Tag Archivio per: FLOYD GOTTFREDSON

Spider-Man 60th anniversary Italian

Spider-Man 60th anniversary Italian

Nel nostro piccolo anche noi abbiamo celebrato il tessiragnatele. SuperGulp! Fumetti in TV è stato un programma televisivo dedicato al mondo dei fumetti trasmesso dalla RAI e creato da Guido De Maria e Giancarlo Governi, con le musiche di Franco Godi nel 1972. Alla ripresa del programma nel 1977 la Mondadori mandò in edicola un settimanale a fumetti con lo stesso titolo SuperGulp che riprendeva (in parte) i personaggi della trasmissione. Furono realizzati episodi dei maggiori supereroi dell’epoca, quali i Fantastici Quattro e L’Uomoragno. Qui uno degli episodi realizzati da Giancarlo Malagutti Giorgio Montorio.

 

Xtina a week of comic strips

Xtina a week of comic strips

Fumetti Italiani Vintage Doc Sullivan

Fumetti Italiani Vintage Doc Sullivan

 

Testata: Doc Sullivan – medico – detective

Disegni: Giancarlo Tenenti

Prima pubblicazione: 1965 

n. 1 00.05.1965 n. 7 00.11.1965

Editore: Edizioni Cervinia

Mensile

128 pagine

Bianco e nero

Albi: 7

Xtina comic strip only for philosophers

Xtina comic strip only for philosophers

Xtina this is not an apple

Xtina this is not an apple

Happy B’day Leonardo da Vinci

Happy B’day Leonardo da Vinci

Leonardo was born on April 15,1452 in Anchiano, near Vinci (in the province of Florence). Illegitimate son of the notary, ser Piero and a young peasant woman. Leonardo spends his childhood and early adolescence in Anchiano and Vinci. He lives with his father who, in the meantime, marries Albiera degli Amadori

Frank Tashlin Cartoonist

Frank Tashlin Cartoonist.

Born in Weehawken, New Jersey, Tashlin drifted from job to job after dropping out of high school in New Jersey at age 13. In 1930, he began working for John Foster as a cartoonist on the Aesop’s Fables cartoon series, then worked briefly for Amadee J. Van Beuren, but he was just as much a drifter in his animation career as he had been as a teenager. Tashlin joined Leon Schlesinger’s cartoon studio at Warner Bros. as an animator in 1933, where he was known as a fast animator. He used his free time to start his own comic strip in 1934 called Van Boring, inspired by former boss Van Beuren, which ran for three years.He signed his comic strip “Tish Tash,” and used the same name for his cartoon credits (at the time it was considered extremely unprofessional to use anything except one’s birth name among animators, but Tashlin was able to get away with this due to the anti-Germanic feelings of that era). Tashlin was fired from the studio when he refused to give Schlesinger a cut of his comic strip revenues. He joined the Ub Iwerks studio in 1934. He moved to Hal Roach’s studio in 1935 as a writer.uttore esecutivo alla Columbia Pictures nella divisione cartoni animati.

how_to_create

How to Create Cartoons by Frank Tashlin

Xtina Is It Time to Go on a Diet?

Xtina Is It Time to Go on a Diet?

Xtina 8 marzo c’ è poco da festeggiare

Xtina 8 marzo c’ è poco da festeggiare

My Prince Valiant

My Prince Valiant

I remember that, at the age of 7 or 8 years old, we were living in a friend’s house in Burbank. I can still recall the nice house on a hill with a park just down the road. Dad, who noticed how easily I got bored would bring me along to visit the spots in the district, in search of a location for the strips he was preparing. We would often stop for breakfast at his friend H’s place, who also had a huge collection of original comics and strips. It was during one of these visits that I met Prince Valiant of Harold Foster. Dad’s friend did not have – strange to say – a fetishistic rapport with his collections. He did keep the originals in transparent envelopes, (acid-free for sure) but allowed me to take a look, leaf through them without manifesting any anxiety. I recall those tables, that were just my height. Sprawled on the carpet of the study and with the pages strewn all over the place, I would practically immerse myself in those gigantic pages.

Monica