This Post is Stolen
by T. Hodler
Sunday, November 12, 2006
But I’ve got to get back in the habit of blogging somehow.
Anyway, as Tom Spurgeon says, this is “not comics”, but I know there’s got to be some Richard Williams fans out there.
“The Thief and the Cobbler: Recobbled Cut”: Filmmaker Garrett Gilchrist’s unofficial restoration of Richard Williams’ animated feature, available on YouTube as 17 separate video links. Also click here for an accounting of the film’s troubled production history and here for an interview with Gilchrist.
Via: The House Next Door
Labels: animation, Richard Williams, video
This version of The Thief and the Cobbler misses one of the most amazing scenes in the movie, which I saw on English television when I was visiting London in the fall of 1988. I suspect it was an episode of “The South Bank Show” hosted by Melvin Bragg. Anyway, the scene must have been an expanded version of the atmospheric but very short introduction that the recobbled version starts with. In it, one has the powerful, incantatory narration while looking from a distance at the golden city. The camera or shot moves into the city in an amazing, surreal, hallucinatory and spiralling way, as if created with the most complex dolly shot in all of history, although it’s all done by animation, of course. It was absolutely magical. I thought the narrator for that scene was Vincent Price, which would explain the drawings of the wizard’s hands which one sees in the recobbled version’s opening.
If I had to review the film: First of all, it’s great to see this masterpiece, or the remains of a masterpiece, in some sort of recognizable form. I saw the execrable American butchering in the 1990s, and every moment, every second of that made me squirm with displeasure. Here, I’d say that the best parts are the scenes of evil, with their deep, saturated colors and visionary power. The comical and heroic characters generally have a cutesy feeling, and a lot of the shots of the golden city, all candy-colored pastel and soft-focus drawing, look rather dated in a 1960s/1970s way. But the scenes of evil are undying classics.
If you are not burning a CD and you simply want to view the movie, you only need to download 4 .vob files from the numerous files in the bittorrent: vts_01_1.vob, vts_01_2.vob, vts_01_3.vob, and vts_01_4.vob. That should save you some on download time.
Then you might want to do what I did, which was to convert the .vob files to .mpg files. I used my free file conversion software from eRightSoft, and then watched the files with Windows Media Player, which all worked out fine.
If someone has better movie making software than I have, or is more skilled than I am, maybe it would be a good idea to make the four .mpg files, then splice them together and then post the film as a zipped file at Rapidshare.