I love reading biographies of people who inspire me. Max Fleischer, being one of the premier animation pioneers, was very inspiring. Not only was he an animator, he was an inventor, somebody whose mind was geared toward engineering. Not only was he an illustrator, he was mechanically minded, inventing many different innovations in filmmaking (the Rotoscope being the most famous). And Max, with his brother Dave Fleischer, produced animated cartoons that remain striking, unique, and some of them still have yet to be topped nearly a hundred years later.
This biography, written by Max's son, famed director Richard Fleischer, details Max's early life, his break into the animation business, his involvement with industrial filmmaking during WWI, and the founding of Fleischer Studios. After the birth of his company, Max had great success but it was also a tumultuos and difficult career related to his involvement with Paramount Pictures, and the rivalry he felt toward Walt Disney.
Today, he is most remembered for his Popeye and Betty Boop cartoons, and for producing the most beautiful cartoons ever made, the Fleischer Superman shorts. But, he also created the first two-reel color cartoon - Poor Cinderella - and the first ever sound cartoon, My Old Kentucky Home, which predates Disney’s Steamboat Willie by nearly four years. But he also improved on the Cinecolor process, unable to use Technicolor because Disney had an exclusive right to it, so Max added special filters and the result was the same as any state of the art coloring process.
This was a very interesting and engaging read. I couldn't put it down. The author painted a loving, prideful picture of his father. Max seemed like a very driven but also sometimes complicated man. I find him a far more inspiring and decent person compared to Walt Disney because Fleischer seemed far less self-serving, reactionary, and genuinely cared about his employees. I'd recommend this book to animation fans and pop-culture historians alike.