Friday, October 31, 2008

Bert and Harry Piel Live Again! Long-Lost 1950's UPA Cartoon Commercials Resurface

The awesome ASIFA-Hollywood Animation Archive has started to transfer and share some of the most important (and long-hidden) animation of the modern age: The famous UPA commercials starring the Piels Brothers and their beer!

Bert and Harry Piels pitch their beer in these classic animated commercials
click on the picture of Bert and Harry to jump to the downloads!

At the ASIFA-Hollywood Animation Archive post you can download and watch a super-high-quality QuickTime movie featuring well OVER 7 minutes of long-lost cartoon footage from these incredibly influential animated spots. They look very simple, but UPA's Bert and Harry Piel cartoon commercials really broke new ground and set the stage for a whole new era of "modern" cartoons.

...and according to Steve @ ASIFA, this is just the first HINT of the treasures recently uncovered there!

from Wikipedia: In the 1950s, the Piels brewery had a very successful television and radio campaign when the Young & Rubicam ad agency created Bert and Harry Piel, the fictitious animated owners and pitchmen for the brewery. Voices were provided by the comedians Bob and Ray. Harry (Bob Elliott) was tall and soft-spoken, always calming down the short loudmouth Bert (Ray Goulding) when something went wrong. The first Bert and Harry commercials aired December 1955 and ran until 1960.

More on the Cartoon commercials of Bert and Harry Piel at http://www.tvacres.com/admascots_pielsbrothers.htm

Mega-thanks to Stephen Worth and the ASIFA-Hollywood Animation Archive

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Cartoon Matrix

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Wally Wood's 22 Panels That Always Work -- High-Res Scans of a Classic Cheat-Sheet

Legendary EC Comics artist Wallace Wood created a shorthand encyclopedia of many different ways to keep your comic book panels and staging interesting. It came to be known as "Wally Wood's 22 Panels That Always Work."

Wallace Wood Wally Wood's 22 Panels That Always Work by Wally Wood

It was originally drawn in various pieces by Wally Wood to remind himself to stay on his toes. Later it was compiled and used by Wally Wood's assistants to help them emulate the master.

The full-sized, high-resolution version of the image below can be found at Joel Johnson's blog. Joel came into possession of the original paste-up and has generously scanned it and shared it with the world There's a lot of cool backround information about this legendary cheat-sheet at Joel Johnson's blog.

Wallace Wood Comic Book Layouts Cheat Sheet 22 Panels That Always Work by Wally Wood
Hey Joel...Thanks!

Sunday, October 26, 2008

A Sparky Watts EPIC Funny Adventure Comic at Pappy's

Don't miss this awesome Sparky Watts comic adventure
over at Pappy's Golden Age Comics Blog!
Sparky Watts Comic Book by Boody Rogers -- Are you extra small or am I a giant?

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Crazy Pics
















SpongeBob Magazine Halloween Pumpkin Cover Painting - On your Newsstands Now!

The new issue of SpongeBob SquarePants Magazine has a cover I painted a few months ago...a special Halloween themed portrait of SpongeBob and Patrick as seen from inside a Jack-o-Lantern pumpkin...
SpongeBob and Patrick Pumpkin magazine cover painting
(Click on the cover above for a bigger version)
...and here's the original painting before all the word-balloons, headlines and logos:
SpongeBob and Patrick Halloween Pumpkin
(Click on the image above for a bigger version)
This was painted digitally using the fantastic (and cheap) graphics program, ArtRage 2.5
I saved a bunch of different versions of this one as I was working on it so I could recreate a sort of step-by-step drawing painting process. Keep an eye out for that post in the near future.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Early Peanuts Animation: Charlie Brown and Snoopy on the Ford Show

Here's a nice treat from CartoonBrew.com ...in remembrance of Peanuts animator Bill Melendez, Jerry Beck has posted some animated rarities from the earliest days of the Peanuts cartoons. You can watch it below, but it's bigger and better on CartoonBrew.



At the 2:30 mark of this video, (after a trailer for the first full-length Peanuts animated cartoon, "A Boy Named Charlie Brown,") we get to see the very first occurance of an animated Charlie Brown, Snoopy and company...animated by Bill Melendez for an opening on the Tennesee Ernie Ford Show. The voice of Charlie Brown? None other than Paul Frees!

Peanuts TV commercial Linus and PigPen sell a Ford car
The video above features commentary by Jerry Beck, but he has also included a link to the commentary-free version of the video. Check out the whole post at http://www.cartoonbrew.com/brewtv/peanutsephemera

PS...if you like this sort of retro-cartoon commercial post, check out these other winners:

Mr. Owl, How many licks does it take to get to the Tootsie-Roll center of a Tootsie-Pop?
How Many Licks, indeed? The full-length UNCUT version of the classic Tootsie-Pop commercial!

Fizzies Vintage Cartoon TV Commercial - Brilliantly Simple Story and Design Work!

Vintage Cartoon Commercial - Dandy Drawings and a Jaunty Jingle!

Thursday, October 16, 2008

King Aroo - Mr. Elephant and Yuptop Make Some Magic - July 20th 1952

This is one of my favorite King Aroo strips so far...Yuptop gets dressed up and takes center stage, we got magic, and we get to have some fun with Mr. Elephant, too. Every panel has got that little special something that makes this strip a worthy companion to the gentle lyrical humor of Pogo and Krazy Kat.

It's also fun to watch Yuptop got though all his emotions without even having a mouth!

Click on any panel to view a nice BIG hi-res scan
King Aroo Cartoon elephant approaches Yuptop in wizard outfit
King_Aroo cartoon magician reading from magic book while comic elephant looks into magic top hat
King Aroo - Mr. Elephant gets all excited about learning magic tricks
King Aroo Yuptop hand cartoon elephant a page from the magic book
King Aroo listens as cartoon elephant reads the magical spell from a paper
King Aroo POOF! Mr. Elephant disappears by magic as a cartoon rabbit pops out of Yuptop's magic hat


Click on the thumbnail below to see the full color King Aroo Sunday comic strip from March 30th 1952 in high-resolution splendor!
King Aroo - Mr. Elephant and the Magic Act


More King Aroo Sunday strip scans:




King Aroo Makes a Movie

More on King Aroo and cartoonist Jack Kent:

More about King Aroo at Toonopedia

Wanna see more King Aroo Sunday strips?
Just let me know in the comments below and I'll keep 'em coming ^_^