For this project, I learned the importance of the order of making character animation. First, build solid and attractive key poses with correct timing and spacing. Next, adjust the COG to have a line of action( important). Then add more in-betweens for overlapping and secondary action. And the final step is polish the spline.
Author: Binbin Zhu



The goal is to create 3 emotional pose.
Guillermo del Toro: “Animation is a medium, not a genre.”
Stella Adler: “Acting is reacting.”
Core Principles of Believable Acting in Animation:
- Objective: Characters must have a clear goal or desire, and their actions should reflect efforts to achieve it—good acting highlights what the character wants and obstacles they face.
- Specificity: Answer “Why does my character move?” by linking movements to thoughts, feelings, or reasons (e.g., a thief stealing a safe, an archaeologist finding proof of Atlantis).
- Personality: Every movement should mirror the character’s unique traits and their relationship to the situation (e.g., a shy character fidgets; a proud character puffs their chest).
- Thought Process: Animation should “breathe”—characters appear to think before acting (e.g., pauses, eye movements, posture shifts convey inner thoughts) to build believable motivation.
- Key Elements: Clear Poses, Interesting timing, Staging, and the “Keep it simple” principle.
light & heavy box fall down:
Let them have a scenario (blocking):
Individual blog entry
Given the theoretical discourse surrounding the legitimacy of animated documentary Is there animated work you consider falls into one or more of these categories.
Consider:
Environmental/ecological issues
Gender representation
Ethnic representation
Cultural heritage/Exchange
Diversity
Colonialism
Ethical issues
Education
Industry/Vocation
Equality/Human Rights
Community/Social Issues/Social justice
Politics/Government
Waltz with Bashir (2008) by Ari Folman is a prime example of an animated documentary that addresses Politics/Government, Ethical Issues, and Equality/Human Rights.
Here is how it fits the categories and theoretical framework:
1. Legitimacy and Definition
Waltz with Bashir validates the “taxonomy of Animated Documentary” outlined in the lecture because:
- Production: It is created “frame by frame”.
- Subject: It is “about the world rather than a world wholly imagined”, specifically the 1982 Lebanon War.
- Reception: It was “received as a documentary by audiences, festivals or critics” despite being animated.
2. Theoretical Justification
The film demonstrates why animation is a “viable means of documentary expression” in the following ways:
- Addressing Absence: The film reconstructs a massacre and lost memories where no archival footage exists. This exemplifies the theory that animation is fruitful because it resolves a “conflation of absence and excess”. It replaces the “expected indexical imagery” (which is absent) with animation that goes beyond merely transcribing reality.
- Subjectivity: Instead of observable events, the film depicts “subjective, conscious experience”—specifically the trauma and repressed memory of a soldier. This allows the documentary to cover subject matters “traditionally outside of the documentary purview”.
3. Addressing Criticism
While critics sometimes argue that animation might “detract from the seriousness of the situation” , Waltz with Bashir counters the historical attitude that “animation is for children”. By using a non-photorealistic medium, it potentially creates a “more universal level of identification” with the horrors of war, rather than preventing direct engagement.
Week4: polish juice box
I adjust the timing and spacing to give my two juice boxes a resealable reaction time. And I tried to exaggerate the movement of the juice box to give it a more cartoonish style. By finishing this project, I understand deeper about Anticipation, action and reaction in animation.
Week5: weight shifting
Analyze walk cycles and weight distribution: Everyone has a unique walk influenced by factors like character, health, age, and gender. Walk cycles remain one of the most challenging tasks for animators.
Balance and weight distribution check (COG): To ensure a pose is balanced, draw a line through its center—if both sides have equal positive space, the pose is balanced.
first try:
After polish:
Week4: Polish tail
Analyze Crac from Frederic Back
1. Categorisation: Genre & Sub-genre
- Genre & Setting: Crac operates as a “Symptomatic” cultural artifact. A symptomatic interpretation views a film as part of a broad societal context, illustrating themes prevalent in the culture. The film chronicles the industrialization of Quebec through the life of a rocking chair.
- Theme & Commentary: The film comments on the displacement of tradition by technology. This mirrors the historical context mentioned in your lecture, where “Mass communication was at the top of the agenda and therefore mass production was a priority”. Crac visualizes the tension between the “primitive” (hand-crafted chair, rural life) and the “technologically advanced” (urbanization, modern art museums), a conflict often found in films dealing with industrial development.
- Experimental Fit: It fits the “Modernist” perspective by questioning divisions in culture. The film is unique because it functions as both a “document of [its] time and place” (Quebec’s Quiet Revolution) and a piece of high art.
2. Form and Function
- Artist Objectives: Back’s objective appears to be the preservation of cultural memory through movement. The film functions as an “allegory”, where the chair is a metaphor for Quebecois identity—resilient, discarded, and eventually rediscovered.
- Presentational Mode: The lecture notes stating that animation “developed in the midst of these polemic arguments” about high vs. mass culture apply here. Back rejects the static “assembly line” aesthetic in favor of a fluid, painterly style.
- Implicit Meaning: An “implicit” analysis reveals the chair’s personality not through dialogue, but by inferring meaning from how it survives changes. The function of the film is to force the viewer to experience the passage of time physically, adhering to the theory that films can “replicate a certain type of reality the filmmaker wants the audience to experience… memory”.
3. Process: Technique & Materials
- Technique as Message: The lecture highlights that the “Avant Garde interest in part focused upon the formal aesthetic potentials of… line and form, movement and rhythm”. Crac is a definitive example of this. Back used colored pencils on frosted cels, creating a textured, vibrating look that defies the clean, industrial “cel” look pioneered by Raoul Barre and Earl Hurd.
- The “Laborious” Approach: Unlike the “rapid production” models of John Randolph Bray , Back’s process aligns with pioneers like Windsor McCay, for whom the process was “more laborious” and individual. The visible strokes of the colored pencil emphasize the human hand in the work, reinforcing the film’s theme of hand-crafted tradition versus sterile modernity.
4. Formal Elements
- Movement & Metamorphosis: A “Formalist approach” looks at the film’s structure and form. Crac relies entirely on continuous metamorphosis. The “line and form” are never static; the background transforms into the foreground, and characters emerge from the chair’s wood grain.
- Rhythm & Timing: The film utilizes “movement and rhythm” to compress decades of history into minutes. The rhythm accelerates as the setting shifts from the slow, pastoral countryside to the frantic, neon-lit city, using pacing to elicit an emotional response to modernization.
- Audio Relationships: The sound of the “crack” (the tree falling, the chair breaking) serves as a “referential” anchor, marking the transitions between eras.
golden pose: