An EXCELLENT animation joke here! Please note that all of this has been animated on 1âs(which is to say that each drawing is only being held for 1 frame), where most anime is animated on 3âs(each drawing held for 3 frames). This makes the animation look especially fluid, but is extremely time consuming to do – even classic Disney cartoons tended to animate on 2âs as much as possible!
Also worth noting is the beautiful flow of S to C curves in the long hair – this is another thin that is often heavily simplified in anime.
Whatâs more, the entire shot is complicating the animation – the low angle with multiple head turns, the way the hand interacts with the hair, and the extreme foreshortening of the hand as it moves towards the camera.
Lovely animation combined with a wonderful awareness of the skills and pitfalls of the industry!
(This clip is sourced from an anime called Joshiraku, and the rest of it appears to be animated in a more traditional anime style)
I justâŚ. i love this transition so much. Mustang at least gets a couple frames to straighten up his gremlin ass self but Ed and Al are all ĂwĂ and ( ͥ° ͥ°<~ to Business in 0.0001 seconds. it utterly captures the exact emotion of the moment when you and ur friends are fucking the hell around & thereâs a knock on the door and for 3 full seconds the whole gang is ready to commit murder before you remember itâs the pizza guy. Just⌠Hawkeyeâs gun gliding casually into view. The single frame delay between Ed and Al. I am being totally 100% unironic when i say this is one of my favorite pieces of animation ever
It still surprises me at how few people have seen Freak of the Week, and I love sharing it with friends because of the inevitable, âHow the hell have I never seen this?â look of awe drawn out on their face.
And man, it really is gorgeous.
Directed by Juanjo Guarnido, it took the team about a year of hard work to hammer out this bloody masterpiece (which you can learn about in his video here) using a combination of 3D animation with the power of college interns  skill of a team of artists to painstakingly re-draw the 3D elements they wanted in 2D frame-by-frame, not to mention the post processing and⌠everything else.
 Even though it came out in 2014, it doesnât seem to have ever garnered the attention it truly deserves.
I really wanna drive this point home, so to give you an idea, Ghost by Mystery Skulls, animated by MysteryBen27 has 18,147,263 views.  Freak of the Week has only 2,271,121 views at the time Iâm writing this.  Thatâs fucking depressing for something so ⌠phenomenal.  I want more of this, and hell, maybe you do too.  But weâre not going to see anymore simply because the right people havenât seen it.  In fact, it failed to reach a respectable level of Internet PopularityÂŽ, Juanjo himself even described it in the comments section as having ruined him because of how little attention it got. Â
So if youâre reading this and youâve got some connections with a TV network or something, consider pulling some strings to get this video spoon-fed to the masses, because people ought to see this.  Iâm sure Juanjo would be all too happy to oblige.  And hell, if you wanna buy the art book, you can get the link here for about $50.
Now, maybe you recognize the former Disney animator Juanjo Guarnido for his other work: Blacksad.
Which is a comic set in the late 1950â˛s about a hardboiled private investigator published originally by Dark Horse Comics that does⌠yâknow, the âŚ
⌠noir investigator âŚ
⌠aloof ladies manâŚ
⌠badass âŚ
⌠detective story thing.
That I havenât yet read but I TOTALLY NEED TO. Â
Look,
I guess Iâm bringing up Freak of the Week because I was reading the comment section and, man, it kinda got me down. Â
Some of the best things things out there just havenât been seen by the right people, I guess. Â But I suppose itâs also a depressing statement on the culture of the internet that the video makes.
This is depressing. If you havenât watched this video yet PLEASE do, I was in awe and fell instantly in love with it when I first saw it and just assumed something is fantastic and detailed would become an Internet hit âŚ
Apparently not.
Well it should be, I hope this gets to the right people and the video gets the attention it rightfully deserves.
That is not how popularity works. The reason why Mystery Skulls Ghost had the massive positive reception was not because it was fantastically animated, though it WAS very good considering it was made by people who were significantly more on the green side.
It was popular because it told a story that people happened to like. Freak of the Week is not even comparable. And the pitting of these two videos together is apples to oranges. Freak of the Week is a music video that is beautifully animated, but in the end, it looks like a music video. You get what you get, and since the band itself isnât that mainstream, there isnât much of a hook to it. And this is coming from a person who loves the video.
Mystery Skulls Ghost told a story which people liked, so it got popular, Freak of the Week didnât. Itâs the same reason Lone Digger got a lot of views as well.
^^^ this exactly. I ADORE the Freak of the Week music video, but as phenomenally made as it is, it fell into a pitfall that ails a LOT of art â it forgot its audience.
Freak of the Week is,unapologetically, exactly what it is. Itâs a hardcore animated music video using aesthetics of heavy metal and, arguably, WWE-style imagery. Thatâs excellent!  But itâs not very popular. There is certainly a niche audience for that kind of thing, but thatâs just it â itâs a niche. The visuals are beautifully done⌠but not attractive. Itâs beautifully animated but itâs not pretty. As shallow as that may sound, you have to remember that the general audience of this kind of thing isnât going to be your super-high-level animation connosieur crowd. Itâs gonna be your average Joe, who honestly doesnât have much of an appreciation for the art of animation because he doesnât understand how much goes into it. Your average Joe doesnât even bat an eye at Roger Rabbit â he takes it for granted.
You can pooh-pooh that all you want, but thatâs the REALITY of it. Mix unattractive, kinda-deliberately-ugly visuals with an aggressive heavy metal aesthetic that otherwise looks like your average hardcore music video and tells no story⌠and you have something that gets swept under the rug with everything else that falls into the âgeneric music video category.â
Again, allow me to reiterate â thereâs nothing truly âgenericâ about Freak of the Week. Itâs BREATHTAKING⌠if you know what youâre looking at.
If you donât? Itâs a bunch of metalheads rocking out with the exact kind of aesthetics you expect from metalheads.
For contrast, Mystery Skulls Animated: Ghost is a music video that prioritizes storytelling. Again â beautiful animation. Not nearly as detailed, but it doesnât need to be in order to be effective. It uses a bright, appealing color palette, simple and easy-to-remember designs, a charmingly-spooky aesthetic reminiscent of Scooby Doo, and a bold visual style that overall calls to mind the likes of Sanrio properties. To put it bluntly, it looks really cute. More importantly, it looks really cute to your average Joe.
Not to mention, the story â people love a good story. People love a good heartbreaking story. People love a good heartbreaking story with a bittersweet ending, dashes of comedy throughout, and a dark underlying secret to the story that encourages them to dig deeper. Freak of the Week may be beautiful, but itâs not deep. Ghost is deep, and encourages a rewatch or several so that the viewer can get the most out of it that they can.
Freak of the Week focuses on amplifying the effect of the music. Ghost takes the music as a springboard and builds an entire world off of it â prompting the building of a fanbase of people eager to see where the story goes next. In other words: Freak of the Week forgot that longevity requires encouraging people to come back to it. Freak of the Week forgot its audience. Ghost did not.
There is a massive difference. Just like Eli said above me â itâs comparing apples to oranges. Itâs a HUGE shame that Freak of the Week doesnât get the attention youâd HOPE it would get, based on how much work was put into it. But putting work into something doesnât automatically make it valuable â what makes something valuable is how much the audience wants it. Â