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#bojack animatic
nostalgic-woodwind · 2 years
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On this special episode, the Horse teaches the kids about stranger danger
Original audio: @melissakristintv (Instagram)
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thetimelimit · 5 months
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Yakko from the 90's with toxic Hollywood behavior
🛐SUPREMACY🛐
Animatic that I have had for months, using the Bojack scene (I tried to use their old design haha)
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dindleseed · 1 month
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Hi and welcome to ‘my new dnd character I’m obsessed with’
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mazyb0i · 5 months
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This is Nice.
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powderofcats15 · 5 months
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"You are all the things that are wrong with you, bojack" OKAY so this is most definitely out of the norm for me to post but but i hope you guys enjoy it regardless! i enjoyed making this so much omg
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fishfetti · 1 year
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well!!!! what can i say i am delusional here's a mob psycho animatic
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sockfus · 4 months
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shedding tears over adashi instead of studying was not on my 2024 bingo
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labratboygirl · 8 months
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JUST GOT SUCH A GOOD ANIMATIC IDEA THAT I GOT A MINI PANIC ATTACK FROM IT .OH MY GOOOOODDDDD
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mari1019 · 2 years
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bellesheres1219 · 4 months
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Remember when Scarecrow had a gun in the original movie...
Made a video about inspired by Bojack Horseman. This was funny to make. Link is down below.
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cinderpresss · 8 months
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Check out these amazing journals for your beloved pets!
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aravennamednoa · 5 months
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OC's x Bojack Horseman
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s3ptemberist · 9 months
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animatic wip frame
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ultramarinaa · 12 days
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The Magnus Protocol ep 30 spoiler
GOD COLIN’S PHONE CALL HAUNTS ME.
I really want to make an animatic but I’m stuck between using the original audio or the infamous Bojack audio (the “Diane? I need you, you’re gonna come and save me, right?”)
But AAAAAAAAAA COLIN MY BOY NOOOOOOOO
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crooked-wasteland · 1 year
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Oops: Rushing to Catharsis, Dodging Accountability
There is much to be said about the latest episode of Helluva Boss, and it is a bit of a tragedy that the animatic release felt like a more complete version of the episode than the actual finished product. From losing out on the visual intensity of Fizzarolli's injuries to the complete erasure of Barbie in the background of the disaster, it feels like these small changes removed the visceral intensity of the scene and its repercussions. Especially as Barbie is now the obvious point of conflict in Blitz's storyline, it feels like the impact of that part of the story is now devalued by her absence.
But that is hardly the end of the issues at play.
Medrano and her team rushed this story arc.
There are clear parallels to Bojack's two major story beats of Bojack abandoning Herb and the Sugarman Summer Home season arc. It is obvious that Blitz and Fizzarolli have a relationship paralleling that of Herb and Bojack in season one. However, Medrano pulls back in a multitude of ways and fails to commit the plot to a natural conclusion. While Herb rejects Bojack due to the fact that the latter never came to check up on him following his public disgrace and outing, Blitz is absolved of even that.
In the Bojack episode, Herb makes it clear that he doesn't blame his old friend for not standing with him when he was removed from Horsing Around. While he may have been upset at one time, he had cooled off and recognized that if the studio had let them both go, that would have been terrible for both of them.
Rather, it was Bojack assuming Herb's desires and thus avoiding his best friend for years under the belief that he had betrayed Herb so completely that the other wouldn't want to see him anyway. Bojack's insecurity was his own undoing in that relationship, even though it showed that both Herb and Bojack were still very compatible friends. Bojack's background of conditional relationships from his own parents set the groundwork for his hyperavoidant personality and how allowing generational trauma to dictate your relationships in life is a good way to lose everyone you ever hope to keep.
Here, Blitz didn't abandon Fizzarolli. Skipping to the end, Blitz was kept from seeing Fizz in the hospital by a currently unknown third party. Which removes his flaws on a fundamental level. While one could argue ripping off the storyline wholesale would have been just as bad, at least it wouldn't feel like a fanfiction retelling of that Bojack episode. It feels like Medrano had a very negative opinion of Herb and how he rejected Bojack and that this reiteration with her own characters is her way of "fixing" that relationship. At the same time, what Blitz ended up doing is far and above worse than Bojack simply not risking his career.
