Clip Art Animation

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
How many images do you want to layer on top of each other?
Shaft: yes.

The cheapest way to create an animated short is, simply put, not to animate it at all. Rather than actually creating a new set of cel animation drawings, you can simply take some existing piece of clip art and just sort of... move it around on the screen. It doesn't have to look realistic; in fact, the more obviously fake, the funnier it will be.

It doesn't just have to be for humour, though. It can create an unique, thought provoking, postmodernist experience if done correctly.

While forms of this have been around for as long as film, it was until recently mostly associated Terry Gilliam's sequences in Monty Python's Flying Circus and the subsequent films. Now, however, with the explosion of web-based Video Collage, the techniques have become democratized, and entire new genres based on it have arisen.

Examples of Clip Art Animation include:

Anime and Manga

Film

  • Birdemic has a lot of this in its bird effects. Sadly, it was meant to be serious.

Live-Action TV

Video Games

  • One of the levels in Killer7 has cutscenes done in this style.
  • The entire game of The World Ends With You is done in this style... but done so well it barely counts. Plus, the room they saved was put to good use with one of the best soundtracks on a DS game ever.

Web Animation

  • Ikusa No Yukai, a Magical Girl parody produced by the fictitious animation studio Fujimira Doga.
  • JibJab is famous for doing this for political parody.
  • Kagaya Hime Miho-Chan: another Magical Girl satire by Fujimura Doga, played slightly straighter than other examples.
  • Animutations, Flash animations featuring cutouts of random characters and things usually lifted from Google Image Search.
  • Almost all Flash Poop variants of YouTube Poop are done that way.
  • The Homestar Runner animation "The Reddest Radish."
    • Also, the saleswoman in the Teen Girl Squad animation about the girls going to camp.
  • The Spongmonkeys, a pair of lemurs wearing bowler hats and sporting rather creepy-looking human faces that were once featured in a Quizno's sub shop commercial.

Web Original

  • The Tim Traveller often punctuates his videos with Monty Python-influenced clip animation, usually to "recreate" a historical moment or depict a historical figure speaking.

Western Animation

  • The Marvel Superheroes, one of the few uses not meant solely for comedy. It was like watching a comic book on TV.
  • Angela Anaconda - It's très interesting how they did this. They had models come in and take about 30 or so pictures for every mouth movement and a mouth movement for every letter in the alphabet. They then took the model's face and mouth movements and created each character.
  • Parodied in the "Badly Animated Man" shorts on Raw Toonage: the titular character is "animated" in this manner, while every other character is done in Disney's typical fluid style.
  • South Park was originally done like this, at least for the pilot - today, it's done in CGI drawn to resemble this style.
  • MAD, when spoofing real people.
  • All of the land animals from Fish Hooks.
  • One episode of Arthur featured a parody of South Park where Arthur Read is kidnapped by aliens and Buster Baxter is crushed by their flying saucer.
  • The storybook characters in Super Why!.
  • Wonder Pets
  • Mike Jittlov used this technique in many of his early works, most notably the first half or so of "Fashionation". There's even an example in the feature-length version of The Wizard of Speed and Time, with a tour bus passing Hollywood's famous Chinese Theater.