All cartoon characters and fables must be exaggeration, caricatures. It is the very nature of fantasy and fable.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Even if you're drawing a cartoon and exaggerating, you want to capture something true about the person.
So cartooning, for me, is an honorable thing. It's pushing the envelope. It's the truth of something through exaggeration.
Some writers are so enthralled by ideas (one thinks of Doris Lessing) that their characters become debaters, and their fables approach allegory.
He always describes his characters' voices and their physique so brilliantly. As people have said, they are cartoons, caricatures. They're grotesques really.
People tend to think of fairy tales as 'archetypal.' They are also extremely sensual, something which translates well over the ages.
They're all based on factual characters. Well, a good amount of them. That's why I was attracted to this genre anyways, because these characters are so large and cartoonish, they're like caricatures, I just felt that there had to be a film made about them.
Kids cannot follow stories. They don't know what the hell is going on in a cartoon. They like to see funny visual things happening.
Fable is more historical than fact, because fact tells us about one man and fable tells us about a million men.
Storytelling is about two things; it's about character and plot.
One writes fables in periods of oppression.
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