Although I liked this idea, it felt pretty vague and from the beginning, I knew whatever I would create for my practical needed to tie in to my essay and I have known for a long time that one of my weaknesses is that of not staying on subject and straying off target.
Oscar gave me the idea to instead of just animating a scene and that be it, have two scenes as my final products. One that is animated and one that is shot for shot, a live action version of that scene. I really liked this idea and felt like it would give me the opportunity to put to the test how animation can evoke emotion in ways that are not necessarily better than live-action, but different.
The first idea I had was thought up one night at around 4am and scribbled into a sketchbook...
It wasn't a particularly unique idea 'a house party is happening and a character is stood outside alone in the cold and just as he begins to walk off, someone from inside sees him and invites him in', but I felt like it was enough to evoke emotion, in fact I think that sometimes the simpler ideas are more successful at evoking emotion. But I felt like it wasn't enough just to animate this scene shot for shot, that is essentially rotoscoping and I'm not really using animation to it's advantage. So the next follow up idea I had was pretty simple, in the animated version, turn them all into teddybears. Teddybears have long been used in animation and children's book illustrations to evoke emotion. And how do they evoke emotion? Simple, their cute, fluffy, soft and we hate the idea of them having a hard time (part of the reason why Toy Story is so successful at evoking emotion in it's viewers).
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