Ralph Bakshi (born ) is an American director of
animated and live-action films. In the
1970s, he established an alternative to mainstream animation
through
independent and
adult-oriented productions. Between
1972 and 1992, he directed nine theatrically released feature
films, five of which he wrote. He has been involved in numerous
television projects as director, writer, producer and
animator.
Beginning his career at the
Terrytoons
television cartoon studio as a
cel polisher,
Bakshi was eventually promoted to director. He moved to the
animation division of
Paramount
Pictures in 1967 and started his own studio, Bakshi
Productions, in 1968. Through producer
Steve Krantz, Bakshi made his debut feature
film,
Fritz the Cat,
released in 1972. It was the first animated film to receive an
X rating from the
Motion Picture Association
of America, and the most successful independent animated
feature of all time.
Over the next eleven years, Bakshi directed seven additional
animated features. He is well known for his fantasy films, which
include
Wizards (1977),
The Lord of the
Rings (1978) and
Fire and Ice (1983). In 1987,
Bakshi returned to television work, producing the series
Mighty Mouse: The
New Adventures, which ran for two years before it was
canceled due to complaints from a conservative political group over
perceived drug references. After a nine-year hiatus from feature
films, he directed
Cool World
(1992), which was largely rewritten during production and received
poor reviews. Bakshi returned to television with the live-action
film
Cool and the Crazy
(1994) and the
anthology series
Spicy City (1997).
He founded the Bakshi School of Animation and Cartooning in 2003.
During the 2000s, he has focused largely on painting.
He has received
several awards for his work, including the 1980 Golden Gryphon for
The Lord of the Rings at the Giffoni Film
Festival
, the 1988 Annie Award
for Distinguished Contribution to the Art of Animation, and the
2003 Maverick Tribute Award at the Cinequest Film
Festival.
Early life (1938–56)
Ralph
Bakshi was born on October 29, 1938, in Haifa
, British Mandate of Palestine
(now Israel
).
In 1939,
his family emigrated to New York
to escape
World War II, and he grew up in the Brownsville neighborhood of Brooklyn
. The
family lived in a low-rent apartment, where Bakshi became
fascinated with the urban milieu. As a child, he enjoyed
comic books, and often dug through trash cans to
get a hold of them.
In the
spring of 1947, Bakshi's father and uncle traveled to Washington,
D.C.
, in search of business opportunities, and soon
moved the family to the black neighborhood of Foggy Bottom. Bakshi
recalled, "All my friends were black, everyone we did business with
was black, the school across the street was black. It was
segregated, so everything was black. I went to see black movies;
black girls sat on my lap. I went to black parties. I was another
black kid on the block. No problem!"
The
racial
segregation of local schools meant that the nearest white
school was several miles away; Bakshi obtained his mother's
permission to attend the nearby black school with his friends.
Bakshi was the only white student in the classroom. While most of
the students had no problem with Bakshi's presence, a teacher
sought advice from the principal, who called the police. Fearing
that segregated whites would riot if they learned that a white
student was attending a black school, the police dragged Bakshi
from his classroom. Meanwhile, his father had been suffering
anxiety attacks. Within a few months, the family moved back to
Brownsville, where they rarely spoke of these events.
At the age of 15, after discovering
Gene
Byrnes'
Complete Guide to Cartooning at the public
library, Bakshi took up
cartooning to
document his experiences and create fantasy-influenced artwork. He
stole a copy of the book and learned every lesson in it. During his
teenage years, Bakshi took up boxing. While attending Thomas
Jefferson High School, he took little interest in academics,
spending most of his time focusing on "broads, mouthing off, and
doodling". After participating in a food fight and being caught
smoking, Bakshi was sent to the principal's office.
Believing Bakshi was
unlikely to prosper at Thomas Jefferson, the principal transferred
him to Manhattan
's School of Industrial Art
. In June 1956, Bakshi graduated from the
school with an award in cartooning.
Early career (1956–68)
When Bakshi was 18, his friend Cosmo Anzilotti was hired by the
cartoon studio
Terrytoons; Anzilotti
recommended Bakshi to the studio's production manager, Frank
Schudde.
Bakshi was hired as a cel
polisher and commuted four hours each day to the studio, based in
suburban New
Rochelle
. His low-level position required Bakshi to
carefully remove dirt and dust from animation cels. After a few
months, Schudde was surprised that Bakshi was still showing up to
work, and promoted him to cel painter. Bakshi began to practice
animating; to give himself more time, at one point he slipped ten
cels he was supposed to work on into the "to-do" pile of a fellow
painter, Leo Giuliani. Bakshi's deception was not noticed until two
days later, when he was called to Schudde's office because the cels
had been painted on the wrong side. When Bakshi explained that
Giuliani had made the mistake, an argument ensued between the
three. Schudde eventually took Bakshi's side. By this point, the
studio's employees were aware of Bakshi's intention to become an
animator, and he began to receive help and advice from established
animators, including Connie Rasinski, Manny Davis, Jim Tyer, Larry
Silverman and Johnnie Gentilella.
Bakshi married his first wife, Elaine, when he was 21. Their son,
Mark, was born when Bakshi was 22. Elaine disliked his long work
hours; parodying his marital problems, Bakshi drew
Dum Dum and
Dee Dee, a
comic strip about a man
determined "to get—and keep—the girl". As he perfected his
animation style, he began to take on more jobs, including creating
design tests for the studio's head director,
Gene Deitch. However, Deitch was not convinced
that Bakshi had a modern design sensibility. In response to the
period's political climate and as a form of therapy, Bakshi drew
the comic strips
Bonefoot and Fudge, which satirized
"idiots with an agenda", and
Junktown, which focused on
"misfit technology and discarded ideals". Bakshi's frustrations
with his failing marriage and the state of the planet further drove
his need to animate. In 1959, he moved his desk to join the rest of
the animators; after asking Rasinski for material to animate, he
received layouts of two scenes: a hat floating on water and
Deputy Dawg, the lead character of one
of Terrytoons'
syndicated
television series, running. Despite threats of repercussion
from the animators' union, Rasinski fought to keep Bakshi as a
layout artist. Bakshi began to see Rasinski as a father figure;
Rasinski, childless, was happy to serve as Bakshi's mentor.
