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Before Mickey

The Animated Film 1898-1928

With a New Afterword
An engaging account of the largely forgotten world of early animated films from Hollywood and beyond

This witty and fascinating study reminds us that there was animation before Disney: about thirty years of creativity and experimentation flourishing in such extraordinary work as Gertiethe Dinosaur and Felix the Cat. Before Mickey, the first in-depth history of animation from the turn of the century until the debut of Disney, includes accounts of mechanical ingenuity, marketing, and art. Donald Crafton is equally adept at explaining techniques of sketching and camera work, evoking characteristic styles of such pioneering animators as Winsor McCay and Ladislas Starevitch, placing work in its social and economic context, and unraveling the aesthetic impact of specific cartoons.
 

436 pages | 135 halftones, 6 line drawings | 5.5 x 8.5 | © 1993

Film Studies

Reviews

"Before Mickey's scholarship is quite lively and its descriptions are evocative and often funny. The history of animation coexisted with that of live-action film but has never been given as much attention."

New York Times Book Review

Table of Contents

Foreword by Otto Messmer
Preface
Animation: Myth, Magic, and Industry
1. The Secret of the Haunted Hotel
2. From Comic Strip and Blackboard to Screen
3. The First Animator: Emile Cohl
4. "Watch Me Move!" The Films of Winsor McCay
5. The Henry Ford of Animation: John Randolph Bray
6. The Animation "Shops"
7. Commercial Animation in Europe
8. Automated Art
9. Felix; or, Feline Felicity
Conclusion
Notes
Afterword, Errata, and Update
Selected Bibliography
Index

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