
- Time
- Post link
>> If true, this would mean that Dick might have been making so little progress on the film, he was digging into the pencil tests from almost two decades ago in order to boost the weekly footage count.
Or he was having the scene redrawn, as many scenes were (although since the scene was unused this is less likely). Or Maccurdy misinterpeted the question as referring to another, similar shot she'd seen.
Well, I'm back from Comic Con. Had a great time as always. Lost a lot of money. Not sure how I'm going to make rent this week, but boy was it worth it. I'll probably be posting a long ramble at FFrevolution.com.
I actually wore my black Cafepress.com/cobbler Tack tshirt on friday. One person recognized me, and got a free copy of Thief Mark II for his troubles. On saturday, Josh Way recognized me WITHOUT the t-shirt. I was standing in line on my knees (I was tired), and he recognized me ... and got a Thief Mark II for his troubles. =)
I spoke to animation scholar Jerry Beck and gave him a bunch of copies, because I know they'll be going to good homes. Very grateful to Amid and Jerry for putting that interview up at Cartoon Brew. Jerry's "Worst Cartoons Ever" panel is hilarious.
While talking to Jerry I got to meet Bill Plympton .... he'd also heard of my project .... very cool. He was very nice and I also met someone who was with him - I didn't quite catch her name but I believe it was Margaret and that she's an animator. Sorry for the fuzzy facts here.
At the Comic Con film festival I met Raul Garcia (who worked on Roger Rabbit) and saw his terrific short film The Telltale Heart .... animated in stark blacks and whites and narrated by Bela Lugosi .... predating Sin City and the French film Renaissance, but now competing with them.
And .... wonderfully ...
I got to meet and briefly talk to Eric Goldberg .... an honor, I'm a huge fan ... he might be the best animator working today, certainly among the top few.
He'd seen my Thief project, which is nice, and was glad that I was restoring this material. I plan to send him a lot of DVDs, though I'm sure he's collected a lot of this material himself already.
I met a bunch of other people, so many I wound up running out of copies of The Thief to give out ... at that particular moment I was talking to Hans Perk from AFilm animation in Denmark (http://www.afilm.com), Larry Loc from ASIFA, and a fellow who I think was Eric Goldberg's son ...? I think his last name was "Goldberg." My memory fails me for the moment.
He'd seen the cut, and enjoyed it, but felt strongly that I should have done Dick's cut more closely, and not included any Calvert animation. As he said: "The [Williams] storyboards are better than the [Calvert] animation."
Which is true.
He felt I should redo the cut, replacing the Calvert animation with the Williams storyboards, feeling that if Dick saw the film this way "it would kill him."
Eric agreed that the storyboards should have been/should be reinstated.
This had also been Holger Leihe's opinion, and, I'm sure, the opinion of other animators who've seen this cut.
My response was an ashamed "I know, I know ..." which became an "I know, I know, but ..."
I didn't follow Dick's cut of the film exactly for Recobbled. I could have - I could have edited this film a myriad of different ways. But due to the insane complexity of this edit, I decided to pick just one way of editing the film, and stick to it, otherwise I would be working on it for a long, long time.
My decision was to include Calvert animation, new music, scenes that Dick had cut out, and other material that deviated from the workprint.
Why? Well, as a purist I want to see Dick's version of The Thief and the Cobbler. As an editor, I know Dick's version was never completed, and I want to entertain the audience as much as possible. And sadly, the quality of the workprint (the pencil tests in particular) still isn't all that good.
I know that an audience would rather watch finished animation than pencil tests and storyboards, and I made the decision to use Calvert footage to help tell the story and make the film feel more complete. Sadly, it's not exactly Dick's cut anymore, but I feel it's easier for a viewer to turn their brain off and watch it .... not have to think as much. I'm not saying it's BETTER this way, because it isn't, it's simply easier to watch for the general public.
But yeah, it's a tradeoff, and for Dick's sake, I would ideally want to present him with a version that matched his cut perfectly. I do worry that my cut would "kill him."
The only reason I haven't done an alternate cut is that it would be a huge amount of work. And also because I feel I made the right decision for this version of the film.