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Guudance

This is when a cartoon character moves without any visible elbows or knees, but his limbs aren't stiff, but rather bendy like rubber hoses. For examples, see pretty much any black-and-white cartoon. In cartoons made before 1930 or so, this was an intentional style, started by Felix the Cat animator Otto Messmer and Bill Nolan, which was meant to prevent the motion of the limbs in question from looking like they were drawn through a strobe light and flickering - the idea was that if you didn't draw joints, you could make absolutely sure that the limbs in one frame overlapped with where the frames were in the last frame. Higher frame rates, the development of Squash And Stretch, and an awareness of camera blur reduced the need for this as time went on, and cartoon characters all of a sudden had joints. These days, this is a deliberate decision on the part of the animator, probably to creep you out ... but early on, it was just how things were done.

In Anime, it's often used in conjunction with Super-Deformed, possibly to accentuate the childish nature of the Art Shift.

Related to No Knees, though that's mostly a side effect of the Lazy Artist. Noodle People is the non-laziness-induced version of this.

Examples of Rubber Hose Limbs include:


Anime[]

Comic Strips[]

  • Zits: During one strip where Mrs. Duncan wants to know if he wants more pie, Jeremy is seen extending one of his arms like a snake to get a slice.
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Got it!

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Film[]

  • In The Mask, The Mask gets rubber hose limbs during the "El Pachuco" dance number.

Video Games[]

Webcomics[]

Web Original[]

  • In Homestar Runner, Bubs originally had jointed limbs, but they eventually became rubber hose limbs.

Western Animation[]

Real Life[]