No, hungarian doesn't have gender pronouns, and it's genderless, but they didn't want to call it an it in english. It's not a reveal, it's just a localization issue.
So the fact we are in this thread can you give me a rundown on hungary animation? I prefer long replies. Also other eastern bloc cartoons can join in too.
Sure.
The most prominent name I've heard about in hungary animation is Marcell Jankovics, known for his most famous work "Feherlofia" or simply "Son Of The White Mare".
The movie is basically a mix of hungarian folktales and mythology, but what I found interesting is the visuals. His style is very abstract, it even won several awards. I'm kinda new to hungary animation but you should give it a try, it's refreshing.
Sure.
The most prominent name I've heard about in hungary animation is Marcell Jankovics, known for his most famous work "Feherlofia" or simply "Son Of The White Mare".
The movie is basically a mix of hungarian folktales and mythology, but what I found interesting is the visuals. His style is very abstract, it even won several awards. I'm kinda new to hungary animation but you should give it a try, it's refreshing.
>I'm kinda new to hungary animation but you should give it a try, it's refreshing.
oh wait maybe I will find someone who can know the animation too in this thread, somewhere.... sorry.
A quick rundown.
Hungary, in general, is a country with a rich history and stories that influence its national animation. Budapest, a cultural hub with a resilient past, traces its history back to the arrival of the Magyars in the Carpathian Basin in the 9th century. King Stephen I established the Hungarian state around 1000 and played a crucial role in successfully Christianizing the region. In the medieval period, Hungary emerged as a significant European kingdom, with the Árpád dynasty ruling for centuries. Subsequent chapters included Ottoman invasions and Habsburg rule, leading to the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, which granted Hungary greater autonomy. The post-World War I era brought territorial losses and political turbulence. Hungary's efforts to regain territories lost after the Treaty of Trianon in 1920 led to alliances with Nazi Germany during World War II. After the fall of the Third Reich, Hungary fell under Soviet influence following the end of the war. The 1956 revolution against communism was brutally suppressed. The fall of the Iron Curtain in 1989 signaled the end of communism, leading Hungary to embrace democracy. All of this eventually led Hungary to join the European Union in 2004 and NATO in 1999.
Sorry for making you wait; I was at work. I hope I don't sound weird.
That's becasue of its non-Indo-European origin, as it belongs to the Finno-Ugric language family, resulting in distinct grammar, vocabulary, and linguistic features. It's a mix of centuries of languages clashing each other
2 weeks ago
Anonymous
But why didn't it come out as a mix of german and slavic languages and instead is this monstrosity of äs and ös?
2 weeks ago
Birchyfunbags
Hungarian used to be cyrillic but then they switched to Latin. Which sucks because I prefer the old cyrillic better. They've even started using it in some places again from what I've seen.
>I'm kinda new to hungary animation but you should give it a try, it's refreshing.
oh wait maybe I will find someone who can know the animation too in this thread, somewhere.... sorry.
Hey! I'll fill in the gaps. Hungarian animators have been around since day one in high places. George Pal and his Puppetoons, Jules Engel at UPA, John Halas of Halas and Batchelor (British company behind Animal Farm), and Gabor Csupo of Klasky-Csupo were all Hungarian animators.
Pannonia Film Studio is the most prominent Hungarian animation studio. Their output is varied, but it tends to shift from abstract, lucid animation (Son of the White Mare, Bubble Bath) to more "conventional" feature animation (Vuk the Little Fox, Cat City).
A few points of interest: >Marcell Jankovics made four animated features for the studio. >Johnny Corncob is the first Hungarian animated feature. >Son of the White Mare was more popular in the US than in its native Hungary. >Song of the Miraculous Hind, a film about Hungarian history. >The Tragedy of Man, which is the longest Western animated film... and a total masterpiece.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXdbAFIWfvY_UbcWGMMFcCiFwoXBTDPSY&feature=shared >Hugo the Hippo was the first animated film distributed by Fox.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXdbAFIWfvY-mAIDCETG7SDS-p1O7fae8&feature=shared >Heroic Times was a fully-painted animated feature way before Loving Vincent claimed it started the trend. >Cat City is 80s adult-animated kino if you're into that. It's the missing link between Fritz the Cat and Rock and Rule. >2002's The Princess and the Pea boasts incredible animation almost on par with Anastasia. Story's kinda silly but it's worth a watch if you like mock-Disney stuff.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXdbAFIWfvY9EA1sGhTSci0q_NJ1dwEdX&feature=shared
Once communism fell, many Hungarian state-funded studios were no longer sustainable. They had to turn to outsourcing to finance original work. Still, the government treats these films really well: with high-quality restorations and regular displays from their national film archive.
