tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3275154027288684412.post488473195445969316..comments2024-01-23T06:06:59.186-05:00Comments on discontinued go to www.aceandson.com/blog: ASIFA Magazine - Fred Mogubgub, part four. Make A Wish, American Pieroconnorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04933040935053560675noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3275154027288684412.post-79926565613468275742010-09-24T10:16:10.741-04:002010-09-24T10:16:10.741-04:00That's a great story.
Bob had told me that Mo...That's a great story.<br /><br />Bob had told me that Mogubgub's sequences needed a lot of work to put together (though it sounds like that one would've been relatively easy). They required so much work that his assistant filed to be credited as an animator. Bob's argument, which ultimately prevailed, was to effect of "Look at the work, no one else could've created this animation. Assembling it is a mechanical task."roconnorhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04933040935053560675noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3275154027288684412.post-53974514300673887562010-09-23T10:35:24.620-04:002010-09-23T10:35:24.620-04:00I remember Bob having to rush out an animatic to t...I remember Bob having to rush out an animatic to try to sell the film to PBS. He wanted as much footage as he could get. Fred and I had a sequnce of his (storyboard) shot on hi contrast film - only blacks and whites. He, then, started on one side of the actual film coloring with markers and paint. I started on the other, and we met in the middle. The wild colors and color anmiation hand painted on the film never was matched in the final film. It was a loss, to my eye.Michael Spornhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02018522723674960270noreply@blogger.com