Silhouette Fantasies (lost silent animated series; 1916): Difference between revisions
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'''''Silhouette Fantasies''''' was an early animated short series by the Bray Animation studio in | '''''Silhouette Fantasies''''' was an early animated short series by the Bray Animation studio in collaboration with the famous illustrator Charles Allan Gilbert (Mainly known for his famous picture [https://i.pinimg.com/originals/fe/2e/2d/fe2e2df288aa255c9a9a4beffc4e177f.jpg ''All is Vanity'']) , it was one of the earliest animated series animated using a shadow puppet style technique where instead of drawing a character shadow puppets would be cut out and manipulated to portray the stories (A surviving example of this film technique would be [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vQ5dbbol44s ''The Original Film'' (1922) from the Tony Sarg series]) though it also incorporated selective amounts of live action segments and animation, Created in a dedicated studio in 5th avenue the building was modified heavily so that strong shadows would be easy to produce for filming the mixed media series with the produced shorts mainly being centered on myths and adventure stories. | ||
==Destruction== | ==Destruction== | ||
The Bray studio was in severe financial trouble when the | The Bray studio was in severe financial trouble when the 1940s came around and the studio eventually disintegrated, some of it's series such as ''Bobby Bumps'' and ''Jerry On The Job'' found resale value and eventually ended up repeated on the emerging television markets that was just starting to emerge Silhouette Fantasies was not so lucky and the original master prints for the series were among many hundreds of films that ended up getting discarded or destroyed. | ||
==Preservation== | ==Preservation== | ||
No surviving prints from the series have ever been located, In some print media a few still images and frame reprints used in promotional material at the time have been found and preserved. Of the shorts themselves only one damaged film print has been found, This one being discovered located in the Library of Congress by the silent cartoon historian Tommy José Stathes and it being a copy of the second installment in the series titled "Haunts for Rent", Unfortunately the print was in the final stages of nitrate decomposition so only a few images of the film were legible with the rest of it having deteriorated beyond salvation.<ref>[http://brayanimation.weebly.com/silhouette-fantasies.html The Silhouette Fantasies listing on the Bray Animation Project website.] Retrieved 05 | No surviving prints from the series have ever been located, In some print media, a few still images and frame reprints used in promotional material at the time have been found and preserved. Of the shorts themselves only one damaged film print has been found, This one being discovered located in the Library of Congress by the silent cartoon historian Tommy José Stathes and it being a copy of the second installment in the series titled "Haunts for Rent", Unfortunately the print was in the final stages of nitrate decomposition so only a few images of the film were legible with the rest of it having deteriorated beyond salvation.<ref>[http://brayanimation.weebly.com/silhouette-fantasies.html The Silhouette Fantasies listing on the Bray Animation Project website.] Retrieved 05 Jun '19</ref> | ||
==Gallery== | ==Gallery== | ||
<gallery mode=packed heights=275px> | <gallery mode=packed heights=275px> | ||
File:Sfantasy1.jpg| | File:Sfantasy1.jpg| | ||
File:Paramountadvert.png| | |||
File:Sfantasies3.jpg| | File:Sfantasies3.jpg| | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
==External Links== | |||
*[https://www.bcdb.com/cartoons/Paramount_Pictures/Bray_Productions/Silhouette_Fantasies/ Cartoon Database entry on the series.] Retrieved 05 Jun '19 | |||
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silhouette_animation Wikipedia article on Silhouette Animation.] Retrieved 05 Jun '19 | |||
==Reference== | ==Reference== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
[[Category:Lost animation]] | [[Category:Lost animation]] | ||
[[Category:Lost films]] | [[Category:Lost films]] | ||
[[Category:Historic]] | [[Category:Historic]] | ||
[[Category:Completely lost media]] |
Latest revision as of 14:32, 7 May 2020
A decomposing frame from the lost Silhouette Fantasies installment "Haunts for Rent" (1916).
Status: Lost
Silhouette Fantasies was an early animated short series by the Bray Animation studio in collaboration with the famous illustrator Charles Allan Gilbert (Mainly known for his famous picture All is Vanity) , it was one of the earliest animated series animated using a shadow puppet style technique where instead of drawing a character shadow puppets would be cut out and manipulated to portray the stories (A surviving example of this film technique would be The Original Film (1922) from the Tony Sarg series) though it also incorporated selective amounts of live action segments and animation, Created in a dedicated studio in 5th avenue the building was modified heavily so that strong shadows would be easy to produce for filming the mixed media series with the produced shorts mainly being centered on myths and adventure stories.
Destruction
The Bray studio was in severe financial trouble when the 1940s came around and the studio eventually disintegrated, some of it's series such as Bobby Bumps and Jerry On The Job found resale value and eventually ended up repeated on the emerging television markets that was just starting to emerge Silhouette Fantasies was not so lucky and the original master prints for the series were among many hundreds of films that ended up getting discarded or destroyed.
Preservation
No surviving prints from the series have ever been located, In some print media, a few still images and frame reprints used in promotional material at the time have been found and preserved. Of the shorts themselves only one damaged film print has been found, This one being discovered located in the Library of Congress by the silent cartoon historian Tommy José Stathes and it being a copy of the second installment in the series titled "Haunts for Rent", Unfortunately the print was in the final stages of nitrate decomposition so only a few images of the film were legible with the rest of it having deteriorated beyond salvation.[1]
Gallery
External Links
- Cartoon Database entry on the series. Retrieved 05 Jun '19
- Wikipedia article on Silhouette Animation. Retrieved 05 Jun '19
Reference
- ↑ The Silhouette Fantasies listing on the Bray Animation Project website. Retrieved 05 Jun '19