Check them out if you can! At their highest, I think there's a lot of great abstract expression and visual energy that you don't typically see in American animation.
A few points of interest: >Marcell Jankovics made four animated features for the studio. >Johnny Corncob is the first Hungarian animated feature. >Son of the White Mare was more popular in the US than in its native Hungary. >Song of the Miraculous Hind, a film about Hungarian history. >The Tragedy of Man, which is the longest Western animated film... and a total masterpiece.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXdbAFIWfvY_UbcWGMMFcCiFwoXBTDPSY&feature=shared >Hugo the Hippo was the first animated film distributed by Fox.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXdbAFIWfvY-mAIDCETG7SDS-p1O7fae8&feature=shared >Heroic Times was a fully-painted animated feature way before Loving Vincent claimed it started the trend. >Cat City is 80s adult-animated kino if you're into that. It's the missing link between Fritz the Cat and Rock and Rule. >2002's The Princess and the Pea boasts incredible animation almost on par with Anastasia. Story's kinda silly but it's worth a watch if you like mock-Disney stuff.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXdbAFIWfvY9EA1sGhTSci0q_NJ1dwEdX&feature=shared
Once communism fell, many Hungarian state-funded studios were no longer sustainable. They had to turn to outsourcing to finance original work. Still, the government treats these films really well: with high-quality restorations and regular displays from their national film archive.
Check them out if you can! At their highest, I think there's a lot of great abstract expression and visual energy that you don't typically see in American animation.
?feature=shared
(3/3)
Thanks! I also like some soviet content but that would be even longer so maybe I can do it instead or not.
I'll see what I can find. All you have to do is look at Söyuzmultfilm's catalog, they produced several films for the USSR and have an incredibly extensive back catalog. Just replace the O in "Söy" and this link should be good.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Söyuzmultfilm
I'm also going to link you to an animation catalog I've been putting together so you can view these films all in one place. I recommend you start with 1957's The Snow Queen, that's probably the most famous Russian animated classic.
https://youtube.com/@GammaToons?feature=shared
Thanks, now i can go update this again... >George Pal
Any global relevance, or he is just known for doing a thing? >Jules Engel
Will include for CalArts influence.
Pal >Any global relevance, or he is just known for doing a thing?
Pal was a big producer of American fantasy and science fiction films in the middle of the century. Probably most famous for 1950's Destination Moon, 1953's The War of the Worlds and 1960's The Time Machine.
I once read a book where the author considered Pal one of the 20th century's most significant special effect creators, alongside Ray Harryhausen and Eiji Tsuburaya. Of course that's just the author's personal opinion, not some grand academic truth, but it's still a very high praise. Tsuburaya knew of Pal's films and he was impressed by their special effects.
Don't forget about Gustav. I guess it's sort of obscure these days but it was one of Pannonia's first adult comedies and one of their first truly big hits. The Gustav shorts were a playground for lot of big name Hungarian animation directors and writers. At one point a Gustav movie was proposed as Hungary's first animated feature film, before they decided to go with Johnny Corncob instead.
Thanks for that! I knew about Gustav but I didn't know as much about Hungarian TV animation as I did their films. Gustav looks fun so I'll have to check it out someday.
It's still shown on television from time to time. I've seen it a few months ago, it's not bad but it's not the same as the original. More focus on fast action and short visual gags, and the colors are garish. Kriszta is left out, even though there are a bunch of random one-off background characters, so they could easily have included her as a cameo.
It's about the kids playing with a remote control flying rabbit. The fight over the controller and the robot goes crazy, ends up falling into water and the kids have to work together to get it out. Very basic, not much to it, I think they just wanted to show what they could do with the new animation style and put little thought into the plot or characters.
