There is NO WAY that we can get in the zone, because the zone sounds like a HORRIBLE PLACE, since we are TERRIBLE at buckball, and we are going to LOSE, and let everypony down, AND WE DON’T WANNA PLAY ANYMORE!!!!!!
@Muffinshire
There were some later Tracey Ullman shorts that good a bit less cartoony than this. Don’t get me wrong, they’re still cartoony, but you could tell that they were hitting their stride with the animation towards the end of the run. @Brony_Conundrum
You’re allowed to have your own opinion, but I actually prefer the animation from around Season 10-13 (before they went digital). It really felt like they had perfected how to use traditional animation to their advantage by then.
@Brony_Conundrum
I think that was the point at which the Korean subcontractors took over full inbetweening duties. The animation got a lot cleaner but also a lot stiffer when that happened.
@Muffinshire
I honestly preferred the season 2 animation. In fact, The Simpsons’ animation was fantastic up until the post-movie seasons. Then it started getting a bit too uncanny for my taste.
After this clip, I’m convinced Fluttershy was the Roid Rager of the team. Also, anyone else think Fluttershy without sound here should get the “wha wha”s the parents say from the Peanuts movies?
@Deon Miller
There’s just something about those early Klasky Csupo-animated Simpsons episodes that sticks with me. Okay, the drawings were often crude, and they had more than their share of animation errors and weird-looking stuff (early Simpsons was pretty low-budget after all), but it felt a lot livelier than the more regimented, always-on-model style that developed later, and just occasionally they could really knock it out of the park like that.
“Look, kid. You’re gonna do what I tell you or I’m gonna do something to you, and I don’t know what that is because **everyone had always done what I say.*”
It’s not a 100% serious dramatic scene, it’s an over-the-top scene in a light-hearted episode.
Especially the end XD
these aren’t creepy there cute. unlike that abortion of a T&J movie where that was ugly from beginning to end
Well it technically was Opposite Shy last episode.
There were some later Tracey Ullman shorts that good a bit less cartoony than this. Don’t get me wrong, they’re still cartoony, but you could tell that they were hitting their stride with the animation towards the end of the run.
@Brony_Conundrum
You’re allowed to have your own opinion, but I actually prefer the animation from around Season 10-13 (before they went digital). It really felt like they had perfected how to use traditional animation to their advantage by then.
I think that was the point at which the Korean subcontractors took over full inbetweening duties. The animation got a lot cleaner but also a lot stiffer when that happened.
I honestly preferred the season 2 animation. In fact, The Simpsons’ animation was fantastic up until the post-movie seasons. Then it started getting a bit too uncanny for my taste.
Because, after all, we have to remember that they’re cartoon characters, and cartoon characters can do whatever they want. :3
There’s just something about those early Klasky Csupo-animated Simpsons episodes that sticks with me. Okay, the drawings were often crude, and they had more than their share of animation errors and weird-looking stuff (early Simpsons was pretty low-budget after all), but it felt a lot livelier than the more regimented, always-on-model style that developed later, and just occasionally they could really knock it out of the park like that.
Such fluid animation…..
Oh! My bad. I didn’t realize I posted this gif twice.
Still, this moment of the episode deserves all the applause.
I’ve seen it on two images in a row now.
What do you mean?
Why do you keep posting this?