Well, the votes are in and the list has just been announced in the UK for the 100 Greatest cartoons, as voted by the British public.
Take a look at the countdown here:
http://www.animated-news.com/archives/00003141.html
Perhaps as suspected, recent memories outweigh the true classics - but what do you make of the billing? Who did you miss in the countdown and who would you have liked to have seen grab a higher spot?
The UK's 100 GREATEST CARTOONS
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The UK's 100 GREATEST CARTOONS
Last edited by Ben on February 28th, 2005, 12:21 am, edited 1 time in total.
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What really took me by surprise was in the last ten. I'm not a huge fan of Shrek, Toy Story, Family Guy or South Park, but I knew they were popular and recent. But who'd have known Tom and Jerry was more popular, second only to the Simpsons? Nothing against Tom and Jerry, I think they're quite good, but I could not understand that at all.
Any poll where Pokemon, He-man and Dungeons and Dragons score higher than Snow White, The Snowman, Triplettes de Belleville, Dumbo and Animal Farm is pretty much a farce. I was glad to see Nightmare before Christmas and The Iron Giant score highly though.
By and large, the show was terrible. The comedians were on the whole shoddy and second rate. Some seemed unfamiliar with the material they were talking about. They were frequently knocking the cartoons and attempting to imply innuendo. It's a tired format. A pet peeve of mine was if a cartoon seemed a little shoddy, the comedians seemed to assume that it was incredibly cheap as if it could be produced over a weekend for a fiver with little effort and presumably while high.
Any poll where Pokemon, He-man and Dungeons and Dragons score higher than Snow White, The Snowman, Triplettes de Belleville, Dumbo and Animal Farm is pretty much a farce. I was glad to see Nightmare before Christmas and The Iron Giant score highly though.
By and large, the show was terrible. The comedians were on the whole shoddy and second rate. Some seemed unfamiliar with the material they were talking about. They were frequently knocking the cartoons and attempting to imply innuendo. It's a tired format. A pet peeve of mine was if a cartoon seemed a little shoddy, the comedians seemed to assume that it was incredibly cheap as if it could be produced over a weekend for a fiver with little effort and presumably while high.
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Yep, a bad show, with no real sense of history or respect. As I say, "recent memories outweigh the true classics" as with most polls, and this was no exception.
Also agree about the innuendo - how many sexual gags could they stuff in there, or try to at least?
Glad to see Maltin stick up for what was right, and Don Hahn expressing the fact that, without Snow White (at 60!), they wouldn't even be there discussing the 100 Greatest Cartoons.
I stopped taping it around number 6 and used the tape to cover the Oscars right afterwards!
Shame, shame, shame. Badly researched too!
Also agree about the innuendo - how many sexual gags could they stuff in there, or try to at least?
Glad to see Maltin stick up for what was right, and Don Hahn expressing the fact that, without Snow White (at 60!), they wouldn't even be there discussing the 100 Greatest Cartoons.
I stopped taping it around number 6 and used the tape to cover the Oscars right afterwards!
Shame, shame, shame. Badly researched too!