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Glen Keane flips a scene from Aladdin

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Uploaded by on Feb 22, 2009

This is why i love hand-drawn animation. Sorry for the quality.

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Entertainment

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Top Comments

  • Glen Keane did a great job with Aladdin. He's a true ANIMATION LEGEND! He certainly has inspired me! I'm gonna be an animator one day!

  • animators are ridiculously talented!

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  • id be an animator if 1 i could draw and 2 i could pump out a 10 minute animation in a couple of days.

  • Every time I have doubts on being an animator I go to youtube and search for a Glen Keane vid and I get inspited all over again

  • This makes me proud to study animation.

  • Oh god this is beautiful ;___;

  • @Charinidae me too

  • @RatherGrim Its always 24 frames a sec, always, but its hardly ever 24 drawings a sec, its usually a mixture of 2s or 1s and 3s, if its 1s then yeah its 24 a sec, but its only for brief moments, students need to know this, yeah Richard Williams did a lot of work on 1s, he was the exception, like Roger Rabbit, but again that's why his characters were so rubbery. The genie in Aladdin moved in a lot of 1s, but again in the slow scenes, it would be down to 2s and even a few 3s.

  • @RatherGrim Also 3s are used the most in the Disney films in again the slow scenes coming out of holds where there is little movement, but some times there just mixed in in a lot scenes, 4s are more in Japanese animation, but you might get a few 4s in slow holds where your trying to keep the drawing alive, Bluth did this so well in the Land Before Time holds, great holds coming in and out, some of the best Ives seen. They didn't perfect this back in Bambi yet.

  • @RatherGrim I got accepted to Sheridan College's classical animation program, no your wrong, many people don't no this it is like a secret, 3s are used all the time in the slow scenes, its saves tons of work with so little increments between drawings, its better in 3s or 4s because theirs less drawings to jitter and shake, and you will not notice at all, you just have to mix it with 2s especially for the faster movements coming out of the hold.

  • @Dalen77 - People rarely, if ever use 3's or 4's, the motion would be far to jagged. Most animations uses a combination of 1's and 2's because it gives it the slick, fluid motion that you always see in films. Seeing as Glen Keane said that they used 24 frames a second, they must primarily be on 1's. Animation legend Richard Williams thinks for the most part that even 2's doesn't give a smooth enough motion.

  • Thats not correct its not 24 drawings a second always, its 24 frames, some times its in 2s or 3s, 2s is 12 drawings a second and 3s is 9. So in the slow scenes, don't do it in ones do it in 3s or 4s then go into 2s when the motion speeds up. You go in and and out in and out.

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