At the age of 25, Bakshi was promoted to director. His first
assignment was the series
Sad Cat. Bakshi and his wife had
separated by then, giving him the time to animate each
short alone. Bakshi was dissatisfied with the
traditional role of a Terrytoons director: "We didn't really
'direct' like you'd think. We were 'animation directors,' because
the story department controlled the storyboards. We couldn't affect
anything, but I still tried. I'd re-time, mix up soundtracks—I'd
fuck with it so I could make it my own." Independent animation
studios such as
Hanna-Barbera were
selling shows to the networks, even as the series produced by
Terrytoons (which was owned by
CBS) were
declining in popularity. In 1966, Bill Weiss asked Bakshi to help
him carry presentation boards to Manhattan for a meeting with CBS.
The network executives rejected all of Weiss's proposals as "too
sophisticated", "too corny", or "too old-timey". As
Fred Silverman, CBS's daytime programming
chief, began to leave the office, an unprepared Bakshi pitched a
superhero parody called
The Mighty
Heroes. He described the series' characters, including
Strong Man, Tornado Man, Rope Man, Cuckoo Man and Diaper Man: "They
fought evil wherever they could and the villains were stupider than
they were." The executives loved the idea, and while Silverman
required a few drawings before committing, Weiss immediately put
Bakshi to work on the series' development. Once Silverman saw the
character designs, he confirmed that CBS would greenlight the show,
on the condition that Bakshi serve as its creative director.
Bakshi received a pay raise, but was not as satisfied with his
career advancement as he had anticipated; Rasinski had died in
1965, Bakshi did not have creative control over
The Mighty
Heroes, and he was unhappy with the quality of the animation,
writing, timing and voice acting. Although the series' first two
seasons were successful, Bakshi wanted to leave Terrytoons to form
his own company. In 1967, he drew up presentation pieces for a
fantasy series called
Tee-Witt, with help from Anzilotti,
Johnnie Zago and Bill Foucht. On the way to the CBS offices to make
his pitch, he was involved in a car accident. At the auto body
shop, he met Liz, who later became his second wife. Though CBS
passed on
Tee-Witt, its designs served as the basis for
Bakshi's 1977 film
Wizards.
While leaving the network offices, he learned that
Paramount Pictures had recently fired
Shamus Culhane, the head of its
animation division. Bakshi met with Burt Hampft, a lawyer for the
studio, and was hired to replace Culhane. Bakshi enlisted comic
book and pulp fiction artists and writers
Harvey Kurtzman,
Lin
Carter,
Gray Morrow,
Archie Goodwin,
Wally Wood and
Jim
Steranko to work at the studio. After finishing Culhane's
uncompleted shorts, he directed, produced, wrote and designed four
short films at Paramount:
The Fuz,
Mini-Squirts,
Marvin Digs and
Mouse Trek.
Marvin Digs,
which Bakshi conceived as a "
flower-child picture", was not completed the
way he had intended: It "was going to have curse words and sex
scenes, and a lot more than that. [...] Of course, they wouldn't
let me do that." He described the disappointing result as a
"typical 1967 limited-animation theatrical". Animation historian
Michael Barrier called
the film "an offensively bad picture, the kind that makes people
who love animation get up and leave the theater in disgust".
Bakshi served as head of the studio for eight months before
Paramount closed its animation division on December 1, 1967. He
learned that his position was always intended to be temporary and
that Paramount never intended to pick up his pitches. Although
Hampft was prepared to offer Bakshi a severance package, Bakshi
immediately ripped up the contract. Hampft suggested that Bakshi
work with producer
Steve Krantz, who
had recently fired Culhane as supervising director on the Canadian
science fiction series
Rocket Robin Hood.
Bakshi and background
artist Johnnie Vita soon headed to Toronto
, planning to
commute between Canada and New York, with artists such as Morrow
and Wood working from the United States. Unknown to Bakshi,
Krantz and producer
Al Guest were in the
middle of a lawsuit. Failing to reach a settlement with Guest,
Krantz told Bakshi to grab the series' model sheets and return to
the United States. When the studio found out, a warrant for
Bakshi's arrest was issued by the Toronto police. He narrowly
avoided capture before being stopped by an American border guard
who asked him what he was doing. Bakshi responded, "All of these
guys are heading into Canada to dodge the draft and I'm running
back into the States. What the fuck is wrong with that!?" The guard
laughed, and let Bakshi through. Vita was detained at the airport;
he was searched and interrogated for six hours.
Bakshi soon founded his own studio, Bakshi Productions, in the
Garment District of
Manhattan, where his mother used to work and which Bakshi described
as "the worst neighborhood in the world". Bakshi Productions paid
its employees higher salaries than other studios and expanded
opportunities for female and minority animators. The studio began
work on
Rocket Robin Hood, and later took over the
Spider-Man
television series. Bakshi married Liz in August 1968. His second
child, Preston, was born in June 1970.
Fritz the Cat (1969–72)
In 1969, Ralph's Spot was founded as a division of Bakshi
Productions to produce commercials for
Coca-Cola and
Max, the 2000-Year-Old
Mouse, a series of educational shorts paid for by
Encyclopædia Britannica. Bakshi
was uninterested in the kind of animation the studio was turning
out, and wanted to produce something personal. He soon developed
Heavy Traffic, a tale of
inner-city street life. Krantz told Bakshi that Hollywood studio
executives would be unwilling to fund the film because of its
content and Bakshi's lack of film experience. While browsing the
East Side Book Store on
St.
Mark's Place, Bakshi came across a copy of
Robert Crumb's
Fritz the Cat. Impressed by Crumb's sharp
satire, Bakshi purchased the book and suggested to Krantz that it
would work as a film. Krantz arranged a meeting with Crumb, during
which Bakshi presented the drawings he had created while learning
the artist's distinctive style to prove that he could adapt Crumb's
artwork to animation. Impressed by Bakshi's tenacity, Crumb lent
him one of his sketchbooks for reference.
