In this scene the thief has stolen Princess Yum Yum's golden backscratcher and shoe. Tac, the cobbler, chases the thief because he has to finish his work on the shoe and feels obligated to save the belongings of the beautiful princess he's become infatuated with.
Saturday, April 12, 2008
My Video of Choice
So to begin on project 2, here I chose a portion of the Richard Williams' animated film, The Thief and the Cobbler. I bought the video of this movie around 1995, my sister dug it back out recently and we've both become mesmerized once again by the great animation and Escher-esque tricks. Out of curiosity I checked out wikipedia to see if I could find out the reason it was not as big a hit as it should have been considering the quality of the animation. Apparently it took close to thirty years to finish, edit, and release it, changing voices, songs, and patrons until the final commercial versions (Miramax's is the most popular) lost quite a bit of William's initial intentions. Check out the history of it here, it's almost as interesting as the film itself.
In this scene the thief has stolen Princess Yum Yum's golden backscratcher and shoe. Tac, the cobbler, chases the thief because he has to finish his work on the shoe and feels obligated to save the belongings of the beautiful princess he's become infatuated with.
In this scene the thief has stolen Princess Yum Yum's golden backscratcher and shoe. Tac, the cobbler, chases the thief because he has to finish his work on the shoe and feels obligated to save the belongings of the beautiful princess he's become infatuated with.
Labels:
animation,
project2,
project2a,
richard williams,
thief cobbler
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1 comment:
Interesting plays on the two-dimensional being mixed with the three-dimensional, the highlight of this occurring with the identical tiling patterns, where one is a floor and the other a pit. I think, if handled properly, this mixing of dimensional readings could lead to an impressive analytical model.
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