Animutation Animutation

Animutation - Definition and Overview

Animutation is the practice of using Macromedia Flash to create absurd, silly, and corny videos of strange (usually non-English) music. The style was popularized, if not invented, by Neil Cicierega (aka Trapezoid) from Kingston, Massachusetts at the age of 13. Such videos done by other artists are sometimes called Fanimutations, although this article will solely use the term animutation.

Contents

ABS (Albino Blacksheep) History

Sourced from: http://www.albinoblacksheep.com/flash/animutation/

Animutation is a style of animation invented by Neil Cicierega at age 13. This style of animation is usually characterized by random images of pop culture in sequence with foreign music. The animation style is strange, weird, random, but from a creator's point of view, very easy to implement. Professionalism is not required in the Animutation style.

The first Animutation is believed to be "The Japanese Pokerap" by Neil Cicierega. Other animations by other authors adapting Neil's Animutation style were originally called Fanimutations, as they served as a tribute to Neil's Animutations, and were created by fans of Neil's work.

Colin Mochrie is a staple of the Animutation style, as his image appears in various Animutations and Fanimutations as a running gag and as remembrance to the original Animutations. Colin Mochrie is a Canadian improv actor leading in Whose Line Is It Anyway?, This Hour has 22 Minutes, Improv Heaven & Hell, Blackfly, and other television series. He is aware of being an Internet celebrity among Animutation and Fanimutation artists and viewers.

ABS Member, Andrew Kepple created a three-part flash series entitled, "Colin Mochrie versus Jesus H. Christ" that concluded Animutations and Fanimutations are to be interchangeable names for each.

Audio

Animutations are typically based on a song in some other language. Japanese songs were used in most of the original animutations by Trapezoid, but newer animutations use songs in a wide variety of languages, including English. Dutch is becoming increasingly popular for new animutations, but the style does not require any particular language or genre of music.

Fake lyrics

In most animutations, some or all lyrics are intentionally "misheard" in a manner similar to that of mondegreens, resulting in nonsensical and unrelated sentences. These words are sometimes illustrated in the flash movie, but in other cases, even the video is irrelevant to the lyrics (especially in earlier animutations). The misheard lyrics are usually featured in subtitles or as sing-along style lyrics.

For example, these lyrics were used in the second animutation made by Trapezoid, "Hyakugojyuuichi!!!":

TV says donuts are high in fat, kazoo
Found a hobo in my room
It's Princess Leia, the yodel of life
Give me my sweater back or I'll play the guitar!

These took the place of the real Japanese lyrics:

Kimi-tachi to no deai wa zenbu
Chanto oboete 'ru
Kizutsukeatta koto mo atta kedo
Sore wa (e~to) wasureta

Another example of mondegreens come from this animutation made by the same artist called "Earth vs. Funk" (Actual song is called Funkastic by Rip Slyme):

Have a good yam key
And a crusty eye
See him on the pot
Now you're funtastic

That took place of:

F-U-N-K-A-S-T-I-C
On the funk and funkastic

The real and fake lyrics may not appear very similar, but when you hear the song and you imagine that the singer is speaking English in a heavy Japanese accent, it's almost believable. Sometimes, animutations are mondegreened throughout the whole song.

Video

Animutations are typically characterized by bright flashing backgrounds (so photosensitive epileptics should not view them), cut-and-pasted images (which are often resized or cropped sloppily resulting in a pixelated or rough look), haphazard or silly scribbling on the images or other bad drawing, stick figures, and many other elements that give it a highly unpolished and unprofessional look. An animutation will typically also re-use the same image many times, resulting in repetition and choppiness.

Most (or all) Animutation music videos have lyrics, so to represent the lyrics being spoken as dialogue from the random pics, users 'lasso' the mouth section and lower it a little or a lot. Images can also be stretched to represent dialogue also. There are many ways to do this technique.

Running gags

Virtually every single animutation and fanimutation contains one or more images of Colin Mochrie from Whose Line Is It Anyway? and Jay Jay the Jet Plane from the PBS children's series of the same name. Other popular images include Pee Wee Herman, Hulk Hogan, Harry Potter, characters from the show Mystery Science Theater 3000, Mr. Bean, Dave Thomas, the middle finger, SpongeBob SquarePants, Bill Cosby, Steve Urkel, and many other figures from popular culture, including Mochrie's Whose Line co-stars Drew Carey and Ryan Stiles. Catch phrases from shows have also been used, such as the phrases "Hikeeba" or "Watch out for snakes!", both taken from famous episodes of MST 3000. A popular inside joke is the use of hidden images or messages that last for one frame. They are nearly impossible to see without pausing the video. The messages range from telling you to buy funyuns, a message to to disobey your grandparents, or just George Costanza from Seinfeld stating "These pretzels are making me horny!". Thus, the videos have a lot of replay value.

History

In an early Salon interview, Trapezoid said that he was originally inspired by "insane Japanese commercials." The original animutations, "The Japanese Pokerap" and "Hyakugojyuuichi," both based on Japanese Pokemon music, were made by Trapezoid in February of 2001, and quickly became a small internet fad. The style was adopted by others, and the term "fanimutation," to refer to the works by other artists, was adopted. See external link "Mutant Genius" for more history.

See also

External links

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