Preparation began on a studio pitch that included a poster-sized
cel featuring the comic's cast against a traced photo background—as
Bakshi intended the film to appear. Despite Crumb's enthusiasm, the
artist refused to sign the contract Krantz drew up. Artist
Vaughn Bodé warned Bakshi against working
with Crumb, describing him as "slick". Bakshi later agreed with
Bodé's assessment, calling Crumb "one of the slickest hustlers
you'll ever see in your life".
Krantz sent Bakshi to San Francisco
, where he stayed with Crumb and his wife, Dana, in
an attempt to persuade Crumb to sign the contract. After a
week, Crumb left, leaving the film's production status uncertain.
Two weeks after Bakshi returned to New York, Krantz entered his
office and told Bakshi that he had acquired the film rights through
Dana, who had Crumb's power of attorney and signed the
contract.
After Bakshi pitched the project to every
major Hollywood studio,
Warner Bros. bought it and promised an $850,000
budget. Bakshi hired animators he had worked with in the past,
including Vita, Tyer, Anzilotti and Nick Tafuri, and began the
layouts and animation. The first completed sequence was a junkyard
scene in Harlem, in which Fritz smokes marijuana, has sex and
incites a revolution. Krantz intended to release the sequence as a
15-minute short in case the picture's financing fell through;
Bakshi, however, was determined to complete the film as a feature.
They screened the sequence for Warner Bros. executives, who wanted
the sexual content toned down and celebrities cast for the voice
parts. Bakshi refused, and Warner Bros. pulled out, leading Krantz
to seek funds elsewhere. He eventually made a deal with Jerry
Gross, the owner of
Cinemation
Industries, a distributor specializing in
exploitation films. Although Bakshi did
not have enough time to pitch the film, Gross agreed to fund its
production and distribute it, believing that it would fit in with
his
grindhouse slate.

An image from
Fritz the Cat,
with Fritz and a trio of young females he is trying to pick up by
Washington Square Park.
The background demonstrates one of the film's stylistic
innovations: it is a watercolor painting based on a tracing from a
photograph.
Despite receiving financing from other sources, including
Saul Zaentz (who agreed to distribute
the soundtrack album on his
Fantasy Records label), the budget
was tight enough to exclude pencil tests, so Bakshi had to test the
animation by flipping an animator's drawings in his hand before
they were inked and painted. When a cameraman realized that the
cels for the desert scenes were not wide enough and revealed the
transparency, Bakshi painted a cactus to cover the mistake. Very
few storyboards were used.
Bakshi and Vita walked around the Lower East
Side
, Washington Square Park
, Chinatown
and Harlem
, taking
moody snapshots. Artist Ira Turek inked the outlines of
these photographs onto cels with a
Rapidograph, the
technical
pen preferred by Crumb, giving the film's backgrounds a
stylized realism virtually unprecedented in animation. The tones of
the watercolor backgrounds were influenced by the work of
Ashcan School painters such as
George Luks and
John French Sloan. Among other unusual
techniques, bent and
fisheye camera
perspectives were used to portray the way the film's hippies and
hoodlums viewed the city. Many scenes featured
documentary recordings of real
conversations in place of scripted dialogue—this too would become a
signature of Bakshi's.
In May
1971, Bakshi moved his studio to Los Angeles
to hire additional animators. Some,
including
Rod Scribner,
Dick Lundy,
Virgil Walter Ross,
Norman McCabe and
John
Sparey, welcomed Bakshi and felt that
Fritz the Cat would bring
diversity to the animation industry. Other animators were less
pleased by Bakshi's arrival and placed an advertisement in
The Hollywood
Reporter, stating that his "filth" was unwelcome in
California. By the time production wrapped, Cinemation had released
Melvin Van Peebles'
Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss
Song to considerable success, despite the
X rating it had received. When the
Motion Picture Association
of America gave Bakshi's film an X rating as well, Cinemation
exploited it for promotional purposes, advertising
Fritz the
Cat as "90 minutes of violence, excitement, and SEX ...
he's X-rated and animated!"
Variety called it an "amusing,
diverting, handsomely executed poke at youthful attitudes". John
Grant writes in his book
Masters of Animation that
Fritz the Cat was "the breakthrough movie that opened
brand new vistas to the commercial animator in the United States",
presenting an "almost disturbingly accurate" portrayal "of a
particular stratum of Western society during a particular era,
[...] as such it has dated very well."
Fritz the Cat was
released on April 12, 1972, opening in Hollywood and Washington,
D.C. A major hit, it became the most successful independent
animated feature of all time. The same month as the film's release,
Bakshi's daughter, Victoria, was born.
Heavy Traffic (1972–73)
By the time
Fritz the Cat was released, Bakshi had become
a celebrity, but his reputation was primarily based upon his having
directed the first "dirty" animated film. Facing criticism of his
work on publicity tours and in trade publications, he began writing
poetry to express his emotions. This became a tradition, and Bakshi
wrote poems before beginning production on each of his films. The
first of these poems was "Street Arabs", which preceded the
production of
Heavy Traffic in 1972. Inspiration for the
film came from
penny arcades, where
Bakshi often played
pinball, sometimes
accompanied by his 12-year-old son, Mark. Bakshi pitched
Heavy
Traffic to
Samuel Z. Arkoff, who expressed interest in his take
on the "tortured
underground
cartoonist" and agreed to back the film. Krantz had not
compensated Bakshi for his work on
Fritz the Cat, and
halfway through the production of
Heavy Traffic, Bakshi
asked when he would be paid. Krantz responded, "The picture didn't
make any money, Ralph. It's just a lot of noise."
Bakshi found Krantz's
claims dubious, as the producer had recently purchased a new
BMW and a mansion in Beverly Hills
. Bakshi did not have a lawyer, so he sought
advice from fellow directors with whom he had become friendly,
including
Martin Scorsese,
Francis Ford Coppola and
Steven Spielberg. He soon accused Krantz of
ripping him off, which the producer denied.
As he continued to work on
Heavy Traffic, Bakshi began
pitching his next project,
Harlem Nights, a film loosely
based on the
Uncle Remus story
books. The idea interested producer
Albert S. Ruddy, whom Bakshi encountered at a
screening of
The Godfather.
Bakshi received a call from Krantz, who questioned him about
Harlem Nights. Bakshi said, "I can't talk about that", and
hung up. After locking Bakshi out of the studio the next day,
Krantz called several directors, including
Chuck Jones, in search of a replacement. Arkoff
threatened to withdraw his financial backing unless Krantz rehired
Bakshi, who returned a week later.
