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>> Rotoscoping.
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Rotoscoping is an animation technique that
captures motion by tracing live action footage.
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Rotoscoping was patented by Max Fleischer in
1917 and used for his character Coco the Clown
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for his Out of the Inkwell series.
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To do this, Fleischer magnified the film
strip under a pane of glass and drew
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over the figures on celluloid sheets.
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Rotoscoping was a common technique among
film studios in the early 20th century.
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Fleischer Studios used the technique
for the complicated dances in Betty Boop
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and during the film Gulliver's Travels.
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Richard Schickel later revealed
that many sequences
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in Disney's Snow White were also rotoscoped.
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The actress's performance was filmed
and used for both gesture and lip sync.
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Although Disney largely denied the use
of rotoscoping, he encouraged animators
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to heavily reference, if not directly
trace, live footage during the production
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of Cinderella, Peter Pan, and other films.
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Rotoscoping captures more subtle movements,
such as emotional changes in the face.
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These can be hard to animate from reference
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because of how slight some
human gestures can be.
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Rotoscoping allows the animator to capture
these small movements and emotions,
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giving the piece a higher
sense of empathy for viewers.
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A negative aspect of rotoscoping
is that the animation can come
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across as creepy or uncanny valley.
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It can ride that fine line between
too human and not human enough.
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Today, rotoscoping is still used,
although techniques have evolved.
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Films like Waking Life or Chico and
Rita use digital means to rotoscope;
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and motion capture used in such films as
Polar Express, Pirates of the Caribbean,
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and Lord of the Rings is largely seen
as today's equivalent in CG animation.
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This animation technique that is nearing its
centennial birthday helped play a key role
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into elevating animation into
the art form it is today.
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