Showing posts with label Roger Ramjet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roger Ramjet. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Roger Ramjet - the tip


Even without actual animation, this stuff has some key cartoon elements:
Really distinct and funny voices. Plus the acting and inherent comedic timing is great.

Great cartoon actors have to have that clear delivery that not only sounds natural, but focuses on the jokes. They know just where to pause before an accent and what to stress.

Much full animation doesn't use strong vocal talent, but makes up for it with movement. If you don't have much movement you can sure benefit from funny, distinct voice actors.

Add funny and distinct character designs, and you have instant believable characters-even when they don't actually move.

Of course, I love it when you get all this and great full animation, like in 40s Warner Bros. cartoons, but it's rare to have all the elements that make good cartoons in one film or even one studio.

movie clip:




Friday, July 06, 2007

Great Character Design

Here are some great character designs, all from one single cartoon.Each one is different - a specific character, yet they are all in the same style family.
They are deceptively simple, yet they have all the design principles I talk about in my manuals.

Plus they're funny.
Here's some brilliant organic asymmetry.


We have been sketching these and analyzing them.


Want me to break down what makes them great?

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Gary Owens- Roger Ramjet - Lance Crossfire, Ms. Lottalove -



Gary Owens made a career of being a funny straight man. His voice is straight, yet with a great natural timing and a kindly sarcasm. And an amazing tone and warmth.

It's such a unique character!
I talked to Gary the other day and he is going to do a voice on a commercial I'm animating right now. We're also going to hang out in the next couple weeks and he asked if I'd mind if he brought Jonathan Winters along! Holy crap. How cool is that?

When I was a kid, I had all of Jonathan's records and I'd memorize them and act them out for my Italian bully friends...after they finished crushing my cartilaginous bones and stomping me with their pointy shoes.

Gary is one of the greats and I think he knew everyone cool from the 60s. He's from the generation when fantastic skill and professionalism was taken for granted.



Whoever did the sfx for Ramjet was funny too. What a killer team-the Monty Python of cartoon troupes.


CRASH effects:










Funny cutting of course.
The close-ups:

Gary told me who did Lance Crossfire's voice and now I forget who the actor is (Jim Thurman?)...It's an impression of Burt Lancaster, though, and a great one!




Here's a funny animation idea.
side-of-the-mouth lips synch:








Gary was the easiest actor I ever worked with, He instantly got every joke and added some of his own. (The letter 'M'...the Three Stooges gag and more...)

Here he is as Powdered Toastman. By the way, anyone know what famous actor played the President?




Movie Clip:








Thursday, May 03, 2007

Roger Ramjet - funny cuts, funny eye animation

Funny cuts:










funny eye animation:













Sunday, April 22, 2007

R.Ramjet - "K.O. Corral" - come on, Rimpot

CLICK HERE TO WATCH CLIP!

Funny drawings,

funny stylized designs,

funny verbal gags

funny timing

Funny men made this

There are lots of funny cartoonists and voice talents in the business today, but they are not allowed to be funny anymore.

Leave us alone to do what we were born to and make lots of money off us.























Monday, April 16, 2007

R.Ramjet - "K.O. Corral" - trap tourists

CLICK HERE TO WATCH CLIP!


















Thursday, April 12, 2007

R.Ramjet - "K.O. Corral" - I can fix

CLICK HERE TO WATCH CLIP!



Now don't give away the punch line in the comments...!































Sunday, April 01, 2007

Roger Ramjet - "Woodsman" - clip 2 acting-reacting poses

CLICK HERE TO WATCH ROGER RAMJET CLIP!
Here's a great example of funny opposing poses from Roger Ramjet:Here's what I mean by opposing poses:
http://johnkstuff.blogspot.com/2006/11/composition-7-compose-your-poses.html
The animator added a lot to the already funny dialogue track by drawing funny poses of the characters.

The poses aren't funny arbitrarily either. They are in context of the scene.