Bakshi wanted the voices to sound organic, so he experimented with
improvisation, allowing his actors to
ad
lib during the recording sessions. Several animation sequences
appear as rough sketchbook pages. The film also incorporated
live-action footage and photographs. Although Krantz, in an attempt
to get the film an R rating, prepared different versions of scenes
involving sex and violence,
Heavy Traffic was rated X.
However, due to the success of
Fritz the Cat, many
theaters were willing to book adult-oriented animation, and the
film did well at the box office. Bakshi became the first person in
the animation industry since
Walt Disney
to have two financially successful movies released consecutively.
Heavy Traffic was very well received by critics.
Newsweek applauded its "black
humor, powerful grotesquerie and peculiar raw beauty."
The
Hollywood Reporter called it "shocking, outrageous, offensive,
sometimes incoherent, occasionally unintelligent. However, it is
also an authentic work of movie art and Bakshi is certainly the
most creative American animator since Disney."
Vincent Canby of
The New York Times
ranked
Heavy Traffic among his "Ten Best Films of 1973".
Upon release, the movie was banned by the Film Censorship Board in
the province of
Alberta,
Canada.
Coonskin (1974–75)
In 1974, Bakshi and Ruddy began production on
Harlem
Nights, which
Paramount
Pictures was originally contracted to distribute. While
Fritz the Cat and
Heavy Traffic proved that
adult-oriented animation could be financially successful, animated
films were still not respected, and Bakshi's pictures were
considered to be "dirty Disney flicks" that were "mature" only for
depicting sex, drugs and profanity.
Harlem Nights, based
on Bakshi's firsthand experiences with racism, was an attack on
racist prejudices and stereotypes. Bakshi cast
Scatman Crothers,
Philip Michael Thomas,
Barry White and
Charles Gordone in live-action and voice
roles, cutting in and out of animation abruptly rather than
seamlessly because he wanted to prove that the two mediums could
"coexist with neither excuse nor apology". He wrote a song for
Crothers to sing during the opening title sequence: "Ah'm a
Niggerman". Its structure was rooted in the history of the slave
plantation: slaves would "shout" lines from poems and stories great
distances across fields in unison, creating a natural beat. Bakshi
has described its vocal style, backed by fast guitar licks, as an
"early version of
rap".
Bakshi intended to attack stereotypes by portraying them directly,
culling imagery from
blackface
iconography. Early designs in which the main characters (Brother
Rabbit, Brother Bear and Preacher Fox) resembled figures from
The Wind in the
Willows were rejected. Bakshi juxtaposed stereotypical
designs of blacks with even more negative depictions of white
racists, but the film's strongest criticism is directed at the
Mafia. Bakshi said, "I was sick of all the
hero worship these guys got because of
The Godfather."
During the film's production, the title was changed to
Coonskin
No More..., and finally to
Coonskin. Bakshi hired several African
American animators to work on
Coonskin and his next
feature,
Hey Good
Lookin', including Brenda Banks, the first African
American female animator. The film's release was delayed by
protests from the
Congress
of Racial Equality, which called Bakshi and his film racist.
After its distribution was contracted to the
Bryanston Distributing
Company, Paramount canceled a project that Bakshi and Ruddy
were developing,
The American Chronicles.
Coonskin, advertised as an exploitation film, was given
limited distribution and soon disappeared from theaters. Initial
reviews were negative;
Playboy
commented that "Bakshi seems to throw in a little of everything and
he can't quite pull it together." Eventually, positive reviews
appeared in
The Hollywood Reporter,
New York Amsterdam News (an
African American newspaper) and elsewhere.
The New York
Times Richard Eder said the film "could be [Bakshi's]
masterpiece [...] a shattering successful effort to use an uncommon
form—cartoons and live action combined to convey the hallucinatory
violence and frustration of American city life, specifically black
city life [...] lyrically violent, yet in no way [does it] exploit
violence".
Variety called it a "brutal satire from the
streets". A reviewer for the
Los Angeles Herald-Examiner
wrote, "Certainly, it will outrage some and, indeed, it's not
Disney. [...] The dialog it has obviously generated—if not the box
office obstacles—seems joltingly healthy." Bakshi called
Coonskin his best film.
==
Hey Good Lookin''' (1974–75/1982)== Production of ''Hey Good
Lookin''' began in 1974. It was originally conceived as a
combination of live action and animation. Bakshi said, "The
illusion I attempted to create was that of a completely live-action
film. Making it work almost drove us crazy."{{cite book |title=The
Animated Movie Guide |chapter=''Hey Good Lookin''' |page=112 }} The
film is set in Brooklyn during the 1950s; its lead characters are
Vinnie, the leader of a gang named "The Stompers", his friend Crazy
Shapiro and their girlfriends, Roz and Eva. Vinnie and Crazy
Shapiro were based on Bakshi's high school friends Norman Darrer
and Allen Schechterman.{{cite book |title=Unfiltered: The Complete
Ralph Bakshi |pages=180; 184 |chapter=''Hey Good Lookin''' }} An
initial version of ''Hey Good Lookin''' was completed in 1975.
However, distributor Warner Bros. told Bakshi that the film was
"unreleasable" because of its mix of live action and animation, and
it would not spend further money on the project. Bakshi financed
the film's completion himself from the director's fees for other
projects such as ''Wizards'', ''[[The Lord of the Rings (1978
film)|The Lord of the Rings]]'' and ''[[American Pop]]''. The
live-action sequences of ''Hey Good Lookin''' were gradually
replaced by animation; among the eliminated live-action sequences
was one featuring the [[glam punk]] band [[New York Dolls]]. Singer
[[Dan Hicks (singer)|Dan Hicks]] worked on the initial musical
score, but the final version was scored by John Madara.{{cite book
|last=Planer |first=Lindsay |title=All Music Guide to Country
|year=2003 |publisher=Backbeat Books |isbn=0879307609 |page=343
|chapter=Dan Hicks }} ''Hey Good Lookin' opened in New York
City on October 1, 1982, and was released in Los Angeles in January
1983. The film's release was limited, and went largely unnoticed.
In a brief review, Vincent Canby wrote that it was "not exactly
incoherent, but whatever it originally had on its mind seems to
have slipped away". Animation historian
Jerry
Beck wrote, "the beginning of the film is quite promising, with
a garbage can discussing life on the streets with some garbage.
