GIRAF20 is now ONLINE! Get your online passes and tickets and watch from the comfort of your own home
A ring of black text on a transparent background, reading 'Monday Short'.

Kevin Bailey’s Father’s Son (2015)

As much as he’s paying tribute to the ’90s animation underground, Bailey is also letting his own personality come through loud and clear, and the result is wonderfully odd.

Two characters, an anthropomorphic bird and an anthropomorphic frog, are sitting in a car. The shot is from the passenger-side window, where the characters are looking beyond the camera. The bird is driving, and is orange with a mullet, and is looking with a disapproving expression. The other character, the frog, is sitting in the passenger seat. He is green, is wearing a white button up, has blond hair and a red ballcap on his head. He is looking worried. The background is of Nevada landscape. From Kevin Bailey’s Father’s Son (2015)

This Monday Short was originally posted on July 31, 2017. We are re-posting Peter Hemminger's Monday Short Blog posts until we've exhausted the incredible archive.

Kevin Bailey’s NYU short Father’s Son is a blast of nostalgia for early ’90s animation. The style falls somewhere between Beavis & Butthead and Rocko’s Modern Life; the mood is all slacker-friendly apathy and absurdist humour; it’s even given a warm bath of VHS distortion, all the better to make it feel like some long-lost bootleg of a Liquid TV short. (It’s a real VHS transfer, too, not just a filter).

Unlike a lot of ’90s-aping animation, though, Father’s Son actually lives up to the standards of the shorts it’s emulating. Credit for that goes to Bailey’s knack for character details—the look on Fishboy’s face before he slinks out of the car to meet the Satanic Babes is priceless, and the whole short is packed with similarly brilliant moments. As much as he’s paying tribute to the ’90s animation underground, Bailey is also letting his own personality come through loud and clear, and the result is wonderfully odd.

syn. A young fishboy and his birdude friend must choose between the satanic babes by the cliffs and the open road ahead.

dir. Kevin Bailey

2015