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Bricks in Motion
We are a friendly filmmaking community devoted to the art of stop-motion animation using LEGO® and similar construction toys. Here, you can share your work, join our community of other brickfilmers, and participate in periodic animation contests!
A place to discuss, share, and create stop motion films.
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Actually, the animation was pretty good, but very slow.
Generally, if you imagine yourself to be walking around or turning around or sitting down or leaning backwards and back (or whatever), think not only of what movements are made, but also how long it takes to do them. Granted, you're working with minifigs and they're not humans, but things seem much more natural when they move in a "familiar" way, so to speak.
There's two things you can do here: either animate with a higher framerate, or change your animation style so that it includes less frames. Because pretty much everything was too slow and the animation was generally smooth, I'd go with shooting with a higher framerate (I'm guessing you used something like 5FPS or 8FPS here?) like 12 or 15FPS.
There was one point where the animation itself was not very good. When the guy was sitting down and standing up, that movement was too fast. Remember that just because the studs aren't keeping the minifig in the right position, you should just skip some frames. Use supports behind him (out of screen) to have him "half sitting down"; this will work much better.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/newright/4163910974/
I re-uploaded it at a faster speed. Maybe a little two fast. I'm not quite sure. If it is to fast I could always drop down a little.
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