This is an example of what Bakshi did best—using the medium of
animation to comment on society. Unfortunately, he doesn't do it
enough in this film. There is a wildly imaginative fantasy sequence
during the climax, when the character named Crazy starts
hallucinating during a rooftop shooting spree. This scene almost
justifies the whole film. But otherwise, this is a rehash of ideas
better explored in
Coonskin,
Heavy Traffic, and
Fritz the Cat."
Shift to fantasy film (1976–78)
In 1976, Bakshi pitched
War Wizards to
20th Century Fox. Returning to the fantasy
drawings he had created in high school for inspiration, Bakshi
intended to prove that he could produce a "family picture" that had
the same impact as his adult-oriented films. British illustrator
Ian Miller and comic book
artist
Mike Ploog were hired to
contribute backgrounds and designs. The crew included Vita, Turek,
Sparey, Vitello and Spence, who had become comfortable with
Bakshi's limited storyboarding and lack of pencil tests. As the
production costs increased, Fox president
Alan Ladd, Jr. declined Bakshi's requests for
salary increases, and refused to give him $50,000 to complete the
film. At the same time, Ladd was dealing with similar budget
problems on
George Lucas's
Star Wars. Bakshi and
Lucas had negotiated contracts entitling them to franchise
ownership, merchandising and
back-end payment, so Ladd
suggested that they fund the completion of their films
themselves.
Bakshi chose rotoscoping as a cost-effective way to complete the
movie's battle scenes with his own finances. Because he could not
afford to hire a film crew or actors, or develop 35mm stock, Bakshi
requested prints of films that contained the type of large battle
scenes needed, including
Sergei
Eisenstein's
Alexander
Nevsky, and spliced together the footage he needed.
However, the cost of printing photographs of each frame would have
cost $3 million. Learning that
IBM had
introduced an industrial-sized photocopier, Bakshi asked one of the
company's technical experts if he would be able to feed 35mm reels
into the machine to produce enlarged copies of each frame. The
experiment worked, and Bakshi got the pages he needed for a penny
per copy.
As
War Wizards neared completion, Lucas requested that
Bakshi change the title of his film to
Wizards to avoid
conflict with
Star Wars; Bakshi agreed because Lucas had
allowed
Mark Hamill to take time off
from
Star Wars to record a voice for
Wizards.
Although
Wizards received a limited release, it was
successful in the theaters that showed it and developed a worldwide
audience.
Dave Kehr of
The Chicago Reader saw it as "marred
by cut-rate techniques and a shapeless screenplay". In the view of
film historian Jerry Beck, the lead character, an aging sorcerer,
"clearly owes much to cartoonist Vaughn Bodé's
Cheech Wizard character. [...] The film has a
few interesting moments, particularly in a series of still
illustrations by
Marvel comic artist
Mike Ploog, but is perhaps most notable as a turning point, not
necessarily a positive one, in Bakshi's film career."
In late 1976, Bakshi learned that
John
Boorman was contracted to direct an adaptation of
The Lord of the Rings, in which
J. R. R.
Tolkien's trilogy would be
condensed into a single film. Bakshi arranged a meeting with
Mike Medavoy,
United Artists' head of production, who
agreed to let Bakshi direct in exchange for the $3 million that had
been spent on Boorman's screenplay. Down the hall from Medavoy was
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer president
Dan Melnick, who interrupted a meeting with
Peter Bogdanovich when he learned that
Bakshi wanted to discuss acquiring the rights to
The Lord of
the Rings. Melnick agreed to pay United Artists $3 million,
but was soon fired; the project was canceled by his replacement,
Dick Shepherd. Bakshi contacted Saul Zaentz, who wrote a check to
cover MGM's debt and agreed to fund the $8 million budget for the
first of what was initially planned as a series of three films, and
later negotiated down to two. Before production began, Bakshi and
Zaentz insisted that the Tolkien estate receive
residuals from the
film.
Bakshi did not want to produce a broad cartoon version of the tale,
so he planned to shoot the entire film in live action and animate
the footage with rotoscoping. The film also incorporated brief cel
animation and straightforward live-action footage. Production of
the live-action sequences took place in Spain. During the middle of
a large shoot, union bosses called for a lunch break, and Bakshi
secretly shot footage of actors in
Orc costumes moving toward the craft
service table, and used the footage in the film. Jerry Beck later
wrote that, while he found the rotoscoped animation "beautiful", he
felt that it was unclear whether the use of live action was an
artistic choice or due to budgetary constraints.
After the Spanish film development lab discovered that telephone
lines, helicopters and cars were visible in the footage, they tried
to incinerate it, telling Bakshi's first assistant director, "if
that kind of sloppy cinematography got out, no one from Hollywood
would ever come back to Spain to shoot again." When Bakshi returned
to the United States, he learned that the cost of developing
blown-up prints of each frame had risen. He did not want to repeat
the process that had been used on
Wizards, which was
unsuitable for the level of detail he intended for
The Lord of
the Rings, so Bakshi and camera technician Ted Bemiller
created their own photographic enlarger to process the footage
cheaply. Live-action special effects and analog optics were used in
place of animation to keep the visual effects budget low and give
the film a more realistic look. Among the voice actors was the
well-regarded
John Hurt, who performed the
role of
Aragorn. The project's high profile
brought heavy
trade journal coverage,
and fans such as
Mick Jagger visited the
studio for the chance to play a role. Animator Carl Bell loved
drawing Aragorn so much that Bakshi gave Bell the live-action
costume, which he wore while animating.
Viewing
The Lord of the Rings as a holiday film, United
Artists pressured Bakshi to complete it on schedule for its
intended November 15, 1978, release. Once it was finished, Bakshi
was told that audiences would not pay to see an incomplete story;
over his objections,
The Lord of the Rings was marketed
with no indication that a second part would follow. Reviews of the
film were mixed, but it was generally seen as a "flawed but
inspired interpretation".
