Wednesday 9 December 2009

1988 The Simpsons and Who Framed Roger Rabbit




The Simpson family debuted in short animated cartoons on the Tracey Ullman Show for three seasons before being spun off into their own half an hour series.
These shorts, also called Bumpers, aired before and after advert breaks during the first and second seasons of the show.
They did not appear in the fourth or the final season as they had their own half hour TV series by then.
Who Framed Roger Rabbit is a 1988 fantasy comedy film directed by Robert Zemeckis, produced by Steven Spielburg and based on Gary K. Wolf's novel, Who Censored Roger Rabbit?.
Walt Disney Pictures purchased the rights from Gary K. Wolf and made his novel into the most amazing films up to date, the budget was $50 million dollars, which was too expensive for Walt Disney.
But the budget went down to $29.9 million dollars when Who Framed Roger Rabbit was given the Greenlit.
This film has everything in it, cartoon characters working in the real world and real people putting up with cartoon, Disney toons and Warner Brother toons come together to toontown, but this film involves a cartoon called Roger Rabbit and a detective called Eddie, played by Bob Hoskin.
There's plenty of gags, car chases, laughs, cartoon props, Acme stuff and a chemical that can kill cartoons, this cartoon earned an interest in the Golden Age of American Animation.

The audience for the Simpsons and Who Framed Roger Rabbit would be for young adults and teenagers.
The important history would be that the Simpsons early animation will one day be a smash hit and Who Framed Roger Rabbit is a historical event where cartoons and people live together in two worlds, the real world and the cartoon world.
The technique being used for Who Framed Roger Rabbit was split scene photography, photographing a real life scene and put a drawing of a cartoon character into the photo.
The technologyis still split scene photography.

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