The 12 rules of animation are now a federal requirement; What changes?

The 12 rules of animation are now a federal requirement; What changes?

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rotoscope animation becomes the equivalent of Calarts (popular style)

More of this

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Every CGI animated show improves greatly but costs become higher and several studios close.

Nothing.

You're about to make some people very unhappy

What are they?

Rotoscope becomes illegal.
No, it be more of this.
vimeo.com/216356842
CGI also becomes illegal.

Not much

No, alot.

Squash and Stretch
Anticipation
Staging
Straight Ahead/Pose to Pose
Follow through/Overlapping action
Slow in Slow out
Arc
Secondary action
Timing
Exaggeration
Solid Drawing
Appeal

Animation in a technical level improves, but much of the narrative problems will still remain. The "default" style would become comple. Since the government is not giving support to the studios, I predict there would be a lot of shut downs, and corps like Disney will become even stronger, at least for the time being.

Narrative problems will be fixed.

How?

Otakus can't import their nipshit so anime is a national niche market rather than a global one.
>CGI is illegal
What do you think of Jellyjamm of Le grandes vacances? I think those are very good examples of CGI that follows 12 principles.

More focus on animation, color composition and character design rather than muh deep and convoluted storyline and scripts. Seriously script driven shows are the cancer of the medium.

Japan has to follow them too.

>What do you think of Jellyjamm of Le grandes vacances?
Never seen it.

Unironically this.

irrelevant

This oh so much.

I suppose there would be an improvement, but a lot of the issues would remain, though it would be gradually be erased away.

Anime would still be popular everywhere else in the world, just not america. This might be really, really hard for you to understand, but american federal laws don't apply to the vast majority of the planet.

No, they will be kept.
Also no more outsourcing.

Japan will follow them.
>But American federal laws don't apply to the vast majority of the planet.
Yes, they do, due to the UN.

Your Trump Derangement Syndrome is letting the orange man live in your head rent free. Even bringing him up in threads that have nothing to do with politics. Please seek help.

>Rotoscope becomes illegal.
Snow White and Little Mermaid followed the 12 principles and were in rotoscope

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In lat anime became popular because open TV channels aired those shows to fill blank spaces and because it was cheap, pretty much like HB shows and eastern europe cartoons, but most people got over them rather than making a niche following. In the case of USA (at least from my limited point of view) it was rather fans of japanimation actively importing bootlegs VHS and sharing them in sci fi conventions instead of being massively aired in open channels for low class people.

Agree but like 9/10 rotoscope productions don't follow 12 principles.

Haven´t seen it (yet) but i´ll check it out. Looks interesting enough if only for the aesthetic style. I´m getting tired of that generic stylized realism most CGI animation movies use.

Realistically speaking narrative sells better than whimsical experimental animation though so i doubt studios will forsake narration any time soon. I think a more realistic aproach would be to just think simpler more relatable stories with a pre-defined begining and end instead of keep exploiting a single idea until ruining it... but then again even that´s unlikely in the current creative bankroupt paradigm.

It's dumb that more and more rules keep being added to this hypothetical, it makes the original question pointless.

As in today, not then.
This.

>Realistically speaking narrative sells better than whimsical experimental animation
I know, but the point of the thread is to speculate how the medium would look like if animation studios were forced to follow the principles of animation. So basically since doing that is not cheap, pretty much any country won't be able to create a big amount of cheap productions to overrun the national production of other countries so I would say national distinctions and more solid national markets would be more common.