Newsday s
Joseph Gelmis wrote that "the film's principal reward is a visual
experience unlike anything that other animated features are doing
at the moment".
Roger Ebert called
Bakshi's effort a "mixed blessing" and "an entirely respectable,
occasionally impressive job [which] still falls far short of the
charm and sweep of the original story". Vincent Canby found it
"both numbing and impressive".
David Denby of
New York felt that the film would
not make sense to viewers who had not read the book. He wrote that
it was too dark and lacked humor, concluding, "The lurid,
meaningless violence of this movie left me exhausted and sickened
by the end." The film, which cost $4 million to produce, grossed
$30.5 million. The studio refused to fund the sequel, which would
have adapted the remainder of the story.
The Lord of the
Rings won the Golden Gryphon at the 1980 Giffoni Film
Festival
.
American Pop and Fire and Ice (1979–83)
Following the production struggles of
The Lord of the
Rings, Bakshi decided to work on something more personal. He
pitched
American Pop to
Columbia Pictures president Dan Melnick.
Bakshi wanted to produce a film in which songs would be given a new
context in juxtaposition to the visuals.
American Pop
follows four generations of a
Russian
Jewish immigrant family of musicians, whose careers parallel
the history of American
pop. While the
film does not reflect Bakshi's own experiences, its themes were
strongly influenced by people he had encountered in Brownsville.
The film's crew included character layout and design artist Louise
Zingarelli, Vita,
Barry E. Jackson, and Marcia Adams. Bakshi again
used rotoscoping, in an attempt to capture the range of emotions
and movement required for the film's story. According to Bakshi,
"Rotoscoping is terrible for subtleties, so it was tough to get
facial performances to match the stage ones." Bakshi was able to
acquire the rights to an extensive soundtrack—including songs by
Janis Joplin,
The
Doors,
George Gershwin,
The Mamas & the Papas,
Herbie Hancock,
Lou Reed, and
Louis
Prima—for under $1 million. Released on February 12, 1981, the
film was a financial success.
The New York Times Vincent
Canby wrote, "I'm amazed at the success that Mr. Bakshi has in
turning animated characters into figures of real feelings." Jerry
Beck called it "one of Bakshi's best films". Due to music clearance
issues, it was not released on
home video
until 1998.
By 1982, fantasy films such as
The Beastmaster and
Conan the Barbarian had
proven successful at the box office, and Bakshi wanted to work with
his long-time friend, the fantasy illustrator
Frank Frazetta.
Fire and Ice was financed by
some of
American Pop s investors for $1.2 million, while
20th Century Fox agreed to distribute.
Fire and Ice was
the most action-oriented story Bakshi had directed, so he again
used rotoscoping; the realism of the design and rotoscoped
animation replicated Frazetta's artwork. Bakshi and Frazetta were
heavily involved in the production of the live-action sequences,
from casting sessions to the final shoot. The film's crew included
background artists
James Gurney and
Thomas Kinkade, layout artist
Peter Chung, and established Bakshi
Productions artists Sparey, Steve Gordon, Bell and Banks. Chung
greatly admired Bakshi's and Frazetta's work, and animated his
sequences while working for
The
Walt Disney Company. The film was given a limited release, and
was financially unsuccessful. Jerry Beck wrote, "The plot is
standard [...] recalling nothing so much as a more graphic episode
of
Filmation's
He-Man series.
[...]
Fire and Ice essentially stands as a footnote to the
spate of barbarian films that followed in the wake of
Arnold Schwarzenegger's appearance as
Conan."
Unproduced projects and temporary retirement (1983–86)
After production of
Fire and Ice wrapped, Bakshi attempted
several projects that fell through, including adaptations of
Hunter S. Thompson's
Fear and Loathing in Las
Vegas,
William
Kotzwinkle's
The Fan Man,
Eric Rücker Eddison's
The Worm Ouroboros,
Stephen Crane's
Maggie: A Girl of the
Streets,
Mickey Spillane's
Mike Hammer novels and an
anthropomorphic depiction of
Sherlock
Holmes. He turned down offers to direct
Ray Bradbury's
Something Wicked This
Way Comes and
Phillip K.
Dick's
Do Androids Dream of
Electric Sheep? He passed the latter to
Ridley Scott, who adapted it into the 1982 film
Blade Runner.
During this period, Bakshi reread
J.
D. Salinger's
The Catcher in the Rye, which he
had first read in high school, and saw parallels between his
situation and that of the book's protagonist,
Holden Caulfield. Inspired to seek the film
rights, he intended to shoot the story's bracketing sequences in
live action and to animate the core flashback scenes. Salinger had
rejected previous offers to adapt the novel, and had not made a
public appearance since 1965 or granted an interview since 1980.
Bakshi sent Salinger a letter explaining why he should be allowed
to adapt the novel; the writer responded by thanking Bakshi and
asserting that the novel was unfit for any medium other than its
original form.
Prompted in part by Salinger's letter, Bakshi briefly retired to
focus on painting. During this time he completed the screenplay for
If I Catch Her, I'll Kill Her, a live-action feature he
had been developing since the late 1960s. United Artists and
Paramount Pictures each paid Bakshi to develop the film in the
1970s, but were unwilling to produce it, as were the studios he
pitched the film to in the 1980s. According to Bakshi, "They
thought that no one was going to admit that women can—and do—cheat
on their husbands. They thought it was too hot, which made no
sense." In 1985, he received a phone call from
The Rolling Stones' manager, Tony King,
who told Bakshi that the band had recorded a cover of
Bob & Earl's "
Harlem Shuffle", and wanted Bakshi to direct
the
music video. He was told that the
live-action shoot needed to be completed within one day (January
28, 1986) for it to be shown at the
Grammy
Awards. Production designer Wolf Kroeger was forced to
drastically compact his sets, and animation director and designer
John Kricfalusi had to push his
team, including
Lynne Naylor,
Jim Smith and Bob Jaques, to complete
the animation within a few weeks. The band's arrival at the set was
delayed by a snowstorm and several takes were ruined when the
cameras crossed paths. Bakshi was forced to pay the union wages out
of his own fees, and the continuity between Kricfalusi's animation
and the live-action footage did not match; however, the video was
completed on time.
