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John Kricfalusi

 
Actor: John Kricfalusi
  • Occupation: Actor, Director, Writer
  • Active: 2000s
  • Major Genres: Comedy
  • Career Highlights: The Ren and Stimpy Adult Party Cartoon, The Ripping Friends, The Ren & Stimpy Show: Season 01
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Ren & Stimpy Show: Season 01 (1991)

Biography

Known as John K. after his truncated signature, Canadian-born animator John Kricfalusi has a definitively warped visual style and sense of humor that matches the intensity of his opinions against most modern animation techniques. Though his main influences are classic animators like Bob Clampett and Tex Avery, his visual style is more in keeping with Ed "Big Daddy" Roth. In the early '80s, he worked as a hack animator drawing remakes of cartoons like The Jetsons for Filmation studios. Ralph Bakshi took him under his wing to work on The New Adventures of Mighty Mouse, where he got to inject a little of his trademark sick humor. The next year he founded the production company Spumco and began work on his magnum opus: Ren & Stimpy. Using strange still images, jarring character inconsistencies, and ridiculously rude sound effects, Ren & Stimpy became a early '90s cartoon phenomenon . Eventually, John K.'s highly opinionated nature caused him to split the show and Nickelodeon retained the rights. He then sequestered his talents on the Internet with the web cartoons "The Goddamn George Liquor Show" and "Weekend Pussy Hunt." He also directed the Björk video for "I Miss You" and made a few Cartoon Network specials like the blasphemous Hanna-Barbara deconstructive shorts Boo Boo Runs Wild and Day in the Life of Ranger Smith. In 2001, he presented the show The Ripping Friends, a cartoon about four outrageously muscled men, on Fox Kids and eventually Adult Swim. In 2003, Spike TV (the New TNN) broadcast a Ren & Stimpy revival series, this time with adult viewers in mind. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
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John Kricfalusi

John Kricfalusi at San Francisco's Castro Theatre in July 2006
Born Michael John Kricfalusi
September 9, 1955 (1955-09-09) (age 54)
Chicoutimi, Quebec, Canada
Other name(s) Raymond Spum
John K.
Occupation Animator/Voice actor
Years active 1979–present
Official website

John Kricfalusi (pronounced Kris-falusi, born Michael John Kricfalusi; September 9, 1955), better known as John K., is a Canadian animator. He is creator of The Ren & Stimpy Show and The Ripping Friends animated series, The Goddamn George Liquor Program, the first animated series made using Adobe Flash, as well as the founder of animation studio Spümcø International.

When Kricfalusi did not completely approve[1] of one of his cartoons, he would credit himself as Raymond Spum.[2] As of May 2008, this has only occurred in the Ren and Stimpy episode Nurse Stimpy.

Contents

Career

Work with Ralph Bakshi

For many years, Kricfalusi drew low-end studio television cartoons (the best one in Kricfalusi’s opinion was the 1980s revival of The Jetsons) before being "rescued" around 1985 by director Ralph Bakshi (whom Kricfalusi had worked for before during two brief periods in 1981 and 1983). Kricfalusi and Bakshi were going to make a film called Bobby’s Girl, but that film fell through when Tristar’s president stepped down. Kricfalusi’s first finished project was directing the animation for The Rolling Stones’ 1986 music video of “Harlem Shuffle”[citation needed]. Kricfalusi’s most famous project under Bakshi was Mighty Mouse, based on the classic Terrytoons character. Kricfalusi directed eight of the twenty-six episodes and supervised the series.[3] Kricfalusi also worked on another cartoon series at the time called Galaxy High, providing character designs for some of the aliens in the series. John K. would gain a reputation for being difficult to work with that endures to this day; he was responsible for a fair share of controversy. This ranged from delivering late episodes to animating a scene of Mighty Mouse inhaling petals from a flower which had been handed him, and some viewers interpreted this as showing the character snorting cocaine.[4]

Ren & Stimpy

Kricfalusi founded his Spümcø International animation studio with partner Jim Smith, creating the controversial Ren & Stimpy Show. Spümcø sold the show to Nickelodeon in 1988. Nickelodeon and Kricfalusi disagreed regarding the production, including the level of violence in the show as well as the fact that Kricfalusi continuously missed production deadlines with his series. Kricfalusi points specifically to the episode "Man's Best Friend", which features a violent climax where Ren brutally assaults the character George Liquor with an oar, as being the turning point in his relationship with Nickelodeon.[5] Nickelodeon fired Kricfalusi from production of the series in 1992, leaving the production of the series in the hands of Nickelodeon and Games Animation, who continued work on the series for three more seasons before the series was cancelled. Kricfalusi returned and worked on the series for unaired episodes.

