January 31, 2012

Replacement Stop Animation

Second term is all about stop motion animation. And the first week has started with a quite interesting task or rather two. Stickfas animation: personal and group. For the personal taske we needed to record a Stickfas  walk cycle. The second task included work in groups where we had to produce an animation of our choise with the same models. We each were given a set of figure parts that had to be assembled. It took me about 3 sets and a bit of blood to build a Stickfas model. It awfully resembles Spider Man!!! 

The next day started with mindmaping our ideas and sketching a storyboarding.  The idea we all agreed on, was 3run and tricking. After that was REASERCH. We each picked a couple of tricks a broke them down, considered the use of a ramp.


This video is a great reference to anyone who decides to animate motion. We have decided that our animation will begin with a backflip + our character will preform couple of tricks or breakdance moves.

But as the time passed we had only three days to capture group animation and still our own.  When the Stickfas animation process started we crossed everything out and left just the backflip. 


This was THE reference to our stop motion animation. Slow motion is the best thing ever! There was no need in breaking down movements. Although we actually faced many difficulties on the path. The Stickfas parts were breaking and falling apart. But the most annoying thing was securing a wire in one place with the character. This thing was falling all the time and misplacing. After hours of placing the figure and starting over again we managed to get the animation done.




The biggest mistake that has been made was placing the stickfas too close to the wall. Apart from that, maybe a bit more frames would have made the trick spectacular.

I've also tried to remove the wire but i was rather unsuccessful attempt.

As for the personal animation I've produced a qiuck walk cycle. Because I've rushed it, animation turned out quite akward and the figure looks like a maniac.


Things to improve: deffinately the arm movement ( add more motion to them) also couple of frames would do the trick.

January 24, 2012

Critical Studies: Shinji Hashimoto.

For this critical studies task we're required to choose an animation based on it's style, genre,  studio or auteur. I guess my choise is going to be based on a style.


I've always been a big fan of comic books and manga and used to rip out the pages where they had sketchy drawings. Because in my opinion they are more dynamic and realistic. When Linkin Park's "Breaking the habit video" aired  it was something out of this world! I have never seen a comic book come to life before! Even up until now this animation still remains one of my favourite pieces.



This animation was made by "Studio 4°C". This studio has produced numerous feature films, OVAs and shorts. Their work is various and has a unique and also peculiar style: from being totally reckless and weird to very detailed. As you have guessed, I'm going to focus on the animation style. So the person I've chosen as my style guru is Shinji Hashimoto.

It was extremely hard to find the owner of this "sketchy style" because there's not much information on this artist on the Internet. And I'm still not sure if it's right. At first I was convinced that the person who provided the key animation and directed it was the owner of this style. Also while looking at other pieces of animations that utilise the same style, Kazuto Nakazawa was usually part of the animatiors crew. While browsing through Wikipedia an other sourses I didn't find any additional information regarding style and just went on believing that Kazuto Nakazawa was the hand behind it.


But while I was reading the interview with him i found an interseting thing: "The Sketchy style of the Kill Bill anime and the music video for Linkin Park (the guy who asked this question incorrectly credited him for doing Kid's Story in the amatrix) was not his invention, but instead the invention of another animator, Shinji Hashimoto, who first used the style in Isao Takahata's film My Neighbours the Yamadas". This part part put me in the right direction.



The main reason why I have put Shinji Hashimoto's work in the center of my attention is that it has a particular drawing style that I would like to master. I'm not even sure how to name it. It's rather sketchy but almost realistic enough to believe that the chracters are human. The way he makes emphasis on  character's eyes is beyond me. When he was asked where did he get the idea to use a scratchier style he replied: "Basically I don't like drawings that are drawn very clear-cut. I prefer sketchier pictures that have more atmosphere to them. I have used this sketchy-type thechnique on two other productions. The first time was on the titles for earlier project, and the second time I used the sketchy style from beginning to end was on a film for Studio Ghibli".


Shinji Hashimoto provided key animations for the Animatrix's " Kids Story". The Animatrix is a 2003 direct-to-video anthology film based on the Matrix trilogy. The film is a complication of nine animated shorts. 



"Somebody tell me
why it feels more real when I dream than when I am awake.
How can I know if my senses are lying?"
"There is some fiction in your truth, and some truth in your fiction.
To know the truth/ you must risk everything."


Kazuto Nakazawa interview: http://pareview.livejournal.com/22070.html

January 12, 2012

Critical Studies: Brothers Quay


Brothers Quay are two of the most remarkable filmmakers  of our time. Working in collaboration since at least 1969, when they first moved to London from the United States, their stop - action films have introduced a generation of viewers to a lyrical darkness not often associated with animation. Influenced heavily by Central European writers and artists their work reflects the dark psychology resulting form a  century of industrial warfare, surrealist art and dialectical politics. For example they especially been inspired by figures like Polish killed by a German Nazi officer Bruno Schultz , on whose story "Street of Crocodiles" is based. As well as German Dada painter Max Ernst, but also the influential multimedia Czech filmmaker and puppeteer Jan Svankmajer. The latter it is noteworthy has also influenced other famous noted individuals such as film director Tim Burton and the American-born British screenwriter, director and actor Terry Gillam, who is also a member of the Monty Python troupe. Stephen and Timothy Quay would in fact be such great admirers  of Svankmajer that they dedicate on of their short films to him, entitled "The Cabinet of  Jan Svankmajer"  (1984).



This was probably the most mysterious and bizarre animations I have ever seen, in a good way. After watching I felt rather confused and had all these questions running through my head (like: why the action was happening in that particular evironment? why did they use all the machinery? what's the purpose of it?) The puppets were something from the horror movies, had different body parts attached, and sometimes missing those. In my opinion, this animation had one huge flaw - music. The sounds were so annoying that I had to turn off the animation just to rest my ears and then get back to it afterwards. I have to say that they have approached the world of stop-motion in different way. 



Puppets, toys and dolls with missing limbs, misplaced parts, an metal armatures showing through their torn and frayed clothing that's how mainly Brothers Quay characters look like.