Roger Ramjet proves that having a severely low budget doesn't mean you have to have boring unfunny drawings. It just means you can't afford inbetweens. Many producers today believe that whoever can afford the most inbetweens has the best cartoon. So they'll have a lot of boring bland drawings moving smoothly into the next boring bland drawings. When I watch a cartoon, or even an animated feature, instead of marveling at how smooth some animation is, I ask whether the actual expressions and poses are actually original or entertaining. (I actually don't ask anything...I just twitch around in my seat when I see the same old expressions and unnatural "animation gestures" for the thousandth time)

If the acting is entertaining and smooth as in an old Warner's cartoon, then that's the best of both worlds! But we can't always afford that. I'd settle at least for some funny expressive drawings in TV cartoons. That would be a start!

Smoothness costs money. Talent is rarer but cheaper if you allow the talent to do what they are capable of.


If you had to choose between smooth motion of stiff drawings and funny drawings with character, which would you choose? I'm sure some will choose fully animated in any case, right?


I love animation, but I want drawings that would be worth the trouble of moving them.




Thursday, March 29, 2007

Roger Ramjet - "Woodsman" - clip 3 -grunting bear

I loved this bear when I was a kid. He's real funny looking. His voice killed me and my friends. We used to go around school talking in grunts like the Ramjet bear. You shoulda heard us moan and groan when the teacher would hand out the homework assignments!

We learned to actually communicate with grunts and expressions and knew what each other wanted. We would go to the corner store and order potato chips, cigarettes and comic books just by gesturing and grunting. One time Nick the Leb chased us out of his groceteria screaming his own foreigner obscenities at us and waving his broom. We didn't understand the words, but we knew exactly what he meant!

I still do it. Where is this all leading?? To the next writing lesson: How to write grunt language - with conviction and heart.



CLICK HERE FOR ROGER RAMJET CLIP!













Here's another clip:
CLICK HERE TO SEE A ROGER RAMJET CLIP!




Sunday, March 25, 2007

Roger Ramjet - touching himself, close-ups & funny fight

Roger touching himself animation:













extreme close-up cutting:








funny gorilla:




funny fight:

Look at these great drawings! Anyone know who did 'em?





















Monday, March 19, 2007

Roger Ramjet - "Woodsman" - clip 1 opening scene

Look at these hilarious drawings!

CLICK HERE TO WATCH ROGER RAMJET CLIP!


This is great design. It has all the principles of technical good design, but on top of those it's funny looking too. It's like it's making fun of the 60s style.

You might think it's odd that I would get excited over that, but it's pretty rare to see funny drawings in the cartoon business.

Opposing poses-funny body poses, great balance of negative and filled space in the designs.

Funny voices, funny cuts.

This is the opening scene of one of my favorite Ramjet cartoons. The dialogue so far is mere exposition to set up the story, but the animator/director made it funny.





Even this seemingly simple background is funny. It's also great design and super organic, with lots of balance.



HEY BOB KURTZ! WHO DREW THIS ONE?



Friday, March 02, 2007

Roger Ramjet - "is this your brother?"

Here are just some quick thoughts about Roger Ramjet and I'll add more later.When I was a kid, I wasn't a big fan of Jay Ward cartoons, because they were slow and not drawn very funny. I liked the designs and the voices and always looked forward to a new one when it came out, but then was disappointed when I actually would see them.

Rocky and Bullwinkle had great bumpers (Bill Hurtz) and misic and I loved those parts, but the cartoons bored me. Maybe they were too wordy, I don't know. Fractured Fairy Tales had great stylish limited animation by some of Hollywood's best animators, but the stories dragged for me.

In the mid 60s I discovered Roger Ramjet. I thought it was Jay Ward at first because it superficially looks like it.

But I was laughing when I saw it. Out loud, which is rare for cartoons-especially wordy ones. Usually with wordy cartoons, the intent is to make you feel smug and self satisfied that you got some obscure reference or joke, but you don't really laugh out loud much, unlike how you do constantly at a Warner Bros. cartoon or live action comedy.


movie clip:



Roger Ramjet was put together by a bunch of radio DJs and comedians-Gary Owens, Dick Beals and the likes.

They would write and record the soundtrack. Their delivery had true stand up comedian timing and every character had a really funny ultra pro voice-unlike today's cartoon voices which sound like your gay neighbor pinching his nose and squealing like a baby pig being castrated. They also added some funny very specific sfx-not "wacky" like Saturday Morning cartoons-but funny. There's a big difference!

