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Copyright and What Animators Need To Know About It - Parody, Fair Use, Fan Art
As an animator, it's important to me to be able to pull from collectively known culture (sometimes "pop," sometimes old) in order to tell a visual story. Culture is a language that we can use to communicate and connect with others and the wider that particular culture is (meaning that of music, stories, and now film) the more people you, as an artist, can reach. But then there's Copyright, which stands in the way of using certain types of culture because it's protected. That can feel unnecessary until it's YOUR work that you don't want appropriated for another use than what you intended. Having something fall out of your hands like that feels like stealing, but is it? I've taken the last couple months reading and compiling information in order to distill it down for you, the animator, whether you're concerned about your use of copyrighted material in parody, fan art or question why it even exists in the first place. Why is the copyright term so long anyway? All (relatively speaking) will be revealed!
Top 5 Cartoons Based on R-Rated Movies
The 1980s were a time of excessive everything: excessive clothing patterns, colors, money (wealth or lack thereof), hair volume, glitter for some reason...One particular excess was the "toy cartoon" (or "30 minute commercial" if you prefer). All "your" favorites fall into this category: He-Man, GI Joe, My Little Pony, Care Bears, Transformers, and even my beloved Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.By the time you get to the end of the '80s, companies had turned to video games for "cartoon worthy content." Shows like Captain N: The Game Master and Legend of Zelda (obligatory "well excuuussssee me, Princess!") fall into this category.For some reason, when the 1990s roll around that content search had extended to turning '80s movies into kids cartoons - and many times those movies were rated R! And that's the setup for this list...