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Marching Along with the Rufle Baton 

Steve Stanchfield
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Here's a treat--- Marching Along (1933) from the original camera negative, including the 'Rufle Baton' on the left side used to help the musicians keep the music timed to the action as they recorded it. This was originally prepared to show the Thunderbean "brain trust". Special thanks to Sony Archives.

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17 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 20   
@eascec8374
@eascec8374 Год назад
This has to be one of the best 35mm nitrate prints I’ve ever saw! It looks like it hasn’t been touched for over 90 years!
@PacMania67
@PacMania67 Год назад
negative, but yee. absolutely incredible
@stevestanchfield8491
@stevestanchfield8491 Год назад
@@PacMania67 We did restoration on the element... the actual neg is pretty clean too, but with the usual dust and dirt. The final that appears on the set is actually a little cleaner than this, with additional steadying..
@20035079
@20035079 3 месяца назад
This has got to be the highest quality audio I've ever heard in a short this ancient!
@InfinityFunnies
@InfinityFunnies Год назад
The audio is SOOO clear and crisp! Amazing! 😮😮😲😲
@MamonFighter2ndChannel
@MamonFighter2ndChannel 9 месяцев назад
6:01 Looks like the queen breaks the fourth wall for the Baton of the Baton man. Hah! How classy it looks, even the master audio quality is actually it.
@InfinityFunnies
@InfinityFunnies Год назад
I don't know if anyone noticed at this point but I noticed that the logo of the shoe brand Vans has the same look as the "Van" part in the Van Beuren Corporation logo!
@louhepton
@louhepton Год назад
The opening singer is Chick Bullock.
@joecab1
@joecab1 Год назад
Looks great! Even with this Soglow style you can see Tyer come through
@CJODell12
@CJODell12 Год назад
The Rufle Baton was officially patented on July 26, 1932 as Patent #1868993. Throughout his life, George Rufle earned at least 7 patents for his various inventions.
@baxterfilms
@baxterfilms Год назад
3:01-3:20 definitely looks like Pete Burness's animation.
@McNabbot
@McNabbot Год назад
I thought when they brought up NRA they were all going to arm themselves LOL! Apparently it starts for National Recovery Administration, a government assistance program to help Americans and businesses after the great depression by writing up a list of fair business practices.
@marcschirmeister9821
@marcschirmeister9821 Год назад
I have a friend who collects New Deal artifacts. Years back, at a swap meet, I found a beautiful original NRA We Do Our Part Blue Eagle poster in a frame. I bought it for my friend, and frankly, the dealer was glad to get rid of it. People thought it was a National Rifle Association poster and gave him hell for displaying it, thinking he was a gun nut. That's a sad commentary about how we teach American history- People nowadays know nothing about the New Deal.
@stevehoffman9735
@stevehoffman9735 Год назад
Wow, thanks, Steve. First time I ever saw anything like this before! Amazing..
@hunter8554
@hunter8554 Год назад
This is so cool. So was the baton used to add an audio track after animation, or does it help in some way with timing the animation to already existing audio ?
@moviefiend44
@moviefiend44 Год назад
The former. It was there as a visual aid to keep the musicians/sound effects in synch with the visuals. The East Coast studios kept doing post-sync animation well after the West Coast studios (like Disney) stopped.
@pauletcheverry5572
@pauletcheverry5572 Год назад
Gorgeous 35mm print! This is a prime example that Great Depression cartoons sub-genre with PROSPERITY BLUES (1932, Mintz/Columbia), CONFIDENCE (1933, Lantz/Universal), HEY HEY FEVER (1934 MGM/Hugh Harman) and LETS GO (1937, Mintz/Columbia).
@gunier.j.kintgenanimations
@gunier.j.kintgenanimations Год назад
I just gotta ask: where did you get the soundtrack from? It sounds like it's the orignal phonofilm recording from the studio, But I just want to be sure.
@raspberry1440kb
@raspberry1440kb Год назад
What's that thing on the left side bouncing up an down?
@diazbrothersyoutube
@diazbrothersyoutube Год назад
The "Rufle Baton", created by animator George Rufle in 1931 for Van Beuren Corp as a way for the music to sync with the tempo of the animation (since east-coast studios in the early 30's such as Fleischer Studios had the animation finished before the audio was recorded). Here's another example of the Rufle Baton from another original camera negative of a Van Beuren 'toon: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-j7Ultq3GIrI.html
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