tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6593666821624078979.post5128083850837780075..comments2024-03-14T07:41:50.214+01:00Comments on Colorful Animation Expressions: Bob Clampett: Heighten The ImpactOswald Itenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09560644491496569393noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6593666821624078979.post-61988016573015843492013-08-17T00:28:42.720+02:002013-08-17T00:28:42.720+02:00Oops, thanks for your correction, I have been putt...Oops, thanks for your correction, I have been putting it together more hastily than usually. It should be fixed by now.Oswald Itenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09560644491496569393noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6593666821624078979.post-62001872519072877872013-08-16T13:56:13.713+02:002013-08-16T13:56:13.713+02:00Again, an excellent post on an often overlooked as...Again, an excellent post on an often overlooked aspect of Clampett's work. Many of Clampett's color cartoons for WB are full of throwbacks to cartoons of the '30s that you simply don't find in cartoons of other directors of that time (I'm thinking notably of the cute song sequence in RUSSIAN RHAPSODY, many of the gags and the twitchy Fleischer-like motions in COAL BLACK, the putty-nosed cats in Clampett's cat cartoons, etc.) and that clearly reflect his love for that era in cartooning.<br /><br />One correction, though: I suppose the cartoon title in the second-to-last paragraph should be BABY BOTTLENECK instead of BOOK REVUE?Veikko Suvantohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07826714151185706043noreply@blogger.com