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What happened to the posters for Disney shorts in the 40s? Went from pleasant, simplistic colors to a garishly textured and colored mess like those MGM cartoon posters... At least they're still drawn on-model so MGM's illustrator probably wasn't involved...
@ACriticalHuman They also had Ajax toys back then, a strictly Disney megacorp...
@MetalGearFacts1 Your cover is clearly edited. This is the real cover art.
@AbeAnimated A clearer picture...
Your source is quite badly compressed, I'm sorry to say.
Still, the DVNR artifact does exist.
@Gilition Quirks in film printing and remastering, I guess. It's not as noticeable in, say, live action films or cartoons without very familiar elements, but with Bugs Bunny or Tom and Jerry, shorts with characters in GRAY and WHITE, this problem shows up a lot.
@LapperDev They kinda made fun of this phenomenon themselves in 2003, when Garfield was having his 25th birthday.
@ZhugeEX I mean, now the business is looking as if they'll just start assuming there's gonna be an overloading demand for [THING] and think ahead of everyone else (especially anxious buyers) and scalp it. When will they unironically start selling a specific type of air?
@angrycomicooc @oocPopeye @popeyeotaku
I suppose this was during IDW's run of Popeye albums hosted by Roger Langridge. In fact I'm pretty impressed by the way he seated the noses/beaks on the arena, just like Segar liked to put viewers noses on the arena floor whenever there was a prize fight.
@treiibot Won't really go too much into references, but I think that animation can really be the next big thing since...