Could h.c of done aninamted trek much better then filmation did int he 70s??
Personally, I thought (even at the time watching it on Saturday mornings) Filmation themselves could have done a better job - but yeah, Hanna-Barbera circa 1973-1975; nope - would have looked worse (IMO).Could h.c of done aninamted trek much better then filmation did int he 70s??
Yeah, as I recall, their Flash Gordon series was pretty well done.Personally, I thought (even at the time watching it on Saturday mornings) Filmation themselves could have done a better job
One of the best-looking animated shows ever made, thanks to creator Doug Wildey and talented artists like Warren Tufts and Alex Toth. But even Jonny Quest had a lot of limited animation and outright cheats. And a big reason it only lasted one season was because it was a very expensive show. So I don't see Star Trek faring too much better with H/B.My only optimistic hope would H&B would swipe all of the episodes from the original Jonny Quest series.
Yep, and it was only 5 years later too.Yeah, as I recall, their Flash Gordon series was pretty well done.
Hanna-Barbera would have put Scooby Doo in space....
Yep, and it was only 5 years later too.
Ideally, and therefore impossibly, an arcane combination of Filmation's superior design work, better backgrounds, better character sheets, etc., combined with the more fluid, less repetitive animation of HB would have made the best show.
I do.Um, you may not remember this but...
[Josie and the Pussycats in Outer Space]
HB less "repetitive"? In any given episode of say "Flintstones" or "Scooby Doo" did characters performing a run "cycle" (meaning the same frames over an over) raced by the same windows, tables and doors over and over during a given sequence?!![]()
Is this what you were thinking of for Star Trek TAS 80’s style?I don't agree. Sure, H-B's animation was less repetitive, but I wouldn't call it more fluid, just more sloppy. Both studios chose a different tradeoff between how many distinct images they drew and how much time and care they spent on making each image look good. H-B chose the former, Filmation the latter.
I've said before that it's a shame Filmation didn't bring back TAS for a new go-around after ST:TMP. They'd done other revivals of old shows -- The New Adventures of Batman, Gilligan's Planet, new seasons of Fat Albert -- so it could've happened. A new Filmation Trek in 1980 or so could've had animation, design, and music on a par with Flash Gordon or Blackstar or The New Adventures of the Lone Ranger, more fluid and beautiful than TAS, still repetitive but with a lot more rotoscoped movement sequences. And it could've taken advantage of all the interesting alien crew members seen as extras in TMP, like Saurians and Betelgeusians and Zaranites. Plus it was around that time or within the next 2-3 years that Filmation brought in writers like Paul Dini, Michael Reaves, Diane Duane, and J. Michael Straczynski. A second, post-TMP animated Trek could thus have been pretty impressive. If it had existed, it could've solidified Filmation Trek's standing in the eyes of fans and given us more TMP-era adventures. So it's a shame they never tried it.
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