"Animaniacs!" (TTA Episode) Discussion

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So, uh, just... watch it.
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Time for one of my favorite Tiny Toons episodes, "Animaniacs!" It was the 36th episode of season 1 and aired on 11/12/1990.

Written by: Paul Dini & Tom Minton
Storyboards by: Bruce Timm & Douglas McCarthy
Directed by: Art Vitello
Animation by: Akom

animaniacs1a.jpg

Plucky shows up for animation class at ACME Loo... the only catch is, he hasn't attended class YET and it's finals day. He thinks he'll have to watch a bunch of cartoons but nooooooo, there's actual work involved: Making an animated short. He freaks out but Buster, the kind soul that he is, agrees to show him the process, with a little help from the Magic Pen (which plays a cue from Scheherezade when first taken out of its protective case).
animaniacs2a.jpg

Buster goes through all the steps, from original concept to storyboards to layouts to backgrounds to voice acting, etc. In every step the visual example of Plucky getting walloped with a bunch of beets is used. Despite knowing the punchline, the gag of beets falling on his head is pretty much funny every time.

Anyway, once Buster describes everything, Plucky sets to work, because the clock is ticking for the big animation festival that night. But immediately in act two, he quits and goes a little crazy. Buster has to calm him down.
animaniacs3a.jpg

This reaction to Buster's "Whoa, easy! It's me, Buster!" gets me every time. Plucky slowly snaps back to reality and quivers, "...Buster...?" I love it- the way Joe Alaskey delivers that line is gold.
animaniacs4a.jpg

Plucky tells Buster that he wants to make a film about his youth- specifically an incident when he was in the lake and his inflatable toy popped, sending him into a stream of tears. In the process, Buster teaches Plucky about how to make flashbacks, only they accidentally flash back too far, into World War II and finally into the stone age. Buster temporarily leaves cocky Plucky to be ravaged by the 2001 apes, thinking he'll figure out how to flash forward, but realizes "This IS Plucky we're talking about" and goes to the library to save him from a book (he's now a puddle of primordial ooze). Plucky's grateful but at the end of act two the festival is almost here!
animaniacs5a.jpg

Bugs, Daffy, and Porky reluctantly agree to be the judges. Their antics are hilarious- besides the above shot, I love the bit where Daffy is reading a dirty magazine. Bugs snatches it from him in disgust, but then opens it himself. :D
animaniacs6a.jpg

The festival is arguably my favorite part of the episode because of all the different animation styles we get. Elmyra makes a film called "Elmyra's Aminals, Aminals, Aminals and More Aminals", which is a poem consisting of her crushing a dog to death with her hugging. Yikes.
animaniacs7a.jpg

Hamton makes a piece called "My Worst Nightmare", though who knows what that happens to be. Hamton is the solo clapper at the end.
animaniacs8a.jpg

"Dizzy Eat World": See title for plot. Two bits of random trivia:
1) The tune that is played on the kazoo during the short is "Mastersingers of Nuremberg" by Richard Wagner. Take a listen to the actual piece if you haven't- I guarantee you'll at least crack a smile.
2) While it hasn't been confirmed, the rock band's name Jimmy Eat World may have been inspired by the name of this short.
animaniacs9a.jpg

Montana Max farms his film out to an independent contractor instead of doing it himself (a sly in-joke at overseas animation? Maybe) and presents "A Montana Max Christmas", with Max as Jolly Old St. Nick. Funny, I didn't know Santa used a sledge hammer.
animaniacs10a.jpg

Everyone's pumped to see Gogo's film, but he ends up splicing together live action footage to make "So You Want to Learn to Dance". I don't know what Babs's problem was; I thought this was hilarious, in a non sequitur kind of way. These are the most ridiculous dance moves I've ever seen, and the music to go with it was appropriately nutty too. Plus the shot of the man whipping the obviously dummy replica female around was great.
animaniacs11a.jpg

Shirley's "Song of the Loon" is next to last, and beforehand she informs the audience that it had to be cut to fit onto the program schedule, and that it now runs 17 hours and 34 minutes (seriously? How LONG was this festival supposed to go in the first place, anyway?). Everyone freaks out but Shirley won't let anyone leave, including the judges, who she electrocutes and prevents from leaving their room.

After that ordeal, Plucky FINALLY gets to air his film, which he just barely finished in time. It's three seconds and consists of just him crying as a baby. Since it's short, it wins!
animaniacs12a.jpg

Only catch is, he gets to take the course over for skipping it the first time. Ah, poetic justice.
animaniacs13a.jpg

I love this episode. Most any episode which deals with the making of a cartoon ("Stimpy's Cartoon Show", "The Itchy & Scratchy & Poochie Show") I'll love, and this is no exception. While they simplified the creation process a bit (they never even mentioned shipping it overseas for inbetweening- they only briefly mention assistant animators), it was actually pretty informative, especially since I was seven and impressionable in 1990. It could be argued that this episode got me interested in the animation process, though I don't know if that's true.