OH I understand now. I just thought that because of Chinggis Khaan fucking every woman he came across I thought they just had Asians. I didn't take that into account. It guess it kinda reminds me of Armenia I guess over centuries of race mixing people just start to have weird features.
>reee stop attaching an identity to me instead of seeing me as a cool mysterious entity!
Based retard. Keep putting your personal feelings over the needs of actual children.
Started a thread about this, but didn't get a satisfying answer (obviously, it didn't have tits in it)
Before computers, how the hell did they make the underwater rippling effect?
If I remember correctly, a lot of people replied to you and you're just being a cunt
For underwater scenes, animators would draw the desired motion of the water's surface on multiple cels. To create the rippling effect, they might use multiple layers of cels with slight variations in the drawings to simulate the distortion caused by the movement of water. Each frame would be carefully hand-drawn to convey the illusion of motion. They had to get creative, I wonder where all at that imagination went
The only thing i that seems plausible is distorting the final cels themselves, otherwise they would have had to animate with some semi-transparent light distorting material onto cels they would put onto the animation cels, but that probably wouldn't look like that.
I guess they put water on a cel and just dripped more water on it. I know some old cheap cartoons would put actual real effects in.
That would mean they would have to record a playback of the animation playing under the water, which would look like shit, otherwise the rippling wouldn't look smooth and continuous.
For underwater scenes, animators would draw the desired motion of the water's surface on multiple cels. To create the rippling effect, they might use multiple layers of cels with slight variations in the drawings to simulate the distortion caused by the movement of water. Each frame would be carefully hand-drawn to convey the illusion of motion. They had to get creative, I wonder where all at that imagination went
Thats a great way to understand it. >I wonder where all at that imagination went
How is it that you could have only like 2 to 4 animators making the best shit but the shit that comes out now has like 20 animators and the cartoons look like shit? We truly have lost the way.
Thats a great way to understand it. >I wonder where all at that imagination went
How is it that you could have only like 2 to 4 animators making the best shit but the shit that comes out now has like 20 animators and the cartoons look like shit? We truly have lost the way.
Not sure what you mean, current hun cartoons look like this.
I saw this in cinema. It's really dope. The voice acting is still weird and awkwardly worded at times despite it being made in hungarian but it's really fun. I especially liked the Lightning character that came into the movie after a good while. The guy had some really cool animation.
Other recent (ongoing from 2021) hungarian thing, about dinosaurs living in a reality show and getting voted out by species.
English translation probably never.
And also made a commercial comic series in microsoft paint, and a card game for Pangea TV in microsoft paint, which gives him money other than patreon, tends to sell them at cons.
The Cat City restoration recently got a US release on blu-ray. The old English VHS dub isn't included. Not a huge loss, it was censored and got rid of a few good jokes but it would have been nice to preserve. At least it has other nice bonus features like documentaries and interviews about the film's creators. I hope someone will post them online eventually.
It's interesting that vintage Hungarian animation gets more appreciation abroad than in its home. Son of the White Mare, Johnny Corncob and Heroic Times also got blu-ray editions in the US and Bubble Bath was released in France. Hungary only has DVDs but some films don't have any currently available releases at all, unless you manage to catch them on TV.
There was a pretty nice looking DVD set released a few years back about award winning shorts from the 60s to the 80s. Now that Deaf Crocodile is putting out newer blu-ray sets centered around specific movies or directors, they should really take the opportunity to produce more comprehensive releases.
Ok so here's my contradict on the introduction of eastern bloc animation like the first ever or something like that:
>Albania
Animation was first introduced in the mid 70s
>Armenia
1930s the guys who created snow queen created the armenian animation industry before moving to russia.
>Azerbajan
Around 1930s, but oldest animation found is from 1960s.
>Belarus
1960s then animation consistently begin to make more during the 70s.
>Bulgaria
1940s
>Croatia
1920s but animation film started in the 1950s
>Czech and also Slovakia
1920s
>Estonia
1930s but had an hiatus due to WW2 but after that had started an animation industry during the late 50s.
>Hungary
1910s
>Georgia
around 1940s and earlier
>Latvia
1960s
>Lithutania
First 2d animation made in 1960s
>Moldova
1960s
>Poland
1940s with studio forming
>Russia
Around 1900s or 1910s
>Romania
1920s
>Ukranian
1920s but has a hiatus after the 30s due to the war. Animation industry was recreated in the late 50s but started releasing cartoons around the early 60s.