Bakshi recognized Kricfalusi's talent, and wanted to put him in
charge of a project that would showcase the young animator's
skills. Bakshi and Kricfalusi co-wrote the screenplay
Bobby's
Girl as a take on the
teen films of
the era. Jeff Sagansky, president of production at
TriStar Pictures, put up $150,000 to
develop the project, prompting Bakshi to move back to Los Angeles.
When Sagansky left TriStar, Bakshi was forced to pitch the film
again, but the studio's new executives did not understand its
appeal and cut off financing. Bakshi and Zingarelli began to
develop a feature about
Hollywood's
Golden Age, and Bakshi Productions crewmembers worked on
proposed cartoons influenced by pulp fiction.
Bobby's Girl
was reworked as a potential
prime time
series called
Suzy's in Love, but attracted no serious
interest.
Return to television (1987–89)
In April 1987, Bakshi set up a meeting with Judy Price, the head of
CBS's Saturday morning block. Three days before the meeting,
Bakshi, Kricfalusi, Naylor,
Tom Minton,
Eddie Fitzgerald and
Jim Reardon met to
brainstorm. Bakshi remembers, "My car was packed to the windows.
Judy was my last stop before driving cross country back to New York
to my family." Price rejected Bakshi's prepared pitches, but asked
what else he had. He told her that he had the rights to
Mighty Mouse, and she agreed
to purchase the series. However, Bakshi did not own the rights and
did not know who did. While researching the rights, he learned that
CBS had acquired the entire Terrytoons library in 1955 and
forgotten about it. According to Bakshi, "I sold them a show they
already owned, so they just gave me the rights for nothin'!"
Kricfalusi's team wrote story outlines for thirteen episodes in a
week and pitched them to Price. By the next week, Kricfalusi had
hired animators he knew who had been working at other studios.
Mighty Mouse: The
New Adventures went into production the month it was
greenlighted; it was scheduled to premiere on September 19, 1987.
This haste required the crew to be split into four teams, led by
supervising director Kricfalusi, Fitzgerald, Steve Gordon and Bruce
Woodside. Each team was given a handful of episodes, and operated
almost entirely independently of the others. Although the scripts
required approval by CBS executives, Kricfalusi insisted that the
artists add visual gags as they drew.
Bruce
Timm,
Andrew Stanton, Dave
Marshall and Jeff Pidgeon were among the artists who worked on the
series. Despite the time constraints, CBS was pleased with the way
Bakshi Productions addressed the network's notes.
During the production of the episode "The Littlest Tramp", editor
Tom Klein expressed concern that a sequence showing Mighty Mouse
sniffing the remains of a crushed flower resembled
cocaine use. Bakshi did not initially view the
footage; he believed that Klein was overreacting, but agreed to let
him cut the scene. Kricfalusi expressed disbelief over the cut,
insisting that the action was harmless and that the sequence should
be restored. Following Kricfalusi's advice, Bakshi told Klein to
restore the scene, which had been approved by network executives
and the CBS
standards and
practices department. The episode aired on October 31, 1987,
without controversy.
In 1988, Bakshi received an
Annie Award
for "Distinguished Contribution to the Art of Animation". The same
year, he began production on a
series
pilot loosely adapted from his
Junktown comic strips.
According to Bakshi, the proposed series "was going to be a
revitalization of cartoon style from the '20s and '30s. It was
gonna have
Duke Ellington and
Fats Waller jazzing up the soundtrack."
Nickelodeon was initially
willing to greenlight 39 episodes of
Junktown.
On June 6, 1988,
Donald Wildmon, head
of the
American Family
Association (AFA), alleged that "The Littlest Tramp" depicted
cocaine use, instigating a media frenzy. The AFA, during its
incarnation as the National Federation for Decency, had previously
targeted CBS as an "accessory to murder" after a mother killed her
daughter following an airing of
Exorcist II: The Heretic.
Concerning Bakshi's involvement with
Mighty Mouse: The New
Adventures, the AFA claimed that CBS "intentionally hired a
known pornographer to do a cartoon for children, and then allowed
him to insert a scene in which the cartoon hero is shown sniffing
cocaine." Bakshi responded, "You could pick a still out of
Lady and the Tramp and
get the same impression.
Fritz the Cat wasn't pornography.
It was social commentary. This all smacks of burning books and the
Third Reich. It smacks of
McCarthyism.
I'm not going to get into who sniffs what. This is lunacy!" On
CBS's order, Klein removed the sequence from the master broadcast
footage. Wildmon claimed that the edits were "a de facto admission
that, indeed, Mighty Mouse was snorting cocaine". Despite receiving
an award from
Action
for Children's Television, favorable reviews, and a ranking in
Time magazine's "Best of
'87" feature,
Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures was
canceled by CBS following the controversy.
The incident had a ripple effect, weakening Nickelodeon's
commitment to
Junktown. Bakshi has also stated that "we
were trying something different [...] but a series didn't make
sense. It just didn't work". The series was scrapped, and the
completed pilot aired as a special,
Christmas in Tattertown, in
December 1988. It was the first original animated special created
for Nickelodeon. Bakshi moved into a warehouse loft in downtown Los
Angeles to clear his head, and was offered $50,000 to direct a
half-hour live-action film for
PBS's
Imagining America
anthology series. Mark Bakshi produced the film,
This Ain't
Bebop, his first professional collaboration with his father.
Bakshi wrote a poem influenced by
Jack
Kerouac,
jazz, the
Beat Generation and Brooklyn that served as
the narration, which was spoken by
Harvey
Keitel. After a car crash, Bakshi completed the post-production
in stitches and casts. Bakshi said of the work, "It's the most
proud I've been of a picture since
Coonskin—the last real
thing I did with total integrity."
As a result of the film, Bakshi received an offer to adapt
Dr. Seuss's
The Butter Battle Book for
TNT. Ted Geisel had never been
satisfied with the previous screen versions of his Dr. Seuss work.
Bakshi wanted to produce an entirely faithful adaptation, and
Geisel—who agreed to storyboard the special himself—was pleased
with the final product. Bakshi next directed the pilot
Hound
Town for NBC; he described the result as "an embarrassing
piece of shit".