Web-based cartoons, music videos, Hanna-Barbera cartoons, and The Ripping Friends

In 1996, John Kricfalusi created the first[citation needed] internet cartoon series using Macromedia Flash, The Goddamn George Liquor Program. He followed this with Weekend Pussy Hunt, the second Flash cartoon.

Since then, Kricfalusi has worked on various projects including some web-based cartoons, Björk and Tenacious D music videos, some Yogi Bear cartoons (including Boo Boo and the Man, A Day in the Life of Ranger Smith and Boo Boo Runs Wild), two Jetsons cartoons (Father & Son Day and The Best Son), and the short-lived FOX Kids TV series The Ripping Friends.

The return of Ren & Stimpy

Most recently he has written, directed, and starred in a new Ren & Stimpy show, entitled Ren and Stimpy Adult Party Cartoon produced for Spike TV, a network which has allowed the animator much more freedom to work with the lewd and bizarre themes that make his art distinctive. Most of the stories were based on fan ideas and original scripts that were rejected by Nickelodeon during the show's original run. However, John's inability to fulfill his deadlines for production of his cartoons resurfaced as only three of six episodes would see broadcast. This combined with negative critical reaction towards the new episodes, led to Spike TV canceling the series. The revived series would ultimately be released on DVD with the remaining (and ultimately completed) three episodes that never aired. He is currently working on one titled "Life Sucks" in which Ren teaches Stimpy on how the world isn't fair, he said he would release it if DVD sales were good.[citation needed] As of November 2009, that does not appear to be the case, and it is unlikely the new episodes will be released.

The Looney Tunes Golden Collection

Kricfalusi provides several audio commentaries in the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volumes 2 and 3 (DVD sets of classic Warner Bros. Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons) and appears in some of the bonus featurettes as well. Typically, Kricfalusi does commentary on the Bob Clampett cartoons, whom Kricfalusi often praises for his fast-paced and nutty style. John refused to do any more commentaries after volume 3 because of artistic integrity. He disapproved of the method of restoration for the cartoons through DVNR (Digital Video Noise Reduction), which tends to erase parts of the artwork, and the oversaturation of the colors. However, he provided commentary on one cartoon on the fifth volume: Buckaroo Bugs.

2000s

On February 13, 2006, Kricfalusi started his own weblog, All Kinds of Stuff, containing knowledge about animation history and frequent criticisms of modern animated shows. It remains very active. For a short period of time he made his blog private

"I'm just trying to figure out what to do about this blog. Between keeping this up and working on the Spumco Book, getting paying work and being harassed by crazies who have nothing positive to offer. I got weary of it."

In September 2006 he did the layouts for the animated music video for “Weird Al” Yankovic’s "Close But No Cigar"[6] from the album Straight Outta Lynwood which was featured on the DVD side of the DualDisc album. The song is about a man who ends relationships with women who have one minor flaw he cannot get past. The video features John K’s animated cat, Cigarettes. He also animated a THX logo parody for Tenacious D’s feature film The Pick of Destiny, as well as a music video for their song “Classico”. As of 2008, he is in development of a webtoon starring George Liquor. It will be sponsored by Pontiac Vibe.[7] Also in 2006, he served as an art director for a segment for Class of 3000 entitled "Life Without Music."

Influences

Kricfalusi says his influences are Bob Clampett, Chuck Jones, Frank Sinatra and Kirk Douglas.[8] His Myspace page mentions Milt Gross, Tex Avery, Al Jolson, Bing Crosby, Dean Martin, Elvis, Don Martin and Robert Ryan as heroes. John K stated on his blog that he is friends with Danny Antonucci.[citation needed]

Michael Barrier, an animation historian, said that Kricfalusi's works "testify to his intense admiration for Bob Clampett's Warner Bros. cartoons" and that no cartoonist since Clampett created cartoons in which the emotions of the characters "distort their bodies so powerfully."[9]

PictureBox

On June 13, 2008, the Brooklyn based publishing company, PictureBox, stated on their website that production for an art book about Kricfalusi has started. They say the release is planned for late 2009.[10] Animation historian Amid Amidi said, "Next year, they’re [PictureBox is] releasing what is shaping up to be one of the must-have animation books of the year. And I’m not just saying this because I’m the editor of the project. This book is about one of the most influential figures in contemporary animation, and everybody involved is working hard to ensure that it turns out properly."[11]

See also

References

External links

Interviews and Articles


 
 
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