So what about Pantheon? It doesn’t seem relevant to this discussion apart from it also being animated.
I hate simulation theory, and even with that bias, that show had so many cool concepts.
It also produced some well-known cartoonists who went on to have very successful careers: most notably Seth MacFarlane, creator of Family Guy.
Whenever I think of Tartakovsky I also think of his clone wars micro series he did for Cartoon Network. The episode with the special forces clone troopers that has no dialogue after the first 30-60 seconds or show is just so unbelievably good. So much tension.
the episode with mace windu taking on an entire droid army - by himself - is what opened my imagination to the true potential that a jedi master has. it's a shame that neither the movies, nor any other tv show, have come close to conveying "why" everyone fears and respects force users.
Clone Wars microseries did more for my love of star wars than all the movies put together.
pure effing magic.
As a kid, that was my favorite episode of the series first season. I still remember coming back after school catching the 5 minute micro-episodes on Cartoon Network.
> it's a shame that neither the movies, nor any other tv show, have come close to conveying "why" everyone fears and respects force users.
It stops becoming Star Wars as we know it and starts becoming Dragon Ball Z with laser swords. Quite a number of books and video games in the Expanded Universe/Legends veered in that direction, in many cases to the detriment of consistency in lore.
this is a billion dollar idea. i wish i had the capital to get it off the ground, sigh.
> in many cases to the detriment of consistency in lore.
"Somehow, Palpatine returned" is the current state of the lore. it literally cant get worse, so why not have some fun?
It was spellbinding. When he dons the blindfold and everything goes black and silent for what feels like eternity...
- RAoJQ: The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest
- SM: Sailor Moon
- GW: Gundam Wing
Three Blind Archers is Tartakovsky's favorite episode. [1]
It made the cgi clone wars look so amateurish.
The best sam jack imo is the light vs dark. My jaw dropped at that.
He's definitely one of the few creators where I can feel him tickling my mind, overwhelming me with creativity.
It was also pretty cool watching Mace force crush grievous‘s chest lol
Never got around to watching Samurai Jack but really should.
I was at a talk with Tartakovsky a long time ago. I don't remember all the details, but he said when they first got their descriptions of Grievous from Lucasfilm, they didn't have much to go off of. Lucas said Grievous had a cough and that was it. Tartakovsky's team didn't know why he had a cough, so they created the Mace Windu scene.
And Palpatine just raises his eyebrows while she is doing it, amazing. Was hugely disappointed when I saw Episode 3 and what they did to Grievous, that dude was scary in the shorts.
"Shinobi ... warrior of the night"
I adored if at the time and it still looks and feels unique to this day
Sonics is so much wider than language and music but in a lot of real time art takes a back seat.
After reading the article I googled for “samurai jack art style guide” and found this (it has a bunch of backgrounds part way down): https://characterdesignreferences.com/art-of-animation-8/art...
I used to have an artist roommate obsessed with the art style of the show. If anyone hasn't yet watched the rebooted season from 2017, I highly recommend it.
Edit: one great clip from S5 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IFDkcvrSaYU
The new stuff felt more mature to me and the old stuff more like a kids show.
Overall I liked both, but I get it, the new stuff felt a bit off.
You always got the sense from the original that SJ was held back by the censors (Jack has cartoon Wolverine syndrome--he's got a legendary cutting edge, but is only allowed to use it on doors and robots). But I agree, after four seasons of borderline pacifist Jack, suddenly flipping to "Oh, I guess Jack kills people now" hand-waived away by a flashback of his father using lethal force when necessary, was a bit jarring and tonally inconsistent.
Makoto Iwamatsu (Aku) died in 2006 :(
Balance is important!
He never topped this effort in the rest of his work. He's been taking animation shortcuts ever since.
Even to this day a beautiful work of art.
Great analysis!
“There is always hope.” - SJ
photonthug•1d ago