but we did get Captain America, Thor, the Hulk, Iron Man, and Sub-Mariner.
The ridiculous nature of the show notwithstanding, I never paid any attention to what a great piece of work the theme was for the Bugler (Trumperteer?).
Reminds me of "The Canadian Brass". Do you know who did it?
OK, back to movies for a moment. THIS song was used as the theme to a made-for-tv movie back in the early '90's. Actually, it was a mini-series. Anyone remember it?
I was still in at the time it came out and was always looking over my shoulder to see if my twig leader was coming over to make sure I wasn't watching it.
1Knames...don't know about anyone else, but I got the "great with north" clue...good one. :)-->
Yep, it was The Stand. I loved the book. Was really excited when I heard it was going to be a mini-series. Was REAL dissapointed after I watched it. Don't get me wrong...if I had never read the book I would have loved it. But you know...when you read a book, you get a picture of all the people how YOU think they look/act. I didn't think they really cast anyone right. There were a few that worked, and in fact, for the movie, the worked great. Guess it just didn't measure up to the pictures I had in my head from reading the book. Oh wel...:)-->
Now something I have been meaning to do for a few weeks. A couple posters mentined ChattyKathy's singing. Well...click HERE and you can listen to her! Now...I had trouble converting this song...it will only work with the Windows Media Player for now...but I'm working on it. :)-->
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George Aar
Oh, and another BTW,
My favorite episode of "Fractured Flickers" was where they trashed the silent version of "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" with Lon Chaney. He was converted to a football cheerleader named "Dinky Dalton" IIRC. A real hoot...
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hiway29
The lady you're referring to is June Foray, George, one of the best cartoon voice actors ever. Yes, she was the voice of 'Rocky', as well as every female from princesses, to witches.
She also did voices for most of the other studios since the 50's, and is still very much alive and well.
I'm not sure that they never rehearsed, though there was clearly a free spirit atmosphere that June may have been 'embellishing' a bit. As far as I know, Jay Ward never did a voice, and 'Doris' would have been June herself.
I'm headed for the east coast for a week or so, and will gladly turn the board over to other subjects. I really don't plan on being so long winded , or 'know it all'-one post just seems to lead to another.
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hiway29
And I would love to see 'Fractured
Flickers' again. George's memories are sharper than mine. It was also produced by Jay Ward, and used the same actors (June Foray, Paul Frees, Bill Scott) as in the Ward cartoons.
I wonder if they're avaiable on dvd ?
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George Aar
Looky what I found:
http://cgi.ebay.com/Fractured-Flickers-The...1QQcmdZViewItem
Twenty-eight bucks for the complete set? Cheap!
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hiway29
Thanks, George !
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moony3424
Just checked, you rent it on Netflix.
Created by the great minds that concocted the Rocky & Bullwinkle show, Jay Ward and Bill Scott, "Fractured Flickers" takes esoteric and better-known silent movies featuring greats such as Charlie Chaplin and Douglas Fairbanks and uses them as the foundation for a most unusual homage. Catch all 26 episodes of this highly entertaining series, a must for film history buffs and viewers who feed on pop history.
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Sudo
Ala,
I agree with you, the Warner Bros. cartoons were far and away the better cartoons for animation. I can still crack up watching a good Road Runner-Wile E Coyote cartoon. It was the way they depicted the laws of physics tormenting poor Wile E. whenever he had some scheme to get the road runner all figured out. A rocket on his back and wearing roller skates.... using a tree bent over as a slingshot... whatever... and he hadn't figured on the extra acceleration or something.
Rocky and Bullwinkle is much more entertaining to me now than it was then though I haven't seen an episode in years. Hey Kathy... here's that link you couldn't hear placed on another site. Click HERE! and go on and take a guess. So far George is the only one and it looks like he knew it.
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TheManOfa Thousand ScreenNames
Sounds like something from the Great White North, eh?
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hiway29
As far as Warner Bros vs Jay Ward cartoons-Keep in mind that the great Warner cartoons were made for the movie theater, at a much higher budget, and with full animation.
Rocky and Bullwinkle was made for television, with limited budgets and animation, and really should not be compared as far as animation quality.
