Saturday, June 10, 2017

Subtle Action



Another beautiful scene by Milt Kahl.
This is sequence 2, scene 118. "So, I am going to be your tutor." Merlin proclaims to Wart.
The wizard opens a book, before proceeding to clean his glasses. The main business here is the subtle action of Merlin's hand using part of his moustache to wipe the glasses clean. It reads beautifully, because Milt played down everything else in the scene. It teaches us again that if you want to communicate subtle movement, it needs to be isolated. Nothing else should move.
The idea to use the moustage to clean Merlin's glasses is pure Disney. And Milt staged this exquisitely. Study Merlin's hand, as it wipes the glasses. Awesome!!


















4 comments:

  1. Somehow, I think that cleaning one's glasses with hair- which contains oils in it- is counter-intuitive.

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  2. This reminds me of you once talking about​ the staging of a Hercules shot with his toy-self. You wanted to draw attention to to the squeezing action so you kept the rest relatively motionless.

    As usual, great stuff, Andreas. It's these little acting moments that bring the whole to life.

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  3. Love Milts work! How do you feel about the hat flopping over at the same time as he's cleaning the glasses? The rubbing continues for a few frames after the hat settles but is that something you would prefer to tone the hat down even more?

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