Disney s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was the first full-length cel-animated feature to appear on the big screen.
January 19th, 2014
Disney s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was the first full-length
cel-animated feature to appear on the big screen. But if things had gone
a little differently, that honor might have gone to John Carter of
Mars, which MGM was developing with legendary animator Bob Clampett. We
do, however, have some remains of the failed project in the form of
Clampett s test animation.
Clampett,
who is known for his work on Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies, as well
as his television shows Time for Beany and Beany and Cecil, approached
Edgar Rice Burroughs, author of the John Carter stories, about doing an
animated adaptation of his fantastical space tales. Burroughs was so
excited about the idea of an animated John Carter that he contacted MGM,
who was making a mint on Burroughs Tarzan films, about buying a series
of animated shorts. Clampett went ahead and did a test animation
sequence, which both MGM and Burroughs loved.
Sadly,
the film was not to be. MGM s midwestern and southern sales
representatives deemed John Carter too weird for their markets. And the
world did not just lose out on a John Carter movie; if the film
proved a success, more studios might have commissioned films with
the Burroughs brand of strange sci-fi and fantasy visuals. There is a whole
alternate film history, we might have experienced.
Despicable Me 2 Tops at the BOX Office in UK & Ireland
In the year 2013, Despicable Me 2 was the biggest hit movie and it has earned £47 million at the box office. The other big hits included The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug & Les Miserables both the movies have earned £40 million at cinemas in the UK and Republic of Ireland.
Phenakistoscope (1831) A phenakistoscope disc by Eadweard Muybridge (1893).The phenakistoscope was an early animation device. It was invented in 1831 simultaneously by the Belgian Joseph Plateau and the Austrian Simon von Stampfer. It consists of a disk with a series of images, drawn on radii evenly spaced around the center of the disk. Slots are cut out of the disk on the same radii as the drawings, but at a different distance from the center. The device would be placed in front of a mirror and spun. As the phenakistoscope is spun, a viewer would look through the slots at the reflection of the drawings which would only become visible when a slot passes by the viewer's eye. This created the illusion of animation.