Showing posts with label Stooges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stooges. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

The Stooges and Their Enduring Influence


Thursday, September 02, 2010

Someone Made This

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Stooges Studies For Toys


These guys are really hard to draw! They are so unique and have too many interesting subtleties, not only in their physical features, but in their personalities. It's murder trying to cram them all in and still get a likeness.

Ask the competition how hard it is to get likenesses:



When I showed the owners of the 3 Stooges drawings like this they said: "Why is Moe punching Larry? How come you draw him mean? Moe's not mean. He's just....frustrated."

Jim Smith Studies
Excuse the rain damage.



My Moe

I think the 3 Stooges made the funniest films in history. They are the perfect combination of comedic acting, timing, slapstick and cartoon gags. They never cheat you with filler and insincere pathos either. It's the most honest comedy you'lll find anywhere. They give your money's worth.



They have rereleased all their films (plus some lost ones!) in chronological order.


That's good news and bad news. The picture looks great, but the sound has been "remastered" till it's hardly there any more. You have to turn up the volume on your set all the way and still you are straining to hear the voices and sound effects that were perfectly clear on TV and video tapes just a few years ago. Why do they do this? The old cartoons have lousy sound on DVDs too. Each new release has thinner and thinner sound. Does anyone have an explanation for what they are doing? And why they hire deaf people to remix sound?





This volume (3) has one of the craziest, fastest Stooges films of all time! "Cactus Makes Perfect". It's more cartoony than most cartoons and has the funniest shaving scene ever.






Bonus Kissable Larry

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Moe angry at Curly - learning table manners



"Half-Wits Holiday" (1947)


Here's a big inspiration for Ren and Stimpy. The silly man upsets the serious and stern man. This is a classic situation most people can identify with.


Note how the performance is much more important to the humor than the writing. I defy you to write this scene on paper and see if anyone laughs at it.


I love when low class people try to act high class.


CLICK HERE TO WATCH CLIP!