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Heavy Traffic is a 1973 American live-action/adult animated drama film written and directed by Ralph Bakshi. [5] The film, which begins, ends, and occasionally combines with live-action, explores the often surreal fantasies of a young New York City cartoonist named Michael Corleone, using pinball imagery as a metaphor for inner-city life.
Bakshi pitched Heavy Traffic to Samuel Z. Arkoff, who expressed interest in his take on the "tortured underground cartoonist" and agreed to back the film. Krantz had not compensated Bakshi for his work on Fritz the Cat, and halfway through the production of Heavy Traffic, Bakshi asked when he would be paid. Krantz responded, "The picture didn't ...
Heavy Traffic is the soundtrack to Ralph Bakshi's 1973 film Heavy Traffic. The film's score was performed by Ed Bogas and Ray Shanklin. The soundtrack album was released by Fantasy Records in 1973. The album was released on compact disc in 1996 as part of a compilation that featured the soundtracks to both Fritz the Cat and Heavy Traffic on the ...
1973 – Heavy Traffic [11] 1973 – Marco (live action and stop motion sequences) 1974 – The Golden Voyage of Sinbad; 1974 - Herbie Rides Again; 1974 – The Little Prince; 1974 – Dunderklumpen! 1975 – Coonskin [2] 1975 – Monty Python and the Holy Grail (animated sequences) 1975 – The Return of the Pink Panther
Fritz the Cat is a 1972 American adult animated black comedy film written and directed by Ralph Bakshi in his directorial debut.Based on the comic strip of the same name by Robert Crumb, the film focuses on its Skip Hinnant-portrayed titular character, a glib, womanizing and fraudulent cat in an anthropomorphic animal version of New York City during the mid-to-late 1960s.
Neighborhood residents have noticed heavy truck traffic becoming more prevalent in recent years due to the increased industrial presence just west of the neighborhood, particularly on Oak and St ...
Wacky Races is an American animated television series produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions in association with Heatter-Quigley Productions.It aired on CBS as part of its Saturday-morning schedule from September 14, 1968, to January 4, 1969 and then reruns the next season. [1]
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