Anticipation (animation)

Anticipation is one of the fundamental 12 basic principles of animation, as set out by Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston in their authoritative 1981 book on the Disney Studio titled The Illusion of Life. An anticipation pose or drawing is a preparation for the main action of an animated scene, as distinct from the action and the reaction.

Anticipation: A baseball player making a pitch prepares for the action by moving his arm back. After the anticipation comes the action and the reaction.

Definition

"Early on at the Disney Studio the animators learned that audiences" could not easily follow the animation unless there was a "planned series of events" leading the eye.[1] Therefore, in order to prepare the audience for an action, the animators would add a so-called anticipation drawing, allowing the audience to anticipate the main action in the scene.[1] This would also help to make the action appear more realistic.[2]

For example, a man preparing to run fast would crouch down, "gathering like a spring" for the main action. This is called the anticipation for the main action. Equally, a golfer making a swing has to anticipate the swing by swinging the club back first, just as a baseball pitcher must "wind up" before throwing the ball.[3] This technique was borrowed from the theatre, and was important in holding the audience's attention.[1] The audience might not know exactly why a character was doing something, but they would at least know what he was doing (or what he was about to do).[1]

The technique can also be used for less physical actions, such as a character looking off-screen to anticipate someone's arrival, or attention focusing on an object that a character is about to pick up.[4]

At the Disney studio, Walt Disney pushed his animators to improve their work, and he was especially insistent that visual gags should be clear, wishing to make sure that the audience could always see everything clearly so they could anticipate what was going to happen. He called this technique "aiming," and would act out actions himself, exaggerating them so that the animators could clearly capture the effect.[5]

Les Clark, one of Disney's most talented animators, and later one of Disney's Nine Old Men later said of this discovery, "Today it may look simple to us; at the time it wasn't. It was something that hadn't been tried before or proved."[6]

By contrast, the anticipation pose can also be omitted in cases where it might be expected. The resulting sense of anticlimax will produce a feeling of surprise in the viewer, and can often add comedy to a scene.[7] This is often referred to as a 'surprise gag'.[8]

gollark: And ones which require some retroactive change like "let's all have become better at hygiene and gotten masks for everyone" or something obviously can't actually work.
gollark: If you have a better idea I'm sure someone will listen.
gollark: I mean, the UK initially went for an "ignore it and hope it goes away" sort of approach based on flawed modelling for flu, but then changed their strategy to the lockdown/social distancing one when updated models suggested this was a bad idea.
gollark: Like what? I'm pretty sure there has been thought about this.
gollark: What would you prefer, *no* lockdown (or much less of one) and significantly higher infection (and then death) rates?

See also

Notes

  1. Johnston & Thomas, p.51
  2. De Stefano, Ralph A. "Anticipation". Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago. Retrieved June 27, 2008.
  3. Johnston & Thomas, p.52
  4. Johnston & Thomas (1981), pp. 51–2.
  5. Johnston & Thomas, p.53
  6. Johnston & Thomas, p.53
  7. Willian (June 29, 2006). "Anticipation". Blender. Archived from the original on February 16, 2009. Retrieved June 27, 2008.
  8. Johnston & Thomas (1981), p. 52.

Further reading

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