Before I get into the post I have to thank Thad K. for hooking me up with this one. I love the Lantz Swing Symphonies, there's never really much of a story just gags, dancing and jazz but I think they're just so damn entertaining. "The Greatest Man In Siam" has some really great dancing animation in it. Particularly Pat Matthews (one of my all-time favorites) animation of the Sultan's daughter. Here's Grim Natwick's model sheet for "Miss X" (I had erroneously credited it to Matthews. Steve Worth commented that it was really by Natwick) and two clips from the cartoon. The first clip picks up at the best part of the film when the "hottest man in Siam" enters through the end of the short. The second clip is part of the same clip but of an incredible dance sequence by Pat Matthews in which I've slowed it down to see each drawing in action. Fantastic animation, done without live reference! This is really great cartoon with some nice experimenting going on. The backgrounds are flat colors and even made from colored paper and there's some nice cutting throughout the cartoon. I think these thing typify a lot of Shamus Culhane's Lantz cartoons, he had a great unit working with him.
P.S.-My pal Andy Latham is on the lookout for demostration videos featuring animators. Please check out his blog and let him know if you know of any other videos online that he can link to. Thanks!
You should probably put in a link to Thad's post on the similar 1944 Lantz Swing Symphony Abou Ben Boogie
ReplyDeletehttp://classicanimation.blogspot.com/2006/09/sheik-boogie-woogie.
Van Eaton also recently sold me a cel they listed as being from Greatest Man in Siam, tho it appears in Abou Ben Boogie; can you confirm that it doesn't appear in the complete cartoon?
http://tag.rubberslug.com/gallery/master_query.asp?SeriesID=28624
That cell is definetly from "Abou Ben Boogie". There's no scene like that in "Siam" and she doesn't have headress in it either. Cool cell though.
ReplyDeleteDAAMMMMNNNNNnnn... damn.. really awesome.
ReplyDeletethanks for adding the frame by frame video to go along with it
dancing animation always impresses the hell out of me
i forgot to mention the girl designs: WOW!!!!!
ReplyDeleteShane, I've been wanting to post that model sheet for the longest time but I was holding out until I could get a hold of the cartoon. I hadn't seen since I was a kid. I agree, Matthews is totally showing off in this scene. I'm glad you guys liked.
ReplyDeleteThanks again Thad.
Wasn't there some weird cropping in "Scrub Me Mamma" too? I've only seen public domain copies so maybe that was the reason. I know Culhane liked to try new things but the cropping is just odd looking. Both instances are of scenes of women strutting around so maybe that is the reason. It seems a number of scenes from Culhane's shorts have some sloppy inking in them. Other than that I think they're fantastic.
ReplyDeleteThad actually sent me a copy of that pic not too long ago. Matthews really is great.
Grim Natwick did that model sheet at the top. I have his ruffs for that.
ReplyDeleteSee ya
Steve
Thanks Steve, I scanned it from Culhane's book and he credited it to Matthews.
ReplyDeleteyjfMaybe Matthews and Grim worked together on it. I think Grim was a go-to guy for a lot of artists. He seems to have been willing to "ghost" poses for other guys. I've got Grim ruffs from several Culhane scenes at Warner Bros and even Rudy Zamora's Christmas card from Fleischer.
ReplyDeleteSee ya
Steve
That really doesn't look like its in Grim's natural style if it were his work. That one was definitely by Mattews for "Greatest Man in Siam". Grim's first picture at Lantz was "Abou Ben Boogie", where the girl has a different outfit.
ReplyDeleteTK
Really nice cartoon.
ReplyDeleteAwesome !