Coonskin, produced under the titles Harlem Nights and Coonskin No More… and later released under the titles Bustin’ Out and Street Fight, is a movie that takes a deep look into the race relations of America during the time of it’s release 1975.
Declassify >Ralph Bakshi: A Rotospective
Rotospective: A Journey through American Pop, Lessons in History, Family and American music
American Pop is an amazing journey through the family tree of four generations of a Russian Jewish immigrant family of musicians and songwriters as told through the american music scene. Family matters, heirlooms, relationships and music. In my opinion, this is the best movie following a family tree throughout generations that has ever been attempted. That is follows popular American music is an added bonus, but at it’s heart this film is about family.
Declassify >Ralph Bakshi: A Rotospective
Rotospective: Hey Good Lookin’ Teaches Us to Be Who We Are
Now, Hey Good Lookin’ just seems like piece out of time. Although the most recent Indiana Jones featured greasers this is at the other end of the spectrum. This movie is full of racial tension and sexual frustration. It’s a love story, an us vs. them story, and above all it’s a coming of age story about finding your way.
Declassify >Ralph Bakshi: A Rotospective
Rotospective: Fire and Ice an Example for All to Hold onto Reality
In 1982 Ralph Bakshi and Frank Frazetta, two giants in the fantasy medium, collaborated on the film Fire and Ice. Once again Bakshi animated a film using the same rotoscope technology he had utilized in the past.
Declassify >Ralph Bakshi: A Rotospective
Rotospective: Into Ralph Bakshi’s Cool World where we learn to “Be content with the cards you’ve been dealt.”
Welcome to the Cool World where the doodles live. Ralph Bakshi’s Cool World is a very weird place, but it gets weirder when a noid comes to visit.
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