Buck-Beaver
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2002
- Messages
- 4,174
- Reaction score
- 162
I think that one of the most amazing things about being a member of this forum for years now is seeing just how many cool projects members have done and are working on. It's amazing to think that most of what's shared here (patterns, resources, web sites, videos, etc.) just didn't exist until a few years ago.
I was reading a book about Walt Disney recently and it struck me that where we're at with puppetry on the web is where animation was at in the early 1930s...lots of young people experimenting in a medium that's still relatively new (then it was sound & colour cartoons; today it's the internet).
If we're really honest with ourselves, we have to admit that most of the work that's created here (and yes, of course, mine included) lacks a certain level of sophistication and professional polish. I'm not saying there is not a lot of talent here (as everybody knows, there's tons of amazing puppetry talent here), it's just that we haven't seen (yet) truly revolutionary work on the level of a Jim Henson, a Walt Disney or a Pixar.
I've been thinking about how to bridge that gap and take things "to the next level". I wrote a post on my PuppetVision Blog a few days ago that explains what I mean a little better and includes some examples.
I'd love to hear everyone else's thoughts and opinions about this.
I was reading a book about Walt Disney recently and it struck me that where we're at with puppetry on the web is where animation was at in the early 1930s...lots of young people experimenting in a medium that's still relatively new (then it was sound & colour cartoons; today it's the internet).
If we're really honest with ourselves, we have to admit that most of the work that's created here (and yes, of course, mine included) lacks a certain level of sophistication and professional polish. I'm not saying there is not a lot of talent here (as everybody knows, there's tons of amazing puppetry talent here), it's just that we haven't seen (yet) truly revolutionary work on the level of a Jim Henson, a Walt Disney or a Pixar.
I've been thinking about how to bridge that gap and take things "to the next level". I wrote a post on my PuppetVision Blog a few days ago that explains what I mean a little better and includes some examples.
I'd love to hear everyone else's thoughts and opinions about this.