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Schirmer Encyclopedia of Film

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seminal Silly Symphonies, including Flowers and Trees<br />

(1932), the first cartoon made in three-strip Technicolor;<br />

Three Little Pigs (1933), famous for its Depression-era<br />

rallying cry <strong>of</strong> ‘‘Who’s Afraid <strong>of</strong> the Big Bad Wolf?’’; The<br />

Country Cousin (1936), which established a definitive<br />

design for cartoon mice; and The Old Mill (1937), using<br />

the multiplane camera. All <strong>of</strong> these made aesthetic, technical,<br />

and narrative strides in the field. Many <strong>of</strong> early<br />

Silly Symphonies were drawn by Ub Iwerks and based on<br />

a ‘‘rope’’ aesthetic <strong>of</strong> elongated faces and limbs. Fred<br />

Moore’s use <strong>of</strong> the ‘‘circle’’-based ‘‘squash ‘n’ stretch’’<br />

animation in Three Little Pigs, however, essentially<br />

prompted the change in Disney’s aesthetic that led to<br />

an advance in ‘‘personality’’ animation and an increased<br />

realism in the films that was to characterize the studio’s<br />

signature style. The multiplane camera, which made its<br />

debut in The Old Mill, facilitated this style further by<br />

ensuring that all the moving figures and changing environments<br />

stayed in perspective and maintained a depth<br />

<strong>of</strong> field. At this point, Disney effectively defined animation<br />

and created a legacy that all other producers have<br />

sought to imitate or challenge.<br />

As Disney continued its development with what<br />

were arguably the studio’s two masterpieces, Pinocchio<br />

(1940) and Fantasia (1940)—films that consciously<br />

strove to define the ‘‘art’’ <strong>of</strong> animation in aesthetic and<br />

cultural terms—the Warner Bros. studio established itself<br />

through the work <strong>of</strong> Hugh Harman (1903–1982) and<br />

Rudolf Ising (1903–1992) and the presence <strong>of</strong> Bosko, the<br />

studio’s first animated star. Much <strong>of</strong> the Warner output<br />

was based on music already owned by the studio, and the<br />

early cartoons—the Looney Tunes series and, later, the<br />

Merrie Melodies—may be seen as prototypical music<br />

promos, as these films reinvigorated the market in sheet<br />

music and recordings. Following the Disney strike <strong>of</strong><br />

1941 (which essentially ended the first Golden Era <strong>of</strong><br />

animation) and the purchase in 1944 <strong>of</strong> Leon Schlesinger<br />

Productions by Warner Bros., a new house style emerged,<br />

first under director Friz Freleng (1905–1995), then<br />

through the major creative impact <strong>of</strong> Tex Avery (1908–<br />

1980), which saw Chuck Jones (1912–2002), Frank<br />

Tashlin (1913–1972), Bob Clampett (1913–1984), and<br />

Robert McKimson (1911–1977) become the new heirs<br />

to the animated short. Altogether more urban and adult,<br />

the Warner Bros. cartoons were highly inventive, redefining<br />

the situational gags in Disney films through a higher<br />

degree <strong>of</strong> surreal, self-reflexive, and taboo-breaking<br />

humor.<br />

The Fleischers had the highly sexualized Betty Boop,<br />

with her cartoons’ strong embrace <strong>of</strong> African American<br />

culture and underground social mores; the blue-collar<br />

hero, Popeye; and the outstanding Superman cartoons<br />

<strong>of</strong> the 1940s. Hanna-Barbera had the enduring Tom<br />

and Jerry; Walter Lantz (1899–1994) had created<br />

Cartoons<br />

Woody Woodpecker; and Terrytoons had debuted<br />

Mighty Mouse, parodying Mickey Mouse and<br />

Superman. But Warners had the zany Daffy Duck, the<br />

laconic wise guy, Bugs Bunny, and gullible dupes Porky<br />

Pig and Elmer Fudd, who became popular and moraleraising<br />

figures during the war-torn 1940s and its aftermath.<br />

The cartoons continued to be innovative and<br />

developmental. Their soundtracks also progressed to<br />

enhance the dynamics <strong>of</strong> the more surreal narratives.<br />

Former Disney stalwart Carl Stalling (1891–1972) and<br />

effects man Treg Brown combined short pieces <strong>of</strong> music<br />

and a bizarre range <strong>of</strong> inventive sounds to ‘‘mickey<br />

mouse’’ the movement (follow the action on screen with<br />

exactly matching sound) or to create comic counterpoint<br />

to the dramatic events. And Mel Blanc (1908–1989)<br />

continued to supply the vocalizations for all the<br />

Warners’ cartoon characters.<br />

Chuck Jones and Tex Avery, in particular, revised<br />

the aesthetics <strong>of</strong> the cartoon, changing its pace and subject<br />

matter, relying less on the ‘‘full animation’’ <strong>of</strong> Disney<br />

and more on different design strategies and thematic<br />

concerns such as sex and sexuality, injustice, and the<br />

inhibiting expectations <strong>of</strong> social etiquette. In many<br />

senses, the innovation in cartoons as various as Jones’s<br />

The Dover Boys <strong>of</strong> Pimento University or the Rivals <strong>of</strong><br />

Roquefort Hall (1942), Avery’s Red Hot Riding Hood<br />

(1943), and Bob Clampett’s Coal Black and de Sebben<br />

Dwarfs (1943) anticipate the more formal experimentation<br />

<strong>of</strong> the United Productions <strong>of</strong> America (UPA) studio,<br />

a breakaway group <strong>of</strong> Disney animators (Steve Bosustow,<br />

Dave Hilberman, John Hubley, and Zack Schwartz)<br />

wishing to work more independently and more in the<br />

style <strong>of</strong> modernist art (actually pioneered at the Halas<br />

and Batchelor and Larkins Studios in England during the<br />

war) than in comedy. Though now remembered for<br />

popular characters like the short-sighted Mr. Magoo,<br />

UPA made Gerald McBoing Boing (1951) and The Tell-<br />

Tale Heart (1953), which used minimalist backgrounds<br />

and limited animation and was clearly embracing a<br />

European modernist art sensibility that was emerging in<br />

the ‘‘reduced animation’’ <strong>of</strong> the Zagreb Studios in then-<br />

Yugoslavia, and particularly in the work <strong>of</strong> its leading<br />

artist, Dusˇan Vukotic (1927–1998).<br />

In this work, as in work by studios in Shanghai, the<br />

National <strong>Film</strong> Board <strong>of</strong> Canada, and even at the shortlived<br />

GB Animation Unit, a desire existed to embrace the<br />

art and technique <strong>of</strong> Disney while ultimately rejecting its<br />

aesthetic and industrial model in order to privilege different<br />

notions <strong>of</strong> the cartoon. It is pertinent to remember<br />

that progressive conceptions <strong>of</strong> the cartoon had occurred<br />

in Britain as early as 1934, when Anthony Gross and<br />

Hector Hoppin had lyricized the form in Joie de Vivre,<br />

and later, when Halas and Batchelor made their short<br />

Poet and Painter films for the Festival <strong>of</strong> Britain in 1951,<br />

SCHIRMER ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FILM 223

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