- Joined
- Sep 25, 2014
Certainly very unique for its time when such graphic details in animal were hard to come by.Just saw Watership Down for the first time. Was pretty messed up but still well made.
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Certainly very unique for its time when such graphic details in animal were hard to come by.Just saw Watership Down for the first time. Was pretty messed up but still well made.
You could put Don Bluth's Secret of NIMH there I suppose. Aside from the Disney-like animation, it otherwise had a pretty mature premise. It was an interesting time for experimenting.Along with The Plague Dogs, it's one of those films that could only have been made at its time - the 70s/early 80s. For whatever reason, animated films in that era - even the kids' stuff - was much more mature and sophisticated in its themes than what you generally had before. (Excepting Disney's, of course. That wasn't a really good period for Disney animation.)
Certainly a short dry spell.And then, come the mid-80s, that period ended and films based on half-hour toy commercials - Care Bears, Pound Puppies, Transformers, etc. all got movies - were the order of the day. And the American Rabbit, of course. And then The Little Mermaid came out and we've never been able to fully recover...
You could put Don Bluth's Secret of NIMH there I suppose. Aside from the Disney-like animation, it otherwise had a pretty mature premise. It was an interesting time for experimenting.
Certainly a short dry spell.
Now I'd love to see someone do a Zootopia clone! There's at least one that I know of that's being produced in China (technically animated in the US) called "Rock Dog".As well as some films already mentioned such as The Last Unicorn, Shinbone Alley... I might be missing a few there.
I don't think the dry spell's really ended. After all, the 90s was the era of Disney Renaissance films and their many awful ripoffs; the 00s the era of DreamWorks films and their many awful ripoffs... what era are we in now, I wonder? The era of Disney films that go by one-syllable names and their ripoffs that I have yet to see?
It's funny how this is supposed to be a Chinese film, yet the voices and animation are clearly American. Animation itself isn't all that bad too, considering the budget.Now I'd love to see someone do a Zootopia clone! There's at least one that I know of that's being produced in China (technically animated in the US) called "Rock Dog".
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Ironically the original graphic novel is nothing like this too.It's funny how this is supposed to be a Chinese film, yet the voices and animation are clearly American. Animation itself isn't all that bad too, considering the budget.
I remember! They tried to make a few after that but they ended up shilling for some company that sold Nokia cell phones and pagers. And of course there was that episode a decade ago where Wolf imagined himself as spider man!When I was a child, I loved the Russian piratecopy of Tom & Jerry, "Nu Pogodi" (Ну Погоди, roughly translating into "Oh just you wait"), before the chaos of the perestroika killed it.
Then I remember watching Disney's Adventures of the Gummi Bears, Darkwing Duck, Pepper Ann, Anna Anaconda, Rocko's Modern Life, Ren & Stimpy, Animaniacs and a few others on daytime German TV. Ahhh, they days....I remember! They tried to make a few after that but they ended up shilling for some company that sold Nokia cell phones and pagers. And of course there was that episode a decade ago where Wolf imagined himself as spider man!
I take it you're from the East (if I'm wrong, I apologize).Then I remember watching Disney's Adventures of the Gummi Bears, Darkwing Duck, Pepper Ann, Anna Anaconda, Rocko's Modern Life, Ren & Stimpy, Animaniacs and a few others on daytime German TV. Ahhh, they days....
I take it you're from the East (if I'm wrong, I apologize).
In case I was wrong. I was only going by the note you've watched Nu, Pogodi as a kid and then saw the American stuff later on. I'm not sure how East German TV was like in the 80's, but I'm certain it went through quite a transformation once the country was unified (though I'm sure it didn't stop some form picking up West German signals in the meanwhile). I've learned quite a lot about history of this period in high school so it's a fascinating subject for me see how the end of the Cold War played out.Yes, I am and why do you apologize?
I know very little about East German TV. I know, that they had a version of the "Sandmännchen" and imported Russian cartoons such as "Nu Pogodi", but not much moreIn case I was wrong. I was only going by the note you've watched Nu, Pogodi as a kid and then saw the American stuff later on. I'm not sure how East German TV was like in the 80's, but I'm certain it went through quite a transformation once the country was unified (though I'm sure it didn't stop some form picking up West German signals in the meanwhile). I've learned quite a lot about history of this period in high school so it's a fascinating subject for me see how the end of the Cold War played out.
I know their version of the "Sandman" is still used to this day throughout the country (because I guess nostalgia really is that strong).I know very little about East German TV. I know, that they had a version of the "Sandmännchen" and imported Russian cartoons such as "Nu Pogodi", but not much more![]()
Interesting to see.If you want to know what East German, or really, what all Communist TV was like - animation-wise, you would never find any Western imperialist animation on their TVs, never at all, though with glasnost in the 80s, this began to change and by the end of the decade, you could find DuckTales and Tom and Jerry on TV in many Commie nations.
That is true, I used to see some of that on TV back in the 80's when Nickelodeon once had on a show that mostly served as a depot for a lot of foreign animated junk mixed with live action puppet/human segments (a la Sesame Street). I never realized how often the stuff I had saw came out of the Soviet Bloc back then, much of it I felt was better than the Saturday morning junk I was also seeing.The ban on Western animation turned out to be something of a good thing, as the Russians (as well as the Poles, Czechs, Hungarians, I could go on) developed their own animation industries, with their own idiosyncratic quirks that made some very interesting films and TV shows.