Koko in 1999 (1927)


One thing that will strike you about the Fleischers’ 1927 cartoon short Ko-ko in 1999 is how it anticipates other motifs in science fiction cinema. Most notable is the moment where the eponymous clown finds himself trapped in a feeding machine with more than a passing resemblance to the feeding machine tested by Charlie Chaplin in Modern Times (1936). When a stern Max Fleischer tries to bring Ko-ko down a peg or two by creating a bunch of rival clowns, Ko-ko rebels and shunts the competition out of the frame. Fleischer punishes his creation by conjuring Father Time, who pursues Ko-ko into the future – 1999, to be precise. There, he is assailed by all kinds of automated obstacles, and acquires a wife out of a vending machine. Like A Trip to Mars, which I posted here a couple of weeks ago, this is an extract from the excellent Inkwell Images DVD set, which also features documentaries about the Fleischer Bros. Studios. The music is Stereolab‘s remix of Shonen Knife‘s Hot Chocolate, taken from the Ultra Mix album.

Picture of the Week #42: Animation Backgrounds


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I love Rob Richards’s blog, Animation Backgrounds. It’s built around a single simple, but rich thing – the painted backgrounds from classic cartoons, minus the cel-animated characters that would eventually populate them. It’s a chance to appreciate the artwork itself without the distraction of all that frenetic motion, a demonstration of the care paid to mise-en-scene and a kind of set-building practiced by Disney, Warner Bros, Fleischer studios and many more. I hope Rob won’t mind me posting a small sample here, but for the full collection (and there’s a lot of stuff he’s gathered together), follow this link.