The episode takes the sequence as dark as they'd dare, Fizzarolli crawling out of the explosion as his body burns and disintegrates. The show really does want to bank itself on the emotional impact this sequence should have, picturing how afraid Fizz must be. The amount of pain he would be in as his mangled body turns to ash as he forces himself from the fire. His flesh melted, his horns seared red and glowing like it would if they were made of real keratin, his bones themselves falling apart as he forced his body to escape the disaster. And he calls out to the one person he held such admiration for, his best friend since they were kids, who turns his back on him and runs.
And somehow, that is not the reason the relationship has become so bitter and vile. Not because Fizzarolli, most likely believing he was going to die, watched his best friend run away and "save himself" (from Fizz's perspective), leaving him to die alone in this calamity. It's because Blitz never came to talk to him. And even then, it wasn't Blitz's fault.
While that reveal worked for Bojack and Herb, it doesn't actually work for when a character almost actually loses their life. The figurative end of the world that comes with losing a job you love and a creative passion project stolen and bastardized can not begin to amount to the physical act of dying. That is actually the entire point of Herb's story as well, why Bojack's initial betrayal is forgivable, but his avoidance was not. It's because what felt like the end of life in the moment didn't actually end anything substantial for Herb. He still lived a full and complete life, minus his best friend who left him to rebuild on his own. And you can not, in fact, make up for lost time.
Speaking of comparisons, the dialogue of this sequence in particular feels quite off-putting. Blitz's line of "You have e no idea what I lost in that fire" is accusatory and draws up a direct comparison to what each character lost. Fizzarolli is physically scarred by the events as well as mentally and emotionally. Horns are shown to be a source of social pride for imps, adding self-esteem and identity to the list of things Fizz lost in the disaster. But because it is implied that Blitz's mother actually did die in the fire, that is a tragedy somehow beyond belief for someone like Fizzarolli. It would be safe to assume that Tilla's death would have been felt by everyone who survived the circus, or at the least for the kids. The dialogue sets up a divide that somehow Blitz watching how his careless moodiness almost killed his crush is not at the top of the list of traumas Blitz has to sort through from this sequence is hard to believe.
Speaking of crush.
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And that gets to why this episode as a whole fails to work on a fundamental level. For what it is, what it wants to be, and what it is trying to set up, this episode consistently drops the ball. It is confounding to think that Medrano believed that the relationship for Stolas and Blitz was for more necessary to show than this.
This episode should have been a flashback.
The entire episode should have been the lead up to the disaster. Show us the relationship of Blitz and Barbie and Fizzarolli. Show us the way Blitz is treated by others at the circus even as he ages.
Show us Tilla for five minutes for the love of everything meaningful. It's so hard to believe this should be important to the characters or story when we are given nothing concrete about who Tilla was as a person or mother. We lived the flashbacks of Bojack, no matter how short a snippet they were. We experienced Beatrice's callous nature or his father's self-centered abuse. For as important as she is implied to be, Tilla is not so important as to be an active participant in the story.
At the end of all this, I believe that the greatest issues boil down to a set list
- Characters do not have any lasting responsibility to the situation, their actions or the outcome.
- Somehow a character like Tilla who has never been seen and lacks any personality outside of early Steven Universe Rose Quartz perfection is a loss that is elevated over the trauma we are allowed to very distantly experience in Fizzarolli's monologue.
- The fact that we still have no idea about who any of these characters were to appreciate the sense of loss that this episode was supposed to supply.
- Fizzarolli and Blitz make up completely by the end of a single episode.
- The lack of buildup to the disaster causes confusion as to why it ever happens. Blitz throwing the confession letter on the ground and walking away has no rhyme or reason to it.
This episode is a literal laundry list of bad choices and poor structuring. When a school teacher writes in the margin, "Show, don't tell," this is what they are talking about.
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spooky-pop · 4 months
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I just remembered I have this animatic I made based off of my PopPunkAU that I made SOOOO long ago to a Bojack audio....I need to dig this up. I shared it with moots on Tiktok months ago but it never got shared outside of that....HMMMMM.
i have to many in-progress animatics/videos tbh
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