Wednesday, June 30, 2004

JULY, 2003 ~ JOHN K AND THE ART OF MENTAL ILLNESS





Ren & Stimpy is a critique of the accepted norms of good taste of status quo cartoons as well as of today's society. Ren & Stimpy attempts to make beautiful that which is base, vile or taboo. Beauty in Ren & Stimpy is defined as that which provokes laughter. All that is base, vile or taboo can easily be shown to be such because of the repressive nature of society. Ren & Stimpy is truly a psychoanalytic cartoon. When I say that, I don't mean in the clinical sense; Freud probably made greater contributions to the art world than the health world (for example the entire Surrealist movement owes its existence to Freud). The repressed world of the collective psyche is the murky foundation from which Ren & Stimpy shows grow like bacteria. Ren & Stimpy is an opera of mental health succumbing to the libido. In visual imagery that only the art form of 2d animation could, Ren & Stimpy sets free our deep, dark thoughts locked up in our subconscious as laughter.

"THE REN AND STIMPY SHOT"

The greatest technical innovation of Ren & Stimpy is its use of the microscopic extreme close-up. Extreme close-up shots are a weakness of 2d animation (the flat nature of 2d animation doesn't do well blown up to a large scale and therefore it isn't used alot). Ren & Stimpy however pushes it as far as it will go, i.e. to reveal abhorrent skin imperfections of the character. This should probably be known as the "ren and stimpy shot" in film lingo. Ren & Stimpy is an expression of the child's bewilderment and microscopic gaze at the world through the body. Up close, the skin is porous, hairy, and full of imperfections. It secretes fluids and it smells. The body is not a porceline thing of perfection; it farts, burps and does other embarassing things.

POSTMODERNISM IN ANIMATION

Disney movies often have in-jokes. They will show a Disney character from another Disney movie faintly in the background like Belle walking through the streets of The Hunchback of Notre Dame. The specific departments will try to immortalize themselves through caricatures of staff members or other ways like the infamous SFX cloud in THE LION KING. While Ren & Stimpy does similar in-jokes, it goes further. Ren & Stimpy makes reference to other cartoons in a postmodern play of cartoon iconography. For example, take the episode of John's second coming, courtesy of Spike TV, REN SEEKS HELP. On the surface, it is about Ren's trip to a psychologist and his description of his childhood spent torturing a frog. However, the frog is very similar to the Al Jolson frog from the most heralded of Looney Tunes episodes, ONE FROGGY EVENING. Is this an accident or coincidence? Stephen Spielberg described this Chuck Jones episode as the "Citizen Kane" of animation. John K is subtextually telling the world what he thinks of Stephen Spielberg's animation appreciation. John K is the one torturing the frog not Ren and that's not just any frog, it's Chuck Jones' Al Jolson frog in a Ren & Stimpy episode. Although, it was his childhood friend (albeit object of sadistic abuse), he can't bring himself to kill the legacy. Finally at the end of the show he shoots a gun through its mouth. The show ends abruptly with the familiar Looney Tunes rings around John K characters. This may appear to be John flipping the bird to Looney Tunes, but the whole show is actually John's tribute to the late Chuck Jones in the highest compliment that can be made by an animator (note: this episode may have been in production before Chuck Jones' death. One of John K's heroes is the late Bob Clampett who had an infamous war with Chuck Jones. This episode may actually be John K's continuation of the "war" on behalf of his late mentor.) Nevertheless, this is a story about animation through an animation and yet to most viewers, it was a hilarious display of mental breakdown in an entertaining way. This is the "genius" of John K: his ability to tell an entertaining story while at the same time thumbing his nose to the powers that be. As Ren & Stimpy did in its original heralded run, the new episodes are displaying the semiotic dexterity of playing with cartoons as signs to be referenced as cultural icons in ironic situations.

FEBRUARY, 2002 ~ MONSTERS INC. MOVIE REVIEW



Monsters are a symbol of childhood fears. What are children afraid of? They are afraid of being left alone, especially by their parents. When one or both of a child's parents go to work during the day, mystery and anxiety must set in. If one of the parents work long hours and have little time to spend with the child, the anxiety and fear will be greater.

There is a fascination and a certain anxiety of children with the adult world: where do adults go during the day? As children we learned from the Flintstones that adults carried lunch boxes to a construction site, punched in their time cards (rocks) and loved to hear the horn signal lunch time or the end of day. Just as the title indicates, the Monsters exist in an Incorporated world like that of the Flintstones. "We scare, because we care". This catchy slogan and the ubiquitous eye logo is as capitalist as Mcdonald's golden arches. Let's be clear. This is not the Latin quarter of Victor Hugo's Paris. The world of the monsters is a clean, ordered city of hardworking money-makers. They rent appartments and eat in posh sushi restaurants named after the special effects great, Ray Harryhausen.

Mike and Sully are monster partners in the business of scaring little children during the night. In the Alvar Aaltoesque space of their corporate factory, Sully enters doors to become transported to a child's bedroom. He attempts to scare the child into screaming which is captured and measured by the monsters' factory. Apparently children's screams are the energy source of this nonsensical city. However, during one of Sully's work ventures, one child (appropriately named Boo) accidentally goes through the portal into the world of the monsters. As we have already learned through one mishap at the factory, if any child's things happen to get through the doors, chaos insues. It seems children and anything they touch are deemed so toxic in this world that special ops crews are brought in when a sock is accidentally stuck to a monster (this particular scene in my opinion is a subtle hommage to E.T.). Thus, children (if they make it through the portal) evoke fear in the monsters, which is a complete inversion of the traditional child monster relationship. When Boo enters the world of Mike and Sully, she is like Godzilla entering Tokyo or King Kong loose in New York.

