Thursday, July 19, 2007

Cheap ripoff post today

Sorry peeps, not a lot going on or anything to talk about, except a ripoff from my Blog Brother LIO's most recent post. He posted links to Corky Quackenbush's excellent Mad TV claymation Cops parodies:

Clops 1

Clops 2

Clops 3

Clops 4

Clops 5

I really dig this stuff! Kind of like the forerunner to Robot Chicken, but cruder (visually) - more handmade, and with a much stronger artistic feel to them (especially in terms of lighting and atmosphere). Also the humor is (a little) less sick and twisted, and a lot more creative. I watched these over and over, and I love the darkness and all the practical lights - windows, streetlights, flashlights, police flashers etc, as well as the constantly moving camera. There's something magical about the scene where Gumby is sliding along the street on one foot through pools of darkness, only occasionally passing through a lit area. Also, while Corky's films do have that handmade quality that gives them a certain charm, they're always very elaborately done. It's amazing if you really look at all the props and how good most of them look. I'm guessing he didn't do these completely solo? Probably had assistants to help crank out all the stuff. Anyway, just thought I'd share something so people don't think I fell off the face of the earth!

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Roy T Wood and Kevin Coil (and some others?) pretty much animated/lit/set up cameras/supervised these without much input from Corky other than him jingling his keys at them!

True Story

Darkmatters said...

Wow! Well, they did a damn fine job of it!

Anonymous said...

This can be shocking (to me), BUT, not everyone checks out SMW :o . That's your loss! DarkStrider/Darkmatters, AnimateClay, and others may have a different audience. It is an honor to be be kinda ripped-off, as long as no $$$$ involved ;)

Stop Motion Works is just the 'messenger', the source, a think tank, a Matt Drudge, etc., similar to other informational sources, news, rumor mills, etc. except more specialized in our Stop Motion Animation circle. Once our SMW staff :) releases to the public, it is all YOUR's for absorption, commenting on, reflection, re-posting, etc.; to inform and to inspire one's cellular brain activity & look deeper. Metaphorically, Stop Motion, 'life' one frame at a time; perceptive clarity by slowing down and observating the insanity around us, all accelerating way too fast. In addition, Stop Motion also, 'straight ahead animation', one frame leading to next .... "being in the moment, in the now".

-LIO

P.S. See Strider, if you had not posted your brain cell cogitations on Clops, we would never have known, about Roy T Wood and Kevin Coil. I could not find credits of people who worked on it. Usually, Corky's name associated with it.

jriggity said...

fun stuff!

jriggity

Anonymous said...

Hey, that was a fun trip down memory lane!

Darkstrider, I appreciate the appreciation for the details we put into Clops, and the same for the "handmade" quality of all the stuff I did for Mad TV.

But I have to laugh at "anonymous'"
comment! I usually don't get credit for "key jingling" but he (or she) obviously doesn't know anything about me or my operation

Kevin Coyle and Ray Waad (as I affectionately know Roy Wood) did contribute a lot to the MADtv stuff in varying degrees, but, for instance, Roy wasn't even around for many of CLOPS episodes... Kev was employed at Space Bass Films much more consistently, and though he probably worked on three of the five CLOPS his talents were spread among one of many projects we had going at the time.

You are right though about them not being solo projects - television is unforgiving when it comes to deadlines - it would have been impossible to deliver the more than 4 dozen short films I produced and directed for MADtv without the help of the many talented artists with whom I have been privileged to work, Kevin and Roy being two out of dozens.

I am proud to have been the person who gave Kevin, Roy and others their start in the business. My long time friendship with Kevin was how he moved into stop-motion animation from the art department of major A-list feature films (will he ever forgive me?). Kevin's brilliance is obvious in my films, mostly in the area of set decoration. So much of the detail in props which you noticed came straight from Kev.

But it would be inaccurate to give Kevin and Roy all the credit when there were many others who worked hard on the CLOPS episodes.

One of the wonderful things about stop-motion animation is that usually the people who work in the field are multi-talented. Everyone seems to have done a little bit of everything in the creation of a stop-motion film. Most everyone has some specialty, but they can also jump into almost any position in the crew.

Kevin, for instance, though his forte (in my opinion) was his keen eye for detail in sets and props went on to animate tons of stuff (including some CLOPS characters) at Celebrity Deathmatch and The PJ's among others). Kevin is also a talented director.

Kelly Kucharski, Katy Bowen, Emerick Conrad, Christiane Cegavske (who has also single-handedly created a stop-motion animated feature which continually screens at festivals, wins awards and gets great reviews), and Cameron Gray all have names as fine artists, but joined me in the creation of CLOPS, either making props, sets, and puppets, animating or all of the above. Brett Johnson, Michelle Darnell, Shannon Wade (now working in the art department of major network TV shows and features), Lorelei Pepi (who, last I heard, is still a fantastic college art professor), Simon Lampard (who would take time off from his main gig as a commercial location scout to come and play with us), and Tim Johnson (who has become my associate producer when he's not doing voices, acting, producing live-action) - all of these people not only made contributions in various degrees to CLOPS, but to making the grueling work of churning out ultra-low-budget animation out, on schedule and on budget, and still making it award-winning stuff - making it so much fun!

And of course, so much credit has to go to people like Fred Howard who built the sound tracks from the ground up, and Greg O'Connor who wrote and recorded the "Bad Toys" rip of "Bad Boys"... not to mention the incredible cast I got to work with ad-libbing and riffing off marvelous scripts by the likes of my good friends and writing partners Blaine Capatch, Spencer Green, and Mary Villano, among others...

All I did was direct ("key jingling," I guess)... oh, and build props and sets and lighting design (specifically my favorite part of stop-motion fun), animate, edit, and produce... oh, and to come up with a way of animating video to give it a "reality" look, which had never been done before... nothing more than any other stop-motion dude would do...

But to me, the heroes of the whole thing were the show's producers who pretty much gave me carte blanche to do the shorts the way I wanted from start to finish. Never before or since in the annals of television has one person, such as myself, been given the freedom to take the material off the lot, and with no oversight of any kind, create the film that I wanted to make the way I wanted to make it, turn it in a week before it would air, and see it broadcast pretty much unchanged (except for those dang censors!)!

Thanks for giving me a chance to give credt where credit is due!