Bullwinkle, ( as well as other early tv cartoons , Yogi Bear for example)were extremely successful solutions to the limitations set before them. They weren't trying to out Bugs Bugs Bynny-they were just trying to be funny.
And, as is often the case, many of the artists , writers, and actors, spent time at
several studios, and learned to work within the boundaries given them-and it has not changed to this day.
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George Aar
And even as crude as the animation was in Rocky and Bullwinkle, is was lightyears ahead of what Ward and Co. had been doing previously in "Cursader Rabbit". As I remember, they were like paper cutouts that were moved around a little for the "animation" part. I don't remember exactly, but it was really crude, that I know...
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GeorgeStGeorge
Of course, if you're looking for BAD animation, I have two words for you: Clutch Cargo. Rather than have animators work at making lips move, they actually filmed actors speaking the lines and superimposed their lips on the characters. Even that wouldn't have been so bad had the lips been facing the same way as the cartoon character!
Oh, and did anyone else watch the old Krantz cartoons featuring Marvel super-heroes? They were more slide shows than actual cartoons, with the same scenes being used repeatedly and characters moving against backgrounds as if they were one picture sliding over another.
Ah, to be a kid again, where such things didn't matter!
George
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ChattyKathy
Sudo, is it some type of cavalry charge? And thank you for changing it so I could open it, not sure this time why it was giving me problems.
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Bluzeman
You mean some people DON'T recognize Dudley? :)-->
Rick
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hiway29
'Space Angel" also had the superimposed lips, tho 'Clutch Cargo' is the classic example. I used to watch Clutch every morning before school, and I have vivid memories of being creeped out, especially by the kid, Spinner. The lips were always so wet looking, with glimpses of tongue.
The Marvel Super Heroes cartoons were done as cheap as is humanly possible, yet I have an affection for them. Forget animation, they were basically moving slide shows, but they shot the art right from the comic books,so alot of the great Jack Kirby, and Gene Colan art was unfiltered.
It was shoddy tho, and a little off setting when they would take say, the Hulk's head out of context from another artist, and throw it in, mish mashing art styles, and anything actually animated was ridiculous.
They did fill in alot of blanks for Marvel's world for me though. I also dug the theme songs. Oddly, they didn't feature Marvel's 2 biggest properties, Spider-Man, and Fantastic Four, but we did get Captain America, Thor, the Hulk, Iron Man, and Sub-Mariner.
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George Aar
Sudo,
The ridiculous nature of the show notwithstanding, I never paid any attention to what a great piece of work the theme was for the Bugler (Trumperteer?).
Reminds me of "The Canadian Brass". Do you know who did it?
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Bluzeman
OK, back to movies for a moment. THIS song was used as the theme to a made-for-tv movie back in the early '90's. Actually, it was a mini-series. Anyone remember it?
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hiway29
Only a guess, but was it for 'The Stand'?
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ChattyKathy
At work and don't want to play it here so will listen to tonight.
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GeorgeStGeorge
The song is familiar, but I don't remember a TV show with it as the theme.
George
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TheManOfa Thousand ScreenNames
Once again, I guess my clues are too obscure. :D-->
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moony3424
Definately. Tho this song was only used for episode 1. They used a different theme for each episode.
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hiway29
I remember being moved when the girl (Frannie?)
played 'Don't Dream it's Over" by Crowded House in the second episode.
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moony3424
I was still in at the time it came out and was always looking over my shoulder to see if my twig leader was coming over to make sure I wasn't watching it.
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Bluzeman
1Knames...don't know about anyone else, but I got the "great with north" clue...good one. :)-->
Yep, it was The Stand. I loved the book. Was really excited when I heard it was going to be a mini-series. Was REAL dissapointed after I watched it. Don't get me wrong...if I had never read the book I would have loved it. But you know...when you read a book, you get a picture of all the people how YOU think they look/act. I didn't think they really cast anyone right. There were a few that worked, and in fact, for the movie, the worked great. Guess it just didn't measure up to the pictures I had in my head from reading the book. Oh wel...:)-->
Now something I have been meaning to do for a few weeks. A couple posters mentined ChattyKathy's singing. Well...click HERE and you can listen to her! Now...I had trouble converting this song...it will only work with the Windows Media Player for now...but I'm working on it. :)-->
Rick
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