• smiletolerantly@awful.systems
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    2 days ago

    Yep.

    Those older movies are beautiful achievements for sure. But it’s disingenuous to say that there isn’t a plethora of movies and shows today that rival and surpass those older examples visually. Not to speak of just how much more fluent animation has become.

    Many of the people who worked on those older masterpieces are still in animation today, and have only become better at their art.

    • Ron@zegheteens.nl
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      2 days ago

      The older movies are more atractive because of the flaws, you see the pencil strokes changing between frames. Today IMO they are too flawless.

      • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        That’s actually a really good point. The flaws make the beauty more human the same way music recorded reel to reel back in the 70s was very human because of the limitations of the day. And it is beautiful.

        Not that a flawless thing can’t be beautiful. I just have a bias towards the humanness (pencil strokes, tape flutter) of the older stuff because that’s what I grew up with.

        • anomnom@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          That’s one of the awesome things about Bluey. The voice acting is genuinely kids talking with their mums and dads.

          Was at least, looks like Joe Blum wanted to end it, and Disney is keeping its corpse alive to license the shit out of it with no new episodes in production. Too bad really, but if the creator wanted to move on, he should have been allowed to.