Correct me if i'm wrong just trying to figure out which dates introduce their first animation.
what numbers?
holy shit
What?
HE CANT KEEP GETTING AWAY WITH IT
Rabbits only use their ears like helicopter blades in the movies.
>Has never truly obtained the love and trust of a rabbit
>Rabbit has never shown anon the super secret helicopter technique
Sad!
It's a sekret klub power
Post the drawing of her in the suitcase
So, ia the Rabbit with checkered ears a female?. Is it official?
I don't have it...
I want to hug him so bad
use him as an helicopter so bad
>her
Anon, I have some unfortunate news.
Yeah the rabbit doesn't have a gender
>he doesn't know
It's a boy, according to official promo material.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0133307/trivia/?ref_=tt_trv_trv
No, hungarian doesn't have gender pronouns, and it's genderless, but they didn't want to call it an it in english. It's not a reveal, it's just a localization issue.
It's official promo material, that means it's canon. Deal with it, nerd. Yes, you are in fact a homosex if you want to fuck the rabbit.
Canon for english speakers, maybe :^)
So the fact we are in this thread can you give me a rundown on hungary animation? I prefer long replies. Also other eastern bloc cartoons can join in too.
Sure.
The most prominent name I've heard about in hungary animation is Marcell Jankovics, known for his most famous work "Feherlofia" or simply "Son Of The White Mare".
The movie is basically a mix of hungarian folktales and mythology, but what I found interesting is the visuals. His style is very abstract, it even won several awards. I'm kinda new to hungary animation but you should give it a try, it's refreshing.
tell me the history from start to finish about the country itself, it's nice to tell more information.
>I'm kinda new to hungary animation but you should give it a try, it's refreshing.
oh wait maybe I will find someone who can know the animation too in this thread, somewhere.... sorry.
not him but I found some episodes
https://archive.org/details/a-kockasfulu-nyul/A+kock%C3%A1sf%C3%BCl%C5%B1+ny%C3%BAl+-+A+cirkusz+(19.+r%C3%A9sz).mp4
I know I collected more cartoons that you guys never heard of.
It feels weird to meet someone that actually watches old cartoons and not the weird stuff that is reaching bump limit at the moment
He's gonna vanish away very soon
A quick rundown.
Hungary, in general, is a country with a rich history and stories that influence its national animation. Budapest, a cultural hub with a resilient past, traces its history back to the arrival of the Magyars in the Carpathian Basin in the 9th century. King Stephen I established the Hungarian state around 1000 and played a crucial role in successfully Christianizing the region. In the medieval period, Hungary emerged as a significant European kingdom, with the Árpád dynasty ruling for centuries. Subsequent chapters included Ottoman invasions and Habsburg rule, leading to the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, which granted Hungary greater autonomy. The post-World War I era brought territorial losses and political turbulence. Hungary's efforts to regain territories lost after the Treaty of Trianon in 1920 led to alliances with Nazi Germany during World War II. After the fall of the Third Reich, Hungary fell under Soviet influence following the end of the war. The 1956 revolution against communism was brutally suppressed. The fall of the Iron Curtain in 1989 signaled the end of communism, leading Hungary to embrace democracy. All of this eventually led Hungary to join the European Union in 2004 and NATO in 1999.
Sorry for making you wait; I was at work. I hope I don't sound weird.
Nah i was busy doing stuff too but thanks
Can you explain why they have such a fucked up language?
That's becasue of its non-Indo-European origin, as it belongs to the Finno-Ugric language family, resulting in distinct grammar, vocabulary, and linguistic features. It's a mix of centuries of languages clashing each other
But why didn't it come out as a mix of german and slavic languages and instead is this monstrosity of äs and ös?
Hungarian used to be cyrillic but then they switched to Latin. Which sucks because I prefer the old cyrillic better. They've even started using it in some places again from what I've seen.
You realize that has nothind to do with cyrillic?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Hungarian_script
>Me confusing Rune with Cyrillic again
Well fuck. Still cool though.
While current hungarian is written from left to right, runes are written from right to left, so many traditionalists learn to read texts both ways.
