"No, Homer, very few cartoons are broadcast live, it's a tremendous strain on the animators' wrists"
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I can testify, it takes incredibly long. Even rotoscoping things, while it helps to keep mistakes to a minimum, it still requires you to draw everything. At least we don't need to scan/transfer thousands of papers anymore. That is grueling work
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I cannot imagine what it must have been like to be one of the animators working on a Golden Age Disney film
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I remember that when Spielberg was producing "An American Tail," that he didn't understand it might take months to include an extra minute and it took awhile for the staff to get that through to him. Even later, he admitted that he "still [couldn't] believe it's so complicated."
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Similar thing happened when Eisner took over Disney, too many of the executives he brought onboard (including Katzenberg, whom he put in charge of animation) didn't understand the process or thought the animators could pump out hundreds of drawings in minutes
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Even during the golden age of Disney films they frequently reused animations. Also, the production on Snow White was famously nightmarish, as no one know how much effort a feature length animated film was going to take
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