Usually when I'm talking about Winsor McCay, I'm talking about one of his brilliant comics. Probably Little Nemo in Slumberland. But he was a beast of an artist and cranked out tons and tons of work, including several experimental animated films, which he drew (and sometimes colored!) by hand. He even took Gertie the Dinosaur on tour and presented it as part of a Vaudeville-style act, with McCay himself seemingly interacting with the animated Gertie.
However, I recently came across one of the films he was working on in 1921 that was -- as far as anyone can tell -- was never completed and/or presented publicly: The Centaurs. It was produced by Rialto Productions -- basically McCay's own production house. There was about three minutes' worth of animation completed, but because it had been stored poorly, about half of it didn't survive when it was discovered to be in the possession of long-time McCay associated Irving Mendelsohn in 1947. (My understanding is that the actual film strip itself was literally crumbling to dust.) What we have left is then radically incomplete, offering little in the way of actual story. What we do have suggests something of a love story -- with a male and female centaur expressly affection for one another and meeting with (presumably) his parents before a child centaur is introduced. There's also a seemingly unconnected scene where the male centaur throws a rock at a passing bird for no apparent reason.
Because McCay had been passed away for over a decade before any of the footage surfaced, it's unclear why he seemed to have left it abandoned. I've seen speculation that the partial nudity proved too risque for the times, that McCay ran out of funding, and that he was simply getting too old/infirm to continue work on it. Given the other circumstances of his life at that time, I'm disinclined to believe all of those ideas, but I am at a loss to offer any other reasonable explanations.
In any event, as I only recently discovered this footage myself, I thought I might offer it up here as something of a tangental interest to those who might only know McCay from his comic strip work...
However, I recently came across one of the films he was working on in 1921 that was -- as far as anyone can tell -- was never completed and/or presented publicly: The Centaurs. It was produced by Rialto Productions -- basically McCay's own production house. There was about three minutes' worth of animation completed, but because it had been stored poorly, about half of it didn't survive when it was discovered to be in the possession of long-time McCay associated Irving Mendelsohn in 1947. (My understanding is that the actual film strip itself was literally crumbling to dust.) What we have left is then radically incomplete, offering little in the way of actual story. What we do have suggests something of a love story -- with a male and female centaur expressly affection for one another and meeting with (presumably) his parents before a child centaur is introduced. There's also a seemingly unconnected scene where the male centaur throws a rock at a passing bird for no apparent reason.
Because McCay had been passed away for over a decade before any of the footage surfaced, it's unclear why he seemed to have left it abandoned. I've seen speculation that the partial nudity proved too risque for the times, that McCay ran out of funding, and that he was simply getting too old/infirm to continue work on it. Given the other circumstances of his life at that time, I'm disinclined to believe all of those ideas, but I am at a loss to offer any other reasonable explanations.
In any event, as I only recently discovered this footage myself, I thought I might offer it up here as something of a tangental interest to those who might only know McCay from his comic strip work...

Mark D. White's latest book at the intersection of comic books and philosophy is Ethics of the Fantastic Four. In it, he discusses... well, the ethics of the Fantastic Four. He's not looking at individual decisions, but at the cumulative overall approach each character takes that helps to define who they are. He devotes an entire chapter to each of the four primary members, as well as one for Dr. Doom and another for Galactus and the Silver Surfer. He of course offers an introduction to some broad ethical frameworks to work from, and he does have a sort of case study by way of Marvel's Civil War event.







