>animate your main character in twos to signify he is inexperienced>in the final he is animated in ones to show he's completed his journey>retards in the animation industry now thinks it was the choppy that made it popular and not the slick and brave deisgn choices with the cg animation>now tons of 3d indie animators making animations that look like rough drafts as their final productGod fucking dammit
>>150407860You mean people missed the point of thematic timing and framing?Say it isn’t so
gay
>>150407860>retards in the animation industry now thinks it was the choppy that made it popularIt was tho…
They made that shit up btw, all the characters are animated on twos and even on threes at various points, it has nothing to do with "showing the lack of experience"It was a completely meaningless aesthetic decision that became popular due to contrarianism basically, because it didn't look like Pixar rather than because it looked good (it didn't)
>>150408686Make up whatever excuses you what. ITSV is a fun tightly told story with a great score and a fun vibrant visuals. The changing from 30 fps to 25, the dot-printing effects and peni, noire and porky distinced artstyle are at worse a slight distracting and at best the cherry on top. It why the second movie isn't as beloved. The story has problems and the they just double down on those specific weird effects.It's kind of like 2000's Tim Burton when studios gave him a bunch of money and free rein. He didn't have any self control and every scene needed to be eclectic and weird. You get trash like charlie and the chocolate factory.
>>150408051Stop projecting
>>150408686Not really, it was one of the many artistic choices in spider verse >>150408686
>>150408780Except that is completely wrong, there are scenes of characters being animated in ones
>>150407860>people are quite retardedit's a simple yet harsh truth anon>>150408780unless you're blind, the characters are very obviously animated in ones and twos, and Hobie alone is animated in threes which sets him apart, in line with his character