I have finally figured out the genius behind Kanaban Graphics. It’s director Satoshi Tomioka. This is a director worth studying. He is definitely on the edge. But the trail on him runs cold at around 2009. Does anyone know what he has been up to lately?
These first two clips are from a Play Station Portable game called Exit CF.
An MTV art break
This next one is unusual because it contains dialog.
He has quite a few videos on Youtube, and several of them are less slapsticky, and more surreal, such as this one.
As a former deep sea diver, I am fascinated with this next one.
M. Wilson Disher wrote “Clowns and Pantomimes” which was published in 1925. He lays out six varieties of physical comedy. These are:
FALLS, BLOWS, SURPRISE, KNAVERY, MIMICRY, and STUPIDITY
FALLS. Easily the first one to come to mind. Gravity reminds us we are not special. The more important or serious the person is, the funnier it is when they fall. There are many combinations of people and ways of falling. It’s really about the set up, and also about having a reasonable belief that the person isn’t seriously injured. It’s about making them look foolish.
BLOWS This is the bread and butter of the Three Stooges. It’s also the category that pie fights fall into.
SURPRISE One reason Buster Keaton was considered a great film maker was his ability to set up surprises. You are all set to see one thing, then he gives you another. There are two good surprises in this clip from his short film “One Week.”
KNAVERY is the sneaky stealing of things. The sly trickster is appealing. He is the partner of stupidity. I immediately thought of Harpo Marx.
MIMICRY. You probably noticed the brief moment of mimicry in the previous clip. When someone pretends to be some one or something else, it is funny. Dressing in drag is a form of mimicry. The greater the skill, the greater the comedy. Jim Carrey has great skill and he pushes the exaggeration as far as he can.
STUPIDITY. Here’s the problem with demonstrations of stupidity: The professionals have been pushed out of the market by the amateurs. I’m talking about “fail” videos. Damn if there aren’t lots of cameras trained on lots of stupid people. But we want to see how the professionals act stupid. The comedy of mistakes. It’s about seeing things wrong, being confused, but it’s also seeing things in a different way. The stupid character misinterprets directions and repeatedly makes the same mistake over again. Stan Laurel was one of the great stupid comedians.
I just heard the news that Jonathan Winters has died. It is a blessed life when you can bring joy and laughter to so many people.
When we lived in southern California, my wife and I went into a furniture store on Ventura Boulevard in Studio City. Jonathan Winters was there, holding a pillow and talking to an invisible person in one the beds on display. The invisible person was a relative he was fed up with. He proceeded to use the pillow to smother this “person”. I remember it very clearly. He was doing comedy, with an audience of about 5 people. The guy can not turn it off.
I used to watch Jonathan Winters on TV as a kid. My family loved him. A documentary about Winters, apparently made in 2007, is just now being released. Here is a link to the film’s web page.
Winter’s great genius was improvisation. Here is a clip of him from 1964. With a plain stick he can easily create a character using it as a prop. His voice, expression, body position and the prop all instantly fall in place, and he makes it funny. And not just one character, but a series of them.
If you are having a hard time thinking up a character to animate, try to remember Jonathan Winters.