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He also has a history with Warner's feature department, serving as an animator on Iron Giant, Osmosis & Back in Action. Afterwards, he'd be hired in design for films like Curious George & The Lego Movie. Here's some of his work on those!
Shane was responsible for designing the facial animation in Coraline. Essentially, every single expression you see in the finished film, and how each character looks from any given angle, came from one of Shane's drawings. Here's just a couple from the thousands he drew: https://t.co/XqSR5nep8G
"Rebel Rabbit" (1949)
The greatest cartoon by Robert McKimson, & one of the funniest Bugs Bunny cartoons period. In an era where the rabbit was becoming more domesticated, a film like this where he deliberately tries to be as big a menace as possible is a breath of fresh air.
Duck Dodgers painting by Bill Wray. Given that he was on a lot of the production as a BG artist, this may come from an actual episode but i'm 100% blanking on which one.
the Don Bluth fall-off should be studied in schools because I struggle to think of another animation director who dropped a 4-pack of ass like this one after the other. Damn shame.
I know for a fact that the majority of the Tunes for these were drawn by veteran Warners director/animator Spike Brandt. Artists vary as for the DC characters.
These DC x Looney Tunes variant covers were a lot of fun, weren't they? Would be cool if they did more of these.
You can definitely see where Yost's earlier work (Ren & Stimpy, Clone High, Samurai Jack) and then-current work (The Mighty B!) influenced these designs. Extremely angular and the occassionaly grotesque facial feature here and there, but never anything too distracting.i