The guys would cut the soundtrack together really tight with almost no time left inbetween dialogue to add any visual gags so you'd think that would be no fun for the animators.

But Fred Crippen and his team figured out ways to have fun. Each director drew the cartoons in their own style. I'll try to get an interview with Fred and Bob Kurtz to talk about that later...

Funny Design
Their character designs are really funny and match the personalities of the characters perfectly. It's a real 60s style, only it's like they are making fun of it. The drawings have sarcasm built into them and that isn't something you can define in words. "Hey Fred, put some sarcasm in your designs!"

Funny Cutting
They use cutting to puncuate the gags and even the accents in the dialogue. This was a brilliant inspiration, and I can't believe no one else ever picked up on this!
They purposely avoid hookups and the "180% rule". They just cut to funny angles and gags that weren't in any script and it adds a ton of fun to the entertainment package.

Funny Gags
They added lots of visual gags - like General Brassbottom up in the lamp...


Conclusion
Roger Ramjet represents a philosophy that doesn't exist anymore. It's the entertainer's code. Every element that is available to all the creative people involved on the production is used to be entertainment. The voices, sfx, design, timing, cutting, poses, backgrounds everything.

All the people involved on Roger Ramjet automatically feel it is their sacred duty as entertainers to give the audience all they have. Real entertainers have this instinct and you have to beat it out of them to make them not use it. That's the situation we have today with the few entertainers that are left in the industry and that's what executives and modern cartoon writers are for-to distance the entertainers from the creative aspects of the project.

That's why execs favor voice directors, story editors, note givers, secretaries and the like over cartoonists and real voice actors and story people.

I used Gary Owens as the voice of Powdered Toastman, and I have to tell you he is a super professional. He understood all the gags in the stories and gave automatic funny delivery as he read them and hammed it up appropriately.

He was so good that he even suggested all kinds of jokes that weren't in my storyboards and so we recorded them on the spot and I put them in the cartoons. Then I had to call Nickelodeon to get permission to make the cartoon funnier than what they already approved. Amazingly, back then that was ok with them!

He seemed so happy to be involved in the creative aspects of the show. I'm sure he has had to work on lots of shows where "voice directors" just view the recording session as another day's work and another paycheck.

Gary seemed totally in his element at Spumco. He just fit in as one of the gang instantly. Gary is a man out of his time. He is known as a great voice actor, but he's also a comedian, a writer and a cartoonist!

Roger Ramjet has to be one of the cheapest cartoons in history, but it proves that you don't need a ton of money to be creative. You just need to let loose some creative artists and let them do what God put 'em on earth to do. Entertain people!

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Raketu - Bobby Bigloaf

2 main pencil drawings:

This cartoon was to be very limited indeed. Only 2 keys.





Lip Sync:


...and some mouth positions


..and a ton of recorded dialogue.

I had to figure out a way to keep the cartoon moving and interesting while drawing attention to the important verbal points in the message.

This is not my favorite way to do things, but it was all that the time and budget allowed for. I Haaaate having to rely solely on words to get a message across, but here I was stuck with the problem.



inked by Brian Romero, colored by John:

Then I remembered one of my favorite cartoons from my childhood-Roger Ramjet!

Roger Ramjet was an extremely limited animation show. Almost no animation and no inbetweens.

But it had hilarious dialogue and acting by Gary Owens and other radio personalities of the time. The stories were funny and fast paced.

And on top of that, Fred Crippen and Bob Kurtz figured out a way to make the visuals funny without actually animating anything!

First, they designed and posed the characters funny.

Then they devised a style of cutting that made the show even funnier and drew your attention to the jokes and vocal acting.


Roger Ramjet - cutting theories:





Roger Ramjet is the funniest TV cartoon ever. It has clever writing, acting, drawing and cutting. It is very low budget but that didn't stop every creative talent on the team from making the most of every creative opportunity! No one said "Only the words can be funny!"

Roger Ramjet clip:





Roger Ramjet is sort of Jay Ward done right.

Now, the words in the Bobby Bigloaf Raketu ad aren't as funny as Roger Ramjet, because after all, it's meant to be a commercial not a story, but I tried to use the cutting technique to make it funnier and make the meanings clearer.

















Also, Eddie does the voice of Bobby!