HECTOR the PUP- 35mm raw Thunderbean HD transfer
Here is John Burton's 'Hector the Pup' (1935). This is a new film transfer from an original 1935 Kodak Nitrate print of the film. Pretty, huh?
Here is John Burton's 'Hector the Pup' (1935). This is a new film transfer from an original 1935 Kodak Nitrate print of the film. Pretty, huh?
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I thank God for You. Love, Light, Peace, Music and Joy
I love how this takes the rubberhose animation style of the era and adapts it into stop motion
The stop motion work is amazing.
Burton later worked for Leon Schlesinger- and Warner Bros.
Early stop motion animation,this was released two years after king kong(1933)
I saw Hector The Pup's second short on Google Images in Shutterstock clip "A male dog getting ready for a date" but i can't find a name of that second short after Hector's appearance from John Burton.
Can't believe I've never seen this before!
Pretty. Cool. It's a pretty good example from the 1930s. It reminds me of the outstanding attempts Willis H. O'Brien made on "The Lost World" and "King Kong," which are still heralded even now in the 21st century. Sure, this is more cartoony, but it is still kindred to those attempts. Great find!
great quality.
I wonder why the 1935 copyright on the title card was scratched out
@bunniifangz
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probably a reissue or something
3:20 lmao!
😂😂😂😂
YOU CAN'T HIDE THE DATE!!!! We *KNOW* it's 1935!!!!!!!!!!! 😃
Given that proximity-of-mike-to-voice-performers should not have been an issue (and many other such productions) for animations, then why is the sound so inferior to state-of-art for the mid 30's? This problem dates back to "Finding His Voice". A preponderance of off-the-line (NOT OFF THE AIR) radio recordiings at least here in the U.S.A. typically sound much better than this. Their performers were usually very close to the mikes.