David Low Animation

David Low Animation


Gad Sir, it's an animated Colonel Blimp! David Low's drawings were brought to life in this test for a sadly unrealised political cartoon project

Rubber rooftops and bomber-size fly paper suspended in the sky? Gad Sir, bring on the Blitz! David Low's success as a cartoonist in the 1930s is perhaps best demonstrated by the fact that Goebbels complained that he was souring British-German relations. Though an admirer of animation, this was his only realised venture into the territory, but includes his most famous character Colonel Blimp.

Humphrey Jennings would become best known for his contribution to the British Documentary Movement but in the mid-1930s he was working as a Production Manager for Gasparcolor. In January 1936 he corresponded with David Low on a potential series of political cartoon shorts in colour, and the cartoonist provided some drawings from which this short sequence was made. Sadly the project failed to advance beyond this test.


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Animated Flipside

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27 videos in this collection

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Max Beeza and the City in the Sky

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Superted

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Bunty the Bouncing Bassoon

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The Aeronauts

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David Low Animation

6

The Family Holiday

7

Little Tom Thumb

Out with the old and in with the new – one of Britain’s leading animation companies pitches its new image with great humour
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Animation Has Changed

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I Wanna Mink

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To Our Children's Children's Children

A nutty professor meets a very hungry caterpillar in this animated chase cartoon brimming with swinging 60s backdrops.
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The Professor

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Ersatz

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Johann Sebastian Bach In Euro Deutschland

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Custard

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Pear-shaped Hill

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Internet Story

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A Date with an Enfield

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Boogie Rag Roll - Thunderclap Jones

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Topology

Meet the animated  sci-fi fixer from a strange atomic race who knows the value of Christmas.
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Dodo in Christmas Adventure

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Selwyn's Lucky Day

Witness the no-so-great train robbery in this post-war cartoon, produced "in glorious monochrome"
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The Mail Goes Through

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Midsummer Nightmare

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Noddy Goes to Toyland

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Super Natural Gas

Who does he think he's kidding? This parodic day-in-the-life portrait of Mr Hitler is one of the very few British examples of comic cartoon propaganda from WW2.
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Adolf's Busy Day

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Experimental Animation 1933

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