Friday, January 31, 2025

Tortoise And The Hare - Part 2

 

As previously mentioned in Part 1, I had a little flipbook with my tortoise and the hare project.

You'll be seeing the rest on paper.



Enjoy!


































Yep. All finished. Hoped you really liked it. 


I would like to talk about what went into this cartoon.





This cartoon is paying homage to those Tex Avery fairytale cartoons. The beginning is sorta like Torotise Beats Hare (1941) mixed in with Red Hot Riding Hood (1943). 






While talking about Tex Avery, I also love the Bob Clampett animation. His best films were from 1943-1946. It's so sad that he never got a chance to make more cartoons after 1946, he would've been unstoppable like Chuck Jones.

Falling Hare is probably my most influential out of Clampett's cartoons, that doesn't mean it's the best though. I just love the animation when Bugs fights with the gremlin. 







If they won't allow me using dynamite in the actual cartoon, I'm going to be pissed.






This is also the first time we get to see Cedric The Cat. He's one of my main characters. And this is my first drawing of him.







Well, that's it for now. Here's the official poster. It's also inspired by those outstanding classic animated posters. 




Thursday, January 30, 2025

Tortoise And The Hare - Part 1

 Ladies and gentleman, and also pets too, introducing the first finished Artmania cartoon....






You'll expect a different sidestory of how the rabbit actually defeated the turtle, and is also hilarious, fast-moving and nerve-wracking for all ages!







This is obviously a re-telling of the classic fable, The Tortoise and The Hare. As it tells the important moral slow and steady wins the race, or is it, really?







I love a little bit of fairytales and nursery rhymes myself, I even like it a little more when their funny parodies. Disney, Warner Bros and even MGM have been doing it for 90 years.







The most well-known re-telling of Torotise and The Hare was the Silly Symphony version. I really liked it but I don't think it was that outstanding. Max Hare impressing the girl rabbits just goes on for too long. 


But how do we fix that?



By this!!!





How The Hare Dood It!






This title was similar to Tex Avery's The Early Bird Dood It, I just gotta love that title. 







My future for making cartoons is bringing back the 4th wall breaks. Remember when those were just hilarious? 


Next, I will show you what the cartoon is going to be like with the little book I made. 


It has a few pages. Surprisingly I ran out of room, tomorrow you'll see the rest of the storyboard drawings on paper.















(Apologize for my hands distracting the pictures, I had to hold my phone somehow since this book isn't folded that well)















That's all I have. No more pages, even though there's still more.







Remember how annoying the gremlin was in Falling Hare? That's what my tortoise is like. He's a shameless cheater.






I also love those cartoons like with Red Hot Riding Hood when the wolf gets fed up by the same story told over and over. 


These characters can be so relatable and observed that I just miss these types of animated films.

Modern animated films nowadays are basically emotional, or there isn't any logical dialogue. 

I remember when I was in middle school, a teacher would show us these type of films, and I can tell you, they were boring and nothing special.





Part 2 Tomorrow 

🐢🐇




Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Country Gentleman Magazines

 




Just like with Saturday Evening Post, these were a series of magazines alot of people seem to like. 






They aren't as much of a household name as their other magazine, but I still really like it.





They have alot of entertaining artwork in these issues. Just like with Saturday Evening Post, they sometimes make animal artwork or funny artwork.







It's like if I was watching a cartoon in the theatre back in 40s, every week there would be a Looney Tunes and MGM one. 






The best ones are the covers starring Cousin Reginald. 






These characters are just fun to look at. When you experience them, they feel memorable, especially with the limited colors they had back then.







It's kinda disappointing that our latest generation doesn't have these type of colors, and simplicity anymore. I grew up with stuff like this and I try to not forget about it.






If any of you guys out there are looking for something entertaining and you want to be in a good place, I suggest you to look at nature videos, or interesting artwork to peak your interest. 

I watched this show lately called Antique's Road Show and it's really interesting since it showcases something unique and exicting. It may not be the most fast-paced, comedic show of all time, but it's definitely what I describe what's best with our world of today. Watching AI videos and gore will not help ya. 





The environment and living over 70 years ago, felt more calmer and warm. 




Even when at times these magazines don't go too hard with the artwork, it still looks appealing.









It's also really cool to see what people were like and what they did back in the 1920s. You may never knew that kids back then were charming troublemakers. 








And yes, those dumb theoretical professors can get a life, because color has been a thing since the universe was born and so does the artists themselves!











If your looking to know how to draw humans similar to this, then this is your time. 















This series need more recognition. 


Sunday, January 26, 2025

My Experience With Pop Culture In Cartoons

 

Artmania is one thing. It's my art, and it's filled with creativity like no other.





I always wanted to add references to my cartoons and drawings. I've been doing that since Day 1. I was drawing toy versions of licensed cartoon characters I had in my house. 

I had loads of  Disney princesses, Mario characters and TY's. 








