http://www.flyingmcdavidbros.com/Cartoons.html
(Go to the one at the top: Cyber Stuart: Guardian of Corruption etc.)
We actually won some awards for this silly piece of nonsense, can you believe it?

Moderators: Víctor Paredes, Belgarath, slowtiger
Green Walls wrote:Great creative satire on "Power Ranger" styled movies! Also, loved the pumpkin helmet.
I'd agree, frankly the dialogue itself for that guy was slow, and dragged the pacing a lot (in my opinion). It's definitely floaty Moho animation (times 2 or more). Certainly could have been done better, especially since his scenes were the majority of the actual animated stuff.Green Walls wrote:My only suggestion would be to speed up your animation for your 2d/Moho characters…for example the Elephant/aardvark arm movements were really slow.
Thanks! We will, we can't help ourselves. (Thanks too for everybody else for their kind words).Green Walls wrote:Keep up the great work.
I can totally understand that. I don't know if they didn't have any more jokes, or couldn't build any more sets so they had to string out the skits that they already had, but you're right, it's a perfect example of overextending your welcome.T wrote:He's also a big fan of the "quick finish" (we're always worried about dragging out a joke too long, a-la Saturday Night Live.)
How does the old saying go? Movies are never finished, only abandoned. There are a lot of people who are upset that George Lucas went back and made changes to the original Star Wars for the Special Editions. It's his movie, he can do what he wants. And while you may feel like you "own" Stars Wars as a part of your childhood, it does indeed belong to George Lucas.Sam wrote:I'm actually the guy who wrote and directed it, and I love discussing story and plot structure, etc., which is why I'm glad you had something to say about it. I was nowhere near happy with the way this cartoon turned out. I'll probably re-edit it, but I won't change the end. Jokes end on the punch line. After the climax and resolution, there's no point in hanging around for an epilogue. The explosion of the earth was the payoff, whether it was a good one or not. This was actually a very conventionally told story. The protagonist is introduced, then the problem, then the antagonist, then the peripheral characters, the plot is pencilled in a bit more, a bit of misdirection (the mucus) followed by the climax (race to the button / power company). And the resolution is, of course, the explosion of the earth. Whether or not it was a satisfying payoff is debatable, but it was definitely woven as a traditional story structure. Too traditional, if you ask me.
In my creative writing classes, the mantra was always "show, don't tell". I haven't seen Napoleon Dynamite, but I have to agree with your assessment of the relative virtues of Episode I-III vs. 4-6. Case in point, the relationship between Han and Leia vs. the relationship between Annakin and Padme.Sam wrote:Stephens King and Spielberg would debate me on this, but I think the art of storytelling lies in telling the story without making it so bloody obvious that that's what you're doing. Stephen King and Stephen Spielberg have both said that story is everything, which is fine, I suppose, if you would like to write a movie or novel that emulates either of their styles. But look at their style. 90% of the dialogue is expository. 100% of the dialogue in the latest Star Wars movie was expository, which is one of the reasons it fell so short of the original trilogy. But then take a movie like Napoleon Dynamite. The characters are so big and well-sculpted, you don't even realize you're being told a story. And it's a very traditional, formulaic story. The characters, though, are so big and dynamic that our attention is diverted from the whole man-vs-man, man-vs-self thing going on underneath them. Most of the dialogue just paints the characters and ignores the story completely.
I think we agree more than we disagree, but I am certainly willing to get into an active discussion about storytelling, nature of plot, characters, and traditional and non-traditional molds.Sam wrote:Thank you for your comments, jorgy. I really hope if you don't agree with me on this whole storytelling thing that we can start discussing it. It's something that really interests me.