It's paced just right. Whenever I start watching this one, I have to finish it, and there's no scene which I feel like skipping. There's a joke that works in pretty much every scene.

I like the Akom animation, which was fairly inconsistent in the show but works for this episode. The timing on the gags is usually pretty solid, especially all those falling beets.

And overall it's just a fun episode, easily one of the best full length shows. Your thoughts on this one?
 
Ah, yes, I've seen this one recently, and it's still a fav. TTA seems to work best, at least to me, as a full 22-minute show, and this one's no expection.
 
Isn't that George O'Hanlon (a.k.a. George Jetson) in GoGo Dodo's 'cartoon'?
 
Oh yes. This is one of those episodes that is just gold from start to finish. Act one gives us a decent tutorial on the animation process. If I live to be 99, whenever I hear the term "comedy beats"... an image of Plucky getting clobbered by beets is going to pop into my head. :D Act two continues Plucky's antics as he ultimately flashes all the way back to the dawn of time: "I'm an angry little amoeba!"

Act three is where things get really good, of course. All the student films are totally "in character"... that is exactly the film that you would expect to see from Elmyra, Hamton, Gogo, etc. Add to this Bugs, Daffy, and Porky as the very reluctant judges. Though it may help if one is familiar with the stereotype of bad/incomprehensible student films (see the episode of "The Critic" in which Jay's student film from film school was shown) in order to fully "get it". Shirley's "Song of the Loon" being "trimmed" to 17 hours and 34 minutes plays and Hamton's "My Worst Nightmare" probably play the strongest on that stereotype. :D


Fanboy that I am, I'm just dying to know what Fifi's film would have been. ;) Probably just like that French film the Warners and Scratchy were watching in "Drive Insane." :D


*Fifi and two random French guys standing around in a run down room with no visible furniture and only one window. Filmed in black and white of course.*

Fifi: "Frère Jacques. Frère Jacques."
Random French Guy #1: "Dormez-vous? Dormez-vous?"
Fifi: "Sonnez les matines! Sonnez les matines!"
Random French Guy #2: "Din, dan, don." *then, very dramatic* "DIN, DAN, DON!"

:anime:
 
One question: Did the idea for Animaniacs(the show) start from this episode, or was it one of those coincidences where this episode and the show happened to have the same name?
 
I remember it better now having read the synopsis. Other than that, the only thing that really stuck out is Dizzy eat world.
 
One question: Did the idea for Animaniacs(the show) start from this episode, or was it one of those coincidences where this episode and the show happened to have the same name?
The A! creators may have borrowed the name from this episode's title, but being that this episode really has nothing to do with Animaniacs, I'm pretty sure the rest was just a coincidence.

However, "Two-Tone Town" can be seen as sort of a prototype for A!, due to the visual/personality similarities in characters, but that's for another thread.
 
This has one of my favorite third acts in the entire series. I've always imagined the TT staff animating the cruder student films themselves, coloring the paper frames with crayons on the floor while laughing. I asked Ruegger if my theory was true--but no response yet, so I don't know.

About Babs's reaction to Gogo's film--from the way it's written, it sounds like Dini and Minton had no idea what live-action piece was going to be used. They must have just put, "an old live-action short from the WB library" and written the dialogue in the assumption it would be something bland.

In the animatic (or "pencil test" as they called it) scene, why didn't they just use the actual animatic? They coulda saved some money there....
 
I was very impressed with this episode, I saw it on youtube a while back but I don't remember seeing it on TV.
 
This was one of my favorite episodes because of its great plot and fun gags. It was also one of the rare times where all the members of the Tiny Toons original cast were showcased in a single episode-don't remember seeing Sneezer or Bookworm though.

Porkys mind-boggling expression after Shirley's film is a definate highlight.
 
Wich are better to animate? Bottom pegs or top pegs?
 
something educational that is actually enjoyable!
 
No screengrab of Fifi at the drawing board from the TTA "Animaniacs" episode?
 
I found a DVD which contains "So You Want to Learn to Dance"! It's on the "By the Light of the Silvery Moon" DVD, along with "So You Want a Television Set" and "From A to Z-Z-Z-Z", a Chuck Jones WB short.
dth1971 said:
No screengrab of Fifi at the drawing board from the TTA "Animaniacs" episode?
I didn't make a Fifi screen grab because it wasn't a significant shot for me. She just looks at the camera dreamily. So? There's nothing funny about it.

Generally in my screens I try to highlight gags I think are funny, or to highlight plot points. If you want a shot of every Fifi scene in an episode, sorry but I can't help you.

...I can't believe I'm apologizing for this.
 
is that your site? its nice!


Naah, it's not mine. I did create the Fifi Club on Deviantart.... which I have left sadly neglected for some time. :(



Hopefully we're not straying too far off topic here.... back to discussion of the episode, folks! :D
 
[still offtopic: I made the yakko-fanclub on DA]

I actually learned alot as an adult from this episode, namely the specific jobs that don't cross over from person to person.
 

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