Return to film, continued television projects and retirement
(1990–present)
In 1990, Bakshi pitched
Cool
World to Paramount Pictures as a partially animated
horror film. The concept involved a
cartoon and human having sex and conceiving a hybrid child who
visits the real world to murder the father who abandoned him. The
live-action footage was intended to look like "a living,
walk-through painting", a visual concept Bakshi had long wanted to
achieve. Massive sets were constructed on a sound stage in Las
Vegas, based on enlargements of designer Barry Jackson's paintings.
The animation was strongly influenced by the house styles of
Fleischer Studios and Terrytoons.
As the sets were being built, producer
Frank Mancuso, Jr., son of Paramount
president
Frank Mancuso, Sr., had
the screenplay rewritten in secret; the new version, by
Michael Grais and
Mark
Victor, was radically different from Bakshi's original.
Paramount threatened to sue Bakshi if he did not complete the film.
As Bakshi and Mancuso wrangled over their creative differences,
Bakshi and the studio also began to fight over the film's casting.
To keep actor
Brad Pitt, Bakshi had to
replace
Drew Barrymore, his original
choice for the character of Holli Would, with
Kim Basinger, a bigger box office draw at the
time. The film's animators were never given a screenplay, and were
instead told by Bakshi, "Do a scene that's funny, whatever you want
to do!"
Designer Milton Knight recalled that "audiences actually wanted a
wilder, raunchier
Cool World. The premiere audience I saw
it with certainly did." The critical reaction to the film was
generally negative. Roger Ebert wrote, "The DJ who was hosting the
radio station's free preview of
Cool World leaped onto the
stage and promised the audience: 'If you liked
Roger Rabbit, you'll love
Cool World!' He was wrong, but you can't blame him—he
hadn't seen the movie. I have, and I will now promise you that if
you liked
Roger Rabbit, quit while you're ahead." The film
was a box-office disappointment. While other film projects
followed, Bakshi began to focus more attention on painting.
In 1993, Lou Arkoff, the son of Samuel Z. Arkoff, approached Bakshi
to write and direct a low-budget live-action feature for
Showtime's
Rebel
Highway series. For the third time, Bakshi revisited his
screenplay for
If I Catch Her, I'll Kill Her, which he
retitled
Cool and the
Crazy. The picture, which aired September 16, 1994,
starred
Jared Leto,
Alicia Silverstone,
Jennifer Blanc and Matthew Flint. Reviewer
Todd Everett noted that it had the same "hyperdrive visual sense"
of Bakshi's animated films. He said, "Everything in 'Cool' [...]
seems to exist in pastels and Bakshi shoots from more odd angles
than any director since
Sidney J.
Furie in his heyday. And the closing
sequences ably demonstrate how it's possible to present strong
violence without any blood being shed onscreen. Bakshi pulls strong
[performances] from a cadre of youngish and largely unknown
actors".
In 1995,
Hanna-Barbera producer
Fred Seibert offered Bakshi the chance
to create two animated short films for
Cartoon Network's
What a Cartoon!
Show:
Malcom
and Melvin and
Babe, He Calls Me, focusing on a
trumpet-playing cockroach named Malcom and his best friend, a clown
named Melvin. Both were heavily edited after Bakshi turned them in
and he disowned them as a result. Bakshi was subsequently contacted
by
HBO, which was looking to launch the first
animated series specifically for adults, an interest stirred by
discussions involving a series based upon
Trey Parker and
Matt
Stone's video Christmas card,
Jesus vs. Santa. Bakshi
enlisted a team of writers, including his son Preston, to develop
Spicy Detective, later renamed
Spicy City, an
anthology series set in a
noir-ish, technology-driven future. Each episode
was narrated by a female host named Raven, voiced by
Michelle Phillips. The series premiered in
July 1997—one month before the debut of Parker and Stone's
South Park—and thus became the
first "adults only" cartoon series. Although critical reaction was
largely unfavorable,
Spicy City received acceptable
ratings. A second season was approved, but the network wanted to
fire Bakshi's writing team and hire professional Los Angeles
screenwriters. When Bakshi refused to cooperate, the series was
canceled.
Bakshi retired from animation once more, returning to his painting.
In 2000, he began teaching an undergraduate animation class at New
York's
School of Visual Arts.
He became involved in several screen projects, including a
development deal with the
Sci Fi Channel, without
results. His attempt to independently finance a low-budget animated
feature,
Last Days of
Coney Island, intended as his most personal film, failed.
In
September 2002, Bakshi, Liz and their dogs moved to New Mexico
, where he became more productive than ever in his
painting.
In 2003, Bakshi received a Maverick Tribute Award at the Cinequest
San Jose Film Festival. The same year, he appeared as a guest on
John Kricfalusi's
Ren & Stimpy "Adult Party
Cartoon" and opened the Bakshi School of Animation and
Cartooning. As of 2009, it is run by artist and educator Jess
Gorell with Bakshi's son Eddie.
The availability of Bakshi's work on the
Internet sparked a resurgence of interest in his career, resulting
in a three-day American
Cinematheque retrospective held at Grauman's
Egyptian Theatre
in Hollywood and the Aero Theater in Santa
Monica, California
, in April 2005. Unfiltered: The Complete
Ralph Bakshi, a hardcover book of Bakshi's art, was released
on April 1, 2008. The foreword was written by
Quentin Tarantino and the afterword by
Bakshi. In September 2008, Main Street Pictures announced that it
would collaborate with Bakshi on a sequel to
Wizards.
The
Online Film Critics
Society released a list of the "Top 100 Animated Features of
All Time" in March 2003 that included four of Bakshi's films:
Fritz the Cat,
The Lord of the Rings,
Coonskin and
Fire and Ice.
Fritz the Cat
was ranked number 56 in the 2004 poll conducted by Britain's
Channel 4 for its documentary
The 100 Greatest Cartoons.
The Museum
of Modern Art
has added Bakshi's films to its collection for
preservation.
Filmography
Films
Television
I Selected episodes
II Provided the voices of Connelly and Goldblum in the episode "Sex Drive", and Stevie in the episode "Mano's Hands"
III Provided the voice of Fire Chief in the episode "Fire Dogs 2"
References
Notes
External links