Johnny Quest might be the best looking television animation of the 1960s.
There was also Space Angel and even Space Ghost could look quite good at times particularly in its opening theme.
Johnny Quest might be the best looking television animation of the 1960s.
Jonny. No H.Johnny Quest might be the best looking television animation of the 1960s.
It got it up to the right number of episodes for syndication, on the assumption that it was a kids' show, and a year later kids have grown a bit and moved on.I've always wondered why the second season was only six episodes instead of another sixteen?
JB
“Clutch Cargo” was done by the same studio that did “Space Angel”.If you want to see cheap and bizarre animation...Clutch Cargo fits the bill.
The nice thing about animated characters is that you can erase them if they start getting too demanding.LOVE That big boss band Jonny Quest theme! Sigh. And how the characters have credits in the opening! Wonder if they fought over billing.
That's probably just that the guy photographing the animation making an error, since the arms and legs were often on separate cels. Filmation made mistakes like that, too.H/B cut so many corners that there's an episode of Super Friends where Green Lantern was drawn with three arms because the animators misunderstood Alex Toth's storyboard... And either no one caught it, or they didn't have the time to fix it (0:47 in the clip below):
With voice over, at least.There's another bad mistake in that clip, too. Captain Cold and Sinestro walk out of frame at 0:06 and we're literally staring at an empty background for a full six seconds.
Extraordinary claims... and kinda unlikely. Animated? Maybe cels being painted...maybe, improbably. You're going to have to find a source for that. Sounds like an urban legend.I've heard that some episodes of Super Friends were actually animated in South American prisons, and after seeing mistakes like this, I can believe it.
Well, the original Johnny Quest (done in 1964) by H-B was envisioned as a Prime Time (evening) show like The Flinstones, and ran on Fri. nights on ABC back in 1964. Later it bacame part of the kids cartoon Saturday morning lineup along with stuff like "Space Ghost" and "The Herculods" <--- Two of my favorites as a young kid in the late 1960s.It was also a serious and intelligent cartoon since there were no talking cats, dogs or bears in it like other HB shows.
And WAS a prime time show.Well, the original Johnny Quest (done in 1964) by H-B was envisioned as a Prime Time (evening) show like The Flinstones, and ran on Fri. nights on ABC back in 1964. Later it bacame part of the kids cartoon Saturday morning lineup along with stuff like "Space Ghost" and "The Herculods" <--- Two of my favorites as a young kid in the late 1960s.![]()
H-B came out of MGM’s cartoon unit and I forget what their production schedules were like, but over at Warner Bros. they had 6 weeks per cartoon, and I recall MGM being more generous than that, so 8 weeks seems reasonable. If so, each unit could grind out 6.5 cartoons a year for maybe 48 minutes of footage.Don’t forget that besides budgets, time was also a factor. For HB, coming from a theatrical short background, where the shorts might take upto 3-4 months to do animation, TV cartoons might have 1-2 months.
“Oh my god, it’s Diiiiiip!”The nice thing about animated characters is that you can erase them if they start getting too demanding.![]()
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