Don't reply to the fucking homosexual
That is interesting as fuck. Hungary is a very interesting country. Like they have an Asian minority that are descendants from Mongols.
We know you touch kids Birchy
Stop giving him attention, you all should kill yourselves too
>Like they have an Asian minority that are descendants from Mongols.
I mean yeah they were invaded by Mongolia
You fucking loser are too poor to ever travel outside of your shitty state, fuck off
I think you mean Rune. They didn't have cyrillic.
>ä
Literally doesn't exist in hungarian.
>monstrosity
Read this:
https://dailynewshungary.com/hungarian-language-the-top-product-of-human-logic/
Sure sounds a lot like they have it.
Especially when they pronounce German words.
>jungä
Hey! I'll fill in the gaps. Hungarian animators have been around since day one in high places. George Pal and his Puppetoons, Jules Engel at UPA, John Halas of Halas and Batchelor (British company behind Animal Farm), and Gabor Csupo of Klasky-Csupo were all Hungarian animators.
Pannonia Film Studio is the most prominent Hungarian animation studio. Their output is varied, but it tends to shift from abstract, lucid animation (Son of the White Mare, Bubble Bath) to more "conventional" feature animation (Vuk the Little Fox, Cat City).
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pannonia_Film_Studio
(1/3)
A few points of interest:
>Marcell Jankovics made four animated features for the studio.
>Johnny Corncob is the first Hungarian animated feature.
>Son of the White Mare was more popular in the US than in its native Hungary.
>Song of the Miraculous Hind, a film about Hungarian history.
>The Tragedy of Man, which is the longest Western animated film... and a total masterpiece.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXdbAFIWfvY_UbcWGMMFcCiFwoXBTDPSY&feature=shared
>Hugo the Hippo was the first animated film distributed by Fox.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXdbAFIWfvY-mAIDCETG7SDS-p1O7fae8&feature=shared
>Heroic Times was a fully-painted animated feature way before Loving Vincent claimed it started the trend.
>Cat City is 80s adult-animated kino if you're into that. It's the missing link between Fritz the Cat and Rock and Rule.
>2002's The Princess and the Pea boasts incredible animation almost on par with Anastasia. Story's kinda silly but it's worth a watch if you like mock-Disney stuff.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXdbAFIWfvY9EA1sGhTSci0q_NJ1dwEdX&feature=shared
Once communism fell, many Hungarian state-funded studios were no longer sustainable. They had to turn to outsourcing to finance original work. Still, the government treats these films really well: with high-quality restorations and regular displays from their national film archive.
Check them out if you can! At their highest, I think there's a lot of great abstract expression and visual energy that you don't typically see in American animation.
?feature=shared
(3/3)
Thanks! I also like some soviet content but that would be even longer so maybe I can do it instead or not.
I'll see what I can find. All you have to do is look at Söyuzmultfilm's catalog, they produced several films for the USSR and have an incredibly extensive back catalog. Just replace the O in "Söy" and this link should be good.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Söyuzmultfilm
I'm also going to link you to an animation catalog I've been putting together so you can view these films all in one place. I recommend you start with 1957's The Snow Queen, that's probably the most famous Russian animated classic.
https://youtube.com/@GammaToons?feature=shared
Thanks, now i can go update this again...
>George Pal
Any global relevance, or he is just known for doing a thing?
>Jules Engel
Will include for CalArts influence.
Pal
>Any global relevance, or he is just known for doing a thing?
Pal was a big producer of American fantasy and science fiction films in the middle of the century. Probably most famous for 1950's Destination Moon, 1953's The War of the Worlds and 1960's The Time Machine.
I once read a book where the author considered Pal one of the 20th century's most significant special effect creators, alongside Ray Harryhausen and Eiji Tsuburaya. Of course that's just the author's personal opinion, not some grand academic truth, but it's still a very high praise. Tsuburaya knew of Pal's films and he was impressed by their special effects.
Don't forget about Gustav. I guess it's sort of obscure these days but it was one of Pannonia's first adult comedies and one of their first truly big hits. The Gustav shorts were a playground for lot of big name Hungarian animation directors and writers. At one point a Gustav movie was proposed as Hungary's first animated feature film, before they decided to go with Johnny Corncob instead.
