Monday, 31 May 2010

Wet Paint Stop Motion

The Boxing Lesson: Dark Side of The Moog

Animation Company 3. Hannah Barbera Productions Inc,

Hanna-Barbera Productions (which now studio was Cartoon Network Studios) is an Animation studio in the United States, owned by Time Warner, which also owns the more widespread Warner Bros. banner. Because of this dual cartoon ownership, in several giant Hanna-Barbera, the local Boomerang station are operated as "classics."

Hanna and Barbera were first teamed together while working at the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer animation studio in 1939. Their first directorial project was a cartoon entitled Puss Gets the Boot (1940), which served as the genesis of the popular Tom and Jerry cartoon series. Hanna, Barbera, and MGM live-action director George Sidney formed Hanna-Barbera Productions in 1944 while working for the studio, and used the side company to work on ancillary projects, including early television commercials and the original opening titles to I Love Lucy.

After an award-winning stint in which they won eight Oscars, MGM closed their animation studio in 1957, as it felt it had acquired a reasonable backlog of shorts for re-release. Hanna and Barbera hired most of their MGM unit to work for Hanna-Barbera Productions, which became a full-fledged production company starting in 1957. The decision was made to specialize in television animation, and the studio's first series was The Ruff & Reddy Show, which premiered on NBC in December 1957. In order to obtain working capital to produce their cartoons, Hanna-Barbera made a deal with the Screen Gems television division of Columbia Pictures in which the new animation studio received working capital in exchange for distribution rights. The company never had a building of its own until 1963, when the Hanna-Barbera Studio, located at 3400 Cahuenga Blvd. in West Hollywood, California, was opened. The Columbia/Hanna-Barbera partnership lasted until 1967, when Hanna and Barbera sold the studio to Taft Broadcasting while retaining their positions at the studio.

The studio is responsible for various different eras in cartoon history and for many cartoons themselves. The studios was the creator of the cult-cartoon Scooby Doo and also The Flintstones. The name of the company slowly began to dissapear in the later cartoons which Cartoon Network slowly gotten complete control over after having a hand in producing.

Muto a wall paint animation by Blu