Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Robert “Bob” Taylor, an award-winning animator, producer and director best known for animated TV series including “TaleSpin” and ...
Originally advertised as “X-rated and animated,” “Fritz the Cat” scored a hit when it was released in 1972, earning a then-impressive $25 million. (It cost only $850,000--a shoestring even at the time ...
It was a strong session tonight at Heritage for original art, with another Crumb page — the infamous "Keep On Truckin" page from XYZ Comics (1972, Kitchen Sink) selling for $191,200, the cover of ...
Trailers from Hell’s Mick Garris takes a look at another film by animation legend Ralph Bakshi, “Fritz the Cat,” from 1972. NSFW! The great cartoonist/provocateur Robert Crumb disowned this 1972 film ...
The 1974 sequel to Ralph Bakshi's bizarre 1972 animated film Fritz the Cat is this equally wacky film, confusingly dubbed The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat. Directed by Robert Taylor—a storyboard artist ...
We’ve just learned animator and director Robert Taylor passed away last Thursday, December 11th, from complications due to COPD. He was 70 years old. Taylor is perhaps best known for directing The ...
That infamous cat and his twisted life are back! Staying within the tradition set by the audacious and racy Fritz the Cat, director-co-writer Robert Taylor takes Robert Crumb's way-cool ...
Robert “Bob” Taylor, an award-winning animator, producer and director best known for animated TV series including “TaleSpin” and animated films such as “The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat,” died December ...
Fritz, now married and a father, is desperate to escape the domestic hell he now finds himself in. Lighting up a joint, he begins to dream about his eight other lives, hoping to find one to provide a ...