She's hot what is the episode where she appears?
Thanks for that! I knew about Gustav but I didn't know as much about Hungarian TV animation as I did their films. Gustav looks fun so I'll have to check it out someday.
Rabbit
Is this still lost media
I guess what happened?
All I could find was a clip. Some Anon a few threads ago said it airs on Hungarian TV all the time with the original.
Fuck off
Kill yourself, when will you have your next mental breakdown in the archive?
I think the admin from the tbharchive deleted it.
You fuck off too.
It's still shown on television from time to time. I've seen it a few months ago, it's not bad but it's not the same as the original. More focus on fast action and short visual gags, and the colors are garish. Kriszta is left out, even though there are a bunch of random one-off background characters, so they could easily have included her as a cameo.
It's about the kids playing with a remote control flying rabbit. The fight over the controller and the robot goes crazy, ends up falling into water and the kids have to work together to get it out. Very basic, not much to it, I think they just wanted to show what they could do with the new animation style and put little thought into the plot or characters.
>see small antro rabbit
>no sexual features in anyway
>still get a raging hard on
fucking why?
Walking talking slavic onahole
the fact that its a boy makes it so much worse for me
>slavic
wat
actual slavic countries are: all yugoslavia countries, bulgaria, czech, slovak, russian, belarus, ukrainian, polish
wooo anon you cant catch him
FUCK
You can never outrun my libido, rabbit
not today homosexual
im not the one taking it in the ass
rab
DONT PAY ATTENTION TO BIRCHY, PAY ATTENTION TO THESE DIGITS
Why? He's actually staying on topic for once. I wanna learn more about runes.
Fuck off
OH I understand now. I just thought that because of Chinggis Khaan fucking every woman he came across I thought they just had Asians. I didn't take that into account. It guess it kinda reminds me of Armenia I guess over centuries of race mixing people just start to have weird features.
Finally a thread to post webms.
Smeet
Fuck off
He should draw Kistofi or Menyus.
You should kill yourself.
FUCK YOU
No, stop.
I'm just waiting for him to appear now.
Quick! Someone light the smeet signal!
Fuck you.
Fuck off munty.
>Fuck off boogeyman
Yawn. Get new material.
>reee stop attaching an identity to me instead of seeing me as a cool mysterious entity!
Based retard. Keep putting your personal feelings over the needs of actual children.
where can I watch this or what is this called? It looks amazing
Started a thread about this, but didn't get a satisfying answer (obviously, it didn't have tits in it)
Before computers, how the hell did they make the underwater rippling effect?
the same thing the anime does or that one bob clampett short?
The only thing i that seems plausible is distorting the final cels themselves, otherwise they would have had to animate with some semi-transparent light distorting material onto cels they would put onto the animation cels, but that probably wouldn't look like that.
That would mean they would have to record a playback of the animation playing under the water, which would look like shit, otherwise the rippling wouldn't look smooth and continuous.
Good point.
If I remember correctly, a lot of people replied to you and you're just being a cunt
If you count a single person as "lot of" then yes:
https://desuarchive.org/co/thread/140264951/
That one person gave a good answer, again, anon is being a huge cunt
I guess they put water on a cel and just dripped more water on it. I know some old cheap cartoons would put actual real effects in.
For underwater scenes, animators would draw the desired motion of the water's surface on multiple cels. To create the rippling effect, they might use multiple layers of cels with slight variations in the drawings to simulate the distortion caused by the movement of water. Each frame would be carefully hand-drawn to convey the illusion of motion. They had to get creative, I wonder where all at that imagination went
Thats a great way to understand it.
>I wonder where all at that imagination went
How is it that you could have only like 2 to 4 animators making the best shit but the shit that comes out now has like 20 animators and the cartoons look like shit? We truly have lost the way.
I wish you’d lose all feeling in your body.
You're witnessing the future of "animation" here, anon. It all comes down to this very show
>
Neverhood Chronicles lookin ass nigga.
Not sure what you mean, current hun cartoons look like this.
Looks cool. I might have to force myself to learn Hungarian like I did French to watch it.
It's in english too, although the dub sounds really shit:
It was released this year. This one was last year.
Oh boy.
