Thursday, September 9, 2010

The Rauch Bros: First Five StoryCorp films

At a time when each month brings news of another NY animation talent departing for the West Coast (we just waved goodbye to the talented animator/director Dan Forgione, for instance), it's a gift to our community that we have Tim and Mike Rauch (pictured above, drawn by Tim) making intelligent and sensitive films out of their virtual Brooklyn studio.

Recently, when one of their new Storycorp animated films, Danny and Annie, debuted on TV and online (note: you can see all five of their StoryCorp films by clicking here), I was tempted to write about it straight and away, but I'm glad I didn't. By waiting I had the opportunity to look at their five Storycorp films as a whole body of work.

The Rauch brothers are among the most exacting filmmakers working in animation today. They produce beautifully crafted films to an ever increasing set of self-imposed standards. After producing the first two Storycorp films, Germans in the Woods and Q & A, largely as independents, their first official, commissioned Storycorp films followed, putting the brothers on a schedule that required more than one film a year. Big boosters of the NY animation scene, they wanted to work with as much local talent as possible. To that end, they wisely snatched up talented newcomer David Sheahan. But, they were also willing to pull in out-of-town collaborators such as the former Spumco background artists Bill Wray and Jim Smith, both of whose styles are compatible with the types of textured art that the Rauch's featured in Q & A.

Once I had a chance to examine and appreciate the three new films, Danny and Annie, Icing on the Cake, and The Human Voice, I could better understand their artistic ambitions. While the character designs vary from one short to another short, Tim's delicate animation and the brothers' directing style unifies the films, squeezing them neatly into a cohesive series.

A still from Icing on the Cake.

Comparing the three new films to the first two, I noticed that the two original pieces were much more filmic or cinematic with pans and camera moves, and I found that I missed those touches in the later shorts. The new approach has longer scenes, so the viewing experience is more like watching moving layouts. All this is done with confidence and it's a bold choice.

Danny and Annie is the film that has gotten the most attention with its very tender and heartbreaking audio track. While I'm not certain the challenging character design of the piece provides the appropriate accompaniment, it is well drawn and lovingly animated.

A much more literal approach is taken on the most recent soundtracks, a curious direction when the Storycorp soundtracks are already moving and powerful without any visuals. In The Icing on the Cake and Danny and Annie what we see on the screen is generally a literal rendering of what's taking place. There was more abstraction in the visuals and locations created for Germans in the Woods and Q & A. Germans in the Woods depicted a WWII vet's saddest memory of the war in a very dream-like fashion, allowing the audio track to soar to even higher emotional heights as a film. Q & A took the audio of a son interviewing a mother and started out with a literal scene of their time in the recording studio before giving the material room to breathe in a surreal landscape for the rest of the film.

The title card from Danny and Annie.

Still, there's a lot to like in The Icing on the Cake and Danny and Annie. The razzle-dazzle factor is high. They look like expensive productions, regardless of the limited budget. The layouts are Hollywood perfect and each transition of time and place in the stories is seamless. I especially like the condensed time effect used in The Icing on the Cake to simplify the action of characters moving across the spaces. Master filmmaker Konstantin Bronzit used a similar technique in his 1994 short Switchcraft.

The backgrounds in The Icing on the Cake and Danny and Annie are lovely and most of the time the clean spare look works really well. I love the way they depict the office space in The Icing on the Cake, for instance. It works a little less well when it comes to the backgrounds in the Mexican American's family home, where the minimalist treatment, as beautiful as it is, gives their home interiors an unintentional unlived-in effect.


A pair of stills from The Human Voice.

I'm absolutely wild about The Human Voice. I think it vividly captures what I loved about the first two Storycorp films: a visual abstraction that adds so much to the storytelling. The animation of Studs Terkel's rant in this film is simply wonderful (in my opinion, Tim is one of the best character animators since Paul Fierlinger). And while it contains the lightest subject matter of all five films, I found it the most moving.

Kudos to the Rauch Brothers and their collaborators for putting all their blood, sweat, inspiration, and sacrifice into making these wonderful and important animations and setting a new standard of excellence for the next generation behind them.

3 comments:

Tim Rauch said...

Hi Dave! Thanks for the thoughtful post.

It's very interesting to hear a balanced, honest take on our work and you are correct to point out a lot of differences between each piece. One was the story of a World War II veteran's haunted memory, the next was a very sweet conversation between a mother and her son, yet another told the entire arc of a true Brooklyn romance. Because each story is so different from the others, we try to bring a unique approach every time.

In Germans in the Woods, I wanted the slow, somber voice to feed a constantly rising level of tension. This led to what I still feel is our most "cinematic" piece.

With Q&A, I wanted a more stepped back proscenium camera that could allow Joshua and his mother to engage in a playful back and forth. We were also tackling color for the first time here and exploring how it could effect our storytelling.

The Human Voice was very much about creating a dynamic comedic performance from a single character who is in nearly every frame from start to finish. This performance was probably the most "up my alley" and hopefully the proof is in the pudding.

For Danny & Annie, our focus was on putting the viewer into the very intimate setting of their apartment. As with Studs Terkel in The Human Voice, we were blessed with a real character in Danny that allowed for the kind of over-the-top acting I love to do.

Icing on the Cake was created on a very tight deadline and necessitated a higher level of commitment to layouts than usual. New solutions came out of this (the compressed time sequences, for instance) and the lessons in efficiency learned here will help us going forward.

Add to all of these directorial considerations variable amounts of time on the production schedule (from a year to 5 weeks) and the variables of incorporating new and different artists, work flows, and methods. Not one of these films has been created in the same way as another.

This fluctuation has been challenging but also rewarding and we are learning a great deal every time we step up to bat. We hope to still do several more StoryCorps films and I think you will continue to see very real changes in every finished piece.

David B. Levy said...

Wow, Tim, thanks for the post, and for sharing so much about your process for these films. Given their success and well-deserved attention in the media, I can't imagine you and Mike not getting a chance to make more.

I'm excited to see this films on the big screen. I know they'll do well in the festival world.

My missing camera moves in the new films is a personal bias. I was at screening of Marv Newland's films at Pratt University, a few years back, and I noticed how interesting his camera work was. In one particular film (I can't think of the name, it's the one with the three-headed person), the camera was often adjusting, trying to anticipate which way the character was going to go and sometimes getting it wrong and having to adjust back. It was very, very subtle, but added so much to the film. It got me very excited on the power of the camera and how to make it work for you. Also, Yuri Norstein, in his last appearance at SVA, said that the camera is a character in his films.

In this day and age of digital production, I find myself utilizing the ability to experiment with camera moves more than ever. In the old days it was terrifying because you had to know just how to mark your x-sheets to get what you wanted. The expense and time wasted if you were wrong was insane.

Mike Rauch said...

Thanks for the mention, Dave! Good comments here.