| Index | 3 reviews in total |
13 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
Great short, even if I found the ending quite obvious and predictable., 1 December 2002
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Author:
Robert Reynolds (minniemato@hotmail.com) from Tucson AZ
Ersatz, an exceptional piece of work from Zagreb Films, was the first non-American work to win the Academy Award for Animated Short (though it was not the first for an independent studio-depending on definition, that honor would go to UPA or John Hubley's Storyboard, Inc) and deserved to win. It's lively, amusing, well-animated and stretches the envelope. Clearly influenced by UPA, as were most of the Eastern Europeans, I loved this the first time I saw this some 25 years ago, although I found it predictable in spots, including the ending. I saw it again recently and it still holds up. It's available on a tape produced by Rembrandt Films, called The Best of Zagreb Films: The Classic Collection, which may well be in print. Copies are certainly still floating around. Well worth tracking down. Most highly recommended
15 out of 18 people found the following review useful:
Classic animated short, far too little known, 29 August 2001
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Author:
RobT-2 from Tulsa, Oklahoma
"Surogat" (mostly known in English-speaking countries as "Ersatz") was the
first film produced outside the USA to win an Oscar for "best cartoon".
While there were many great "foreign" cartoons in previous years,
"Surogat"'s Oscar was auspicious in that it marked the point at which the
mainstream of American animation took notice of such work. In view of the
course American animation eventually took, it's easy to see
why.
"Surogat" itself shows evidence of American influence, specifically from
the
UPA studios. UPA's animators developed a style (really a range of styles)
taking cues from modern art and graphic design. Figures were rendered
iconically; what they stood for was more important than their exact
resemblance to what they depicted. UPA used this style to tell fables for
a
presumed adult audience, and avoided cuteness and slapstick.
"Surogat" is an adult fable as well, but obviously director Dusan Vukotic
and writer Rudolf Sremec didn't feel bound by UPA's anti-slapstick rule.
Otherwise, their film could easily pass as UPA product, though it outdoes
all but UPA's very best work. The figures consist of simple geometric
shapes, and most of their movements are either parallel to one of their
edges or else curvilinear in the manner of "rubber-hose" animation; in
other
cases, they simply "pop" from one pose to another. (An acquaintance of
mine
called it "a bunch of triangles and shapes hopping around." "The Simpsons"
effectively parodied the style by taking advantage of attitudes like that.)
Despite this minimalism, the characters are identifiable as characters, and
within the boundaries of fable the story works just fine.
UPA's main influence on American animation lay not in its "artistry" so
much
as the way its style was easy to copy, and to transfer over to "limited"
animation for television, a growth industry at the time. TV animators also
watched cartoons like "Surogat" for potential shortcuts they could use in
their work. (I believe one immediately influential aspect of "Surogat" was
its music, a sort of advanced semi-jazzy big-band/orchestral piece that
wouldn't be out of place in, say, a "Jetsons" episode.)
However, when a new-generation of animators went to work for Hanna-Barbera
and attempted to take their work "back to basics", they took artistic cues
from UPA and other "artistic"/"iconic" work of the 1950's which influenced
H-B. Hence, the influence of "Surogat" shows up in such recent work as
"Two
Stupid Dogs", "Dexter's Laboratory", "The Powerpuff Girls", and (the most
self-consciously "artistic" of this group) "Samurai Jack".
Unfortunately, "Surogat"/"Ersatz" is very hard (at least for Americans) to
find on video. Janus put it on a collection of short films, but this would
appear to be out of print; however, it may be found in some libraries,
especially those with older or larger video collections.
1 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
It gets an A for originality and a C- for artistic style, 30 October 2008
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Author:
planktonrules from Bradenton, Florida
Regardless how good this cartoon is, I was amazed at how incredibly
annoying the opening music was. Fortunately, the actual cartoon turned
out to be much better, so don't give up just because the opening music
is dreadful! As to the cartoon, you'll probably first notice its
minimalist style. In many ways it looks like a Calder mobile and
cartoon morphed into one. The odd lines and shapes are very artsy and
very indicative of the 1960 "modern" look. To me, a lover of classic
cartoons, the style looked just cheap and you could tell by the art
work and cel count that it was not a high quality film.
Now despite these aesthetics, the film is actually pretty good--mostly
due to a bizarre and very captivating story. An odd little man goes to
the beach and begins pumping up little shapes until they become
full-sized and apparently normal items--such as beach chairs, tents,
etc.. Now here's where it gets weird....he also begins pumping shapes
and they become ladies and the picture enters Weirdsville! However, you
also find yourself laughing and looking forward to what's coming next.
A clever idea with less than terrific art work.
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