I saw this in cinema. It's really dope. The voice acting is still weird and awkwardly worded at times despite it being made in hungarian but it's really fun. I especially liked the Lightning character that came into the movie after a good while. The guy had some really cool animation.
Coyote looks ass tho, it has the same director who made pic related, which is a horrid abomination about gypsies
Other, almost speechless Toldi trailer.
This one looks cool.
Can you fuck off?
Other recent (ongoing from 2021) hungarian thing, about dinosaurs living in a reality show and getting voted out by species.
English translation probably never.
This feels like some shit I'd see on Newgrounds in 2007. Still cool though.
It's made by one person in microsoft paint. And writing itself is what makes it great.
>Made by one person in MS paint
Damn.
I think it's not just one person though maybe a family members or something
Nah I've heard of people being so devoted to what they love that they'll solo a project by themselves. And those projects are usually pretty good.
Was done by the same person who previously made the biggest Naruto parody project ever.
31+ episodes, a special, a 3/4 hour long movie, and a comic, all made in microsoft paint.
Fuck, how to link to playlists...
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLF4FCD55FF2470A7B
Fucking cool. This guy followed his dreams.
And also made a commercial comic series in microsoft paint, and a card game for Pangea TV in microsoft paint, which gives him money other than patreon, tends to sell them at cons.
I respect his hustle.
Except the voices, and music in later episodes.
First two episodes have english subs actually.
Oh I like this.
Holy fuck yes. I love this series but do not speak hungarian. Praying that some kind hungarianon translates the rest of it one day
is subtitle ok?
Get a life
Forgot someones made mock anime intros for Toldi.
I love it.
Hungarians are alright.
Use better Kriszta please.
Cute!
Wait wtf
What the fuck is that a shirt?
It's some cloth thing. But why random screenshots, and why of the reboot nobody knows? What
Its a knockoff probably. They usually use screenshots and slap them on a product.
So it's Chinese, okay i can process that.
Christa
BirchAugie upgraded yet another thread with xhir mighty presence
Imagine xhem swinging from that noose
bump
thanks
The Cat City restoration recently got a US release on blu-ray. The old English VHS dub isn't included. Not a huge loss, it was censored and got rid of a few good jokes but it would have been nice to preserve. At least it has other nice bonus features like documentaries and interviews about the film's creators. I hope someone will post them online eventually.
It's interesting that vintage Hungarian animation gets more appreciation abroad than in its home. Son of the White Mare, Johnny Corncob and Heroic Times also got blu-ray editions in the US and Bubble Bath was released in France. Hungary only has DVDs but some films don't have any currently available releases at all, unless you manage to catch them on TV.
I really hope they can release the much rarer cartoons
There was a pretty nice looking DVD set released a few years back about award winning shorts from the 60s to the 80s. Now that Deaf Crocodile is putting out newer blu-ray sets centered around specific movies or directors, they should really take the opportunity to produce more comprehensive releases.
Ok so here's my contradict on the introduction of eastern bloc animation like the first ever or something like that:
>Albania
Animation was first introduced in the mid 70s
>Armenia
1930s the guys who created snow queen created the armenian animation industry before moving to russia.
>Azerbajan
Around 1930s, but oldest animation found is from 1960s.
>Belarus
1960s then animation consistently begin to make more during the 70s.
>Bulgaria
1940s
>Croatia
1920s but animation film started in the 1950s
>Czech and also Slovakia
1920s
>Estonia
1930s but had an hiatus due to WW2 but after that had started an animation industry during the late 50s.
>Hungary
1910s
>Georgia
around 1940s and earlier
>Latvia
1960s
>Lithutania
First 2d animation made in 1960s
>Moldova
1960s
>Poland
1940s with studio forming
>Russia
Around 1900s or 1910s
>Romania
1920s
>Ukranian
1920s but has a hiatus after the 30s due to the war. Animation industry was recreated in the late 50s but started releasing cartoons around the early 60s.
Correct me if i'm wrong just trying to figure out which dates introduce their first animation.
Bonus Points:
>Macedonia
Arount the 60s but animation studio was made around the 70s lasting until 1991
>Kazah
1960s
he's REAL
Fucking helicopter rabbit
circus rabbit
Huh
>"Six million seems like kind of a lot, huh? Kind of makes you think."
nice
him