Above, some of the Spitting Image puppets. They were life size which allowed for the use of real life backgrounds. It was a great idea!
One day two of the show's ace character designers, Tim Watts and David Stoten, pitched an idea for a Spitting Image-type parody of Kirk Douglas. It would be a stop-motion short made with armature puppets. Tim Watts may (I'm not sure) have already pencil animated the film in 2D while he was at Cal Arts. Anyway, the producer, Rodger Law, agreed to bankroll it.
The Gods must have been on the artists' side because they were able to get one of the best impressionists ever, Frank Gorshin, to do Douglas' voice. He may even have influenced the writing which was based on real dialogue from Kirk Douglas films. I'm a Gorshin fan and so far as I know it was the best thing he ever committed to film.
Okay, what did you think? Not too shabby, eh? The film got the 1994 Oscar nomination but lost to a Wallace and Grommet-type 2D short called "Bob's Birthday." The Bob film was great but I still would have given the laurel to The Big Story. It contained ideas and techniques that seem fresh even today, and which might have strongly influenced computer animation when it came along.
The short payed off for Rodger Law because it allowed him to do several amazing Lipton commercials in the Spitting Image/Big Story style. That's one above.
Actually, I'm just assuming that Law was responsible for those commercials. Maybe it was Uli Meyer. I'm not sure.
Now here's where the story gets weird. The Spitting Image style rode a wave of popularity for several years then inexplicably ran out of gas and died. Oh, the caricature style lingered on in magazine covers but the film applications withered on the vine. "Why?" you're asking...but I don't know why. It just did.
That's tragic! It was a style that would have worked great in the Pixar era. Unfortunately the two styles never coincided.
Imagine what might have come about if Douglas' greatest animation fan, John K, had been green-lighted to do a Douglas-type 3D feature!
I ought to try experimenting with this style. It definitely looks really unique and you are dead on about Pixar. Maybe trying this style out might get the studio back on their feet again.
ReplyDeleteOh yeah! I remember that show. We had it air in Canada, I guess because we're still tied into England somehow. Hey, I don't mind...Coronation Street. Are You Being Served? Keeping Up Appearances, etc... a great fringe benefit to being connected to Britain, even if I'm not sure how.
ReplyDeleteAnywho, yeah, Spitting Image was a great show. It ragged on Royalty and celebs with equal hilarious verve! And the detail that went into those puppet characters was amazing!
Thanks for sharing that memory!
One Kirk Douglas in "The Big Story" is from my favorite Billy Wilder movie ("Ace In The Hole"). Here he is in all of his black-shirt-with-belt-and-suspender splendor: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-2UyqUfe5SY
ReplyDeleteEddie, off topic, but knowing your love of these kind of maps, I thought you'd appreciate this:
ReplyDeleteFirst World War Propaganda Maps
I'm curious to know if the heads were clay? The small "oh" mouths and the wide open "a" mouths show too much range for foam latex, (the tea commercials show how limited foam was). Today the heads would be 3D printed, but back then this was not an option.
ReplyDeleteGlad you're feeling better.
http://www.davederrick.com/the-story-behind-the-big-story/
ReplyDeleteThat new movie Malificent could have definitely used designs like this. Some of the ones I saw were really really corny and hard to look at for me.
ReplyDeleteTim Watts isn't just a brilliant artist & animator, he's also a heck of a nice guy. Don't think he went to Calarts.
ReplyDeleteJenny: I'm glad to hear Watts is a nice guy. Somebody on the net said he'd gone to Calarts and I repeated it, but it sounds like you knew him and would have picked up on it if it were true.
ReplyDelete