A tenor, in suit and tie, with a receding hairline, sings a ballad to his love, “Your Face Is Like a Song,” to simple piano accompaniment.
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"Your Face" is a 3-minute cartoon by Bill Plympton that brought him one of his two Oscar nominations. And while I can see some creativity in here, I still must say that this was not a good watch overall. It is pretty bizarre, almost awkward to watch, but in terms of what I saw exactly I was not too impressed. A head keeps transforming for 3 minutes basically into the weirdest shapes before it gets sucked in by the ground. And fittingly with that strange little movie we also hear a song, named like the film, where I am not sure if it was really bad or not. It was very unique though, so I guess that's a good thing right? I personally thought all in all the song and the film as a whole were fairly mediocre and not Academy Award (nomination) worthy. I do not recommend this almost 30-year-old film. Thumbs down.
While this isn't one of Bill Plympton's best cartoons (it's way too "normal" compared to many of his shorts), it is amazing to watch--especially when you notice that this is all done with what appear to be colored pencils--a rather labor-intensive process. I really liked his insurance ads from a decade ago more--they were very violent yet charming--but still, this is pretty good stuff. Plus, after seeing the PLYMPTOONS DVD, I realize that it's the first film he made that is the classic Plympton style.The concept is simple: a guy's face and upper body are all you see and rather annoying operatic-style music plays as his face begins to do mega-strange things. His lips pop off and move about, his face repeatedly turns inside out, etc. Also, oddly enough, I thought the guy looked a lot like President Lyndon Johnson.Very captivating and deceptively simple. You just can't stop watching the weirdness once it begins despite there really being no plot.
There is no story in this animated short: just wild and crazy contortions drawn on a face who is singing a song about "your face." As he sings, almost every conceivable oddity occurs, such as facial parts changing position, head being twisted, cut, pulled inside-out, being chopped into pieces and reforming and so many things you can't describe.This really is a three-minute piece showing the imagination of the artist. It kept me riveted to my seat, wondering what crazy thing will I see in the next few seconds. Basic, but fascinating material. It was up for an Academy Award. You can see it on the DVD called "Plympton: The Complete Early Works Of Bill Plympton."
As odd as this may sound, I first saw "Your Face" on the Lifetime Channel as I was laying in a hospital room, recovering from major surgery. "Your Face" seemed to fit then and it seems to fit now and always.Although Plympton had made several cartoons prior to "Your Face," this is the fist time we see the style his work is noted for: impossibly grotesque body deformations done for laughs, and funny, too. We watch and see everything that could possibly happen to the singer's head, including abstract reduction. All through the strange looking singer seems blissfully unaware of what's being done to him as he sings a song that is a perfect parody of the ballad and touching, as well.As with later films, Plympton does little if anything to signal us if we should laugh, be horrified, or just creeped out. This sense of subtlety is what makes his films so enjoyable to me.Although only three minutes long, this is a perfectly complete, self-contained masterpiece of animation.Bill Plympton rules!