Monsters Inc. is a reversal of the child's fear relationship to the adult world. The adult world of corporate jobs, sushi restaurants and systems of control (the aforementioned bio-hazard corps and police) is metaphorically embodied by the world of Monstropolis. Here, children get the last laugh. In this animated world, children are the so-called Monster, powerful and destructive and capable of inciting fear and hysteria. After all, isn't the adult's main purpose in raising a child to make them an orderly member of society? Colouring outside of the lines and breaking things are anathema to an adult. In the fantasy world of Monsters Inc. children are feared and capable of creating havoc on the world of adults.

SEPTEMBER, 2001 ~ SHREK MOVIE REVIEW



For the record, I respect and love the achievements of Disney in the world of animation. If this review seems critical of Disney it is only because I believe that this film is a critique of Disney's lofty position in the animated world. It is a complete inversion of all things Disneyesque: the sacharine, the happy and the large-eyed. Shrek focusses on that which is repressed by Disney: the grotesque creatures of fairy tales who have no dimensions other than to be villainized or slain.

It begins (before the credits) with a fairy tale book that Shrek is reading on the toilet and reveals what the plot is. Shrek rips a page out of the book to wipe his rump with to let us know what Dreamworks is going to do with traditional Disney style fairy tales. After Shrek has been attacked by village people, we find out that fairy tale creatures (many of whom are Disney characters like Pinocchio) are being captured and taken to a camp. We are later informed that these fairy tale creatures have been imprisoned by a Lord Farquaad to Shrek's swamp in a kind of fairytale prison camp.

Shrek, after meeting Donkey goes to Lord Farquaad's castle to protest the invasion of his swamp. Much to his and our surprise, the castle bears an uncanny resemblance to Disneyworld: it has parking, a ticket queue complete with turnstiles and a cardboard-facade appearance to its architecture. There is a humorous scene where Lord Farquaad is trying to get the Gingerbread Man to reveal where hidden fairytale creatures are in true Scarface fashion: he has already broken off his legs and is threatening to take away his jelly buttons. The Lord Farquaad we discover is a tyrant over the poor fairy tale creatures. He has captured the Magic Mirror from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs and coerces it to reveal whether he is king. The Mirror informs him that he won't be king until he marries a princess, and thus he holds his competition to find his champion.

After soundly thrashing Lord Farquaad's men in a WWF styled fight, Lord Farquaad bargains with Shrek to rescue the princess in exchange for a deed to his swamp. Shrek goes to slay the dragon with his sidekick, Donkey who provides comic relief with humming and inane conversation. The dragon however is not just a typical monster to be slain; it is an amorous female with a personality. It has become smitten by Donkey and there is a gender reversed scene of King Kong playing with Jessica Lange.

Along the way back to the castle, there is a scene which literally pokes fun at the uber Disney movie, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. The princess has just woken up and is outside singing a duet with a bird. The bird and the Princess exchange librettoes much like in Snow White but in Shrek, the Princess's high pitch is enough to blow up the bird. So she decides to cook the bird's eggs for breakfast.

Unlike the pre-fifties ideal of lady qualities as epitomized by Snow White (modest, squeaky-voiced with fastidious domestic abilities) Princess Fiona burps, eats rats and sports a mean karate kick; she is a strong individual woman (even when being rescued she is pro-active in her search for her "true love's first kiss"). Although Shrek has a happy ending, it is yet another subversion. Contrary to the Disney status quo the princess does not become beautiful after her kiss from Shrek but retains her ogresse-like features. Shrek ends in an Austen Powers singalong which is rock music, not an adult contemporary anthem. Just as Donkey is not like Eddie Murphy but is Eddie Murphy to our collective ears, one can see that Shrek was made to be a part of mainstream culture in its endless references to popular culture. Although epitomizing certain values of their times, Disney movies of the Golden Age were timeless in their intentions.

Disney has a monopoly over all the famous fairy tales. To create an animation now based on any of the Grimm Brothers' stories would be an infringement of copyright over Disney. Dreamworks has found a way to animate a fairy tale despite and in spite of this while at the same time subverting the Disney empire over the imagination.

Thursday, June 24, 2004

20.10.03 ~ THE OTTAWA ANIMATION FESTIVAL


the highlight of the festival was definitely meeting john canemaker who signed books and hosted his own selection of films. congratulations to pasquale, normand and the other teletoon winners.

Wednesday, June 23, 2004

04.10.02 ~ 06.10.02 ~ THE OTTAWA ANIMATION FESTIVAL


the highlight of the festival was the JOHN KRICFALUSI retrospective where he showed some unreleased material. BILL PLYMPTON was also at the festival, as was animation blast's AMID AMIDI.

13.09.02 ~ THE TORONTO FILM FESTIVAL


i only saw one movie, the sweatbox. it was a documentary about the making of disney's emporer's new groove, which actually was a completely new movie risen out of the ashes of another project, kingdom in the sun.

the launch of my blog!

hi all,

i'm going to migrate my news section to this trendier way of keeping a web journal. therefore, even though these events already happened i'm reentering them at the present date. please feel free to leave comments and drop me a line!

thanks.