I haven't became fully aware of pop culture references until I watched cartoons like Spongebob and Looney Tunes and also Watchmojo since sometimes they would do Top 10s based on references in cartoons.







My taste in pop culture is mostly the 30s-50s. I feel warmth with these decades since the music and actors back then were more appealing than what came later.




When it comes people using pop culture in cartoons, they usually do it in a unique manner.




Political Cartoons



These types of pop culture jokes don't make sense to me. I know they are willing to use these beloved characters to reflect on our chaotic world of today, but to me I don't care for these.






Cutaway Gags/Satire




 This is possibly the worst use of adding a pop culture reference to a cartoon. Some of Family Guy's cutaway gags left me confused, they were REALLY stupid. I know that's what the show likes to do, but this stuff needs logical sense somehow. 





I think the best way to cameo or reference characters is to have those characters with their original personalities and visual elements in order to make them feel like their needed.








Even a few second gag can help it. Other cartoons like Simpsons, Family Guy and MGM do it.







But let's not go into pop culture with the joke aspect, I have done some drawings that were inspired by references to media. And I'm willing to send some pictures. They are official and I want them to be in my animated films and storyboards.








I always imagined making a Mickey Donald and Goofy cartoon back when I didn't watch too many of their cartoons. I thought they were slow at first. But nowadays I think their rapid and fast as ever.


I always liked these cartoons the best. My favorites are Mickey's Service Station, Boat Builders and Mickey's Fire Brigade.






Do you know those Simpsons couch gags guest animators worked on for the show? 





Almost all of them I find interesting. My favorite is the pixel one since it pays homage to retro video games. 











They also hired John Kricfalusi to do an intro, but I have mixed feelings about it. The "never make the same face twice" is in here, and it just ends up looking too weird. For a guy who respects classic animation as I do, this is not how you do it.








This isn't going to be official I think, but just as an usual idea if I ever did a collaboration with Simpsons, I might want to make my own version of these characters.






I think it's a solid show even though I'm not a huge fan of it, I love alot of the character designs.







Homer is easy to draw. I had alot of fun drawing him myself. 






This expression here is referenced to Droopy.






I don't think The Simpsons characters ever had smear animation, so it's a good idea for Homer to have a more expressive personality. 









Hollywood caricatures need to be a thing in Artmania. Because it's been a thing in every animated show. Looney Tunes, Disney, MGM, Animaniacs, you name it. 

I find myself liking the classic hollywood caricature cartoons. Not all of them, but some of them are funny. 





Like I was saying, there's something more likeable with these actors than nowadays. 










It's probably more appropriate to draw them. If I drew a current hollywood celebrity today, I would get more trashy comments, but honestly, I wouldn't want to make them that offensive. 







Trust me, even animators aren't the nicest to be around. 




(This is horrendously grotesque. The fact that this cartoon has human designs and these awful designs makes this a fever dream, YUCK.)








Back then, I thought having a cameo of an old hollywood actor into a cartoon wouldn't make sense. It's stuff I get through like today's comics and adult shows. But honestly, these people are timeless, and I'm okay if I can reference them at least once, but correctly. 
















I think the first week I experienced Bing Crosby, I always pictured an actual TV show of him. It's not gonna happen. But how astonishing would that be?












Man, classic cartoons were truly the best. Bob Clampett once did a Warner Bros. cartoon where he did a Horton Hatches The Egg adaptation. It was really hilarious. And I wanted to do something like that too. 









There's this book I remembered having when I was little, I had alot of these beginner books and this is the one I vaguely know the most.







Not only was it funny, but it was also simple and easy to understand. 


There was a few animals introduced in the original story. I wanted to add an additional one. And that's a turtle.









Just like with the fish in the Horton cartoon, I wanted to add a celebrity reference in this adaptation. Yeah, really quirky for me to add Al Jolson in this. 





This scene goes like this...


The bird's walking, until he steps into a turtle's shell. He says his usual phrase, "Are you my mother?" 


Then, the turtle's head appears inside the shell, looking at the bird and saying "No, I'm not your mammy!" The turtle kisses the bird unexpectedly. 

Finally, the bird feels unbalanced for a second and then says "Well now I definitely know that thing isn't my mother!"



It actually makes sense because Jolson is well known for saying that catchphrase. It's really outdated nowadays, but it's still memorable.











Looney Tunes would sorta do these quirky segments where classic entertainers would be turned into objects. Wholly Smoke is a perfect example since when I first saw this, this was weird.



















I think having a pop culture reference once in a while can be a good thing. People nowadays just don't understand, they just want everything to be deep and original. 


There's still an audience that love cartoons like Looney Tunes and Tex Avery's MGM's cartoons and I think that's awesome. 


I don't want that genre of cartoons to die, it was timeless back then and is now. 














Examining Storyboards + More Wolf And Sheep Drawings

  I want to examine some storyboards I downloaded on my save files.  This past year I was so invested into learning more about how animation...