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5[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/20176544.jpg]]
6[[caption-width-right:350:I only hope that we never lose sight of one thing – that it all started with a... a bee?]]
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8''The Adventures of André & Wally B.'' (or just ''André & Wally B.'') is a 1984 short CGI film produced by the Creator/{{Lucasfilm}} Graphics Group (which would eventually form into Creator/{{Pixar}} after Creator/GeorgeLucas sold the division to Creator/SteveJobs), directed and written by Alvy Ray Smith, and animated by Creator/JohnLasseter.
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10The plot is wafer thin. One morning in a forest, a little man named André is waking up. Soon, Wally appears and starts taunting him. André points the other way and, with Wally temporarily distracted, runs off. Wally quickly catches on and chases André, and eventually stings him. Wally flies off victorious, but André throws his hat at him offscreen.
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12Being such an early CGI film, there were many challenges in getting it made. It was rendered using a 13,000,000$ Cray X-MP/48 supercomputer provided by Cray Research and ten VAX-11/750 superminicomputers from Project Athena, the fastest and most advanced computers in the world at the time--which wasn't saying a lot. The modeling program used at the time could only produce simple geometric primitive shapes (cones, cubes, spheres, cylinders, patches, lines, etc.) in spite of John Lasseter wanting a flexible pear shape for André's body, and Wally B.'s feet, as is found in most cartoon characters--Ed Catmull eventually managed to create a teardrop shape that was achieved by using two spheres cut in half and made in different sizes and the computer filled in the section in the middle, and Ed put in the controls to make it distort and bend in different ways. And on top of that, there was no way to output the animation directly onto film, so Craig Good had to photograph an actual computer monitor calibrated with the film playing it frame by frame to get it onto a print. And due to the big deadline, the crew forgot to get the cartoon finished in time for its premiere at SIGGRAPH in 1984, showing it with parts still in wireframe form--regardless, it was met with superb reception there, and the film was ultimately completed anyway for the Toronto International Animation Festival.
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14The film is notable for being the first attempt in CGI to use Squash & Stretch animation techniques and create non-geometric shapes that could do that in CG, and also for its then-complex 3D backgrounds with a particle system for the leaves, and the cartoon was lit like a Maxfield Parrish painting. It is included on the 1993 CGI short film anthology ''WesternAnimation/{{Imaginaria}}'', and, owing to the staff behind it, it is also nominally considered to be the first of the WesternAnimation/PixarShorts.
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16!Tropes:
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18* AllCGICartoon: One of the earliest, if not the first, attempts to make a CGI film with a cartoon-like aesthetic.
19* AmbiguouslyHuman: André. It's hard to tell what he is.
20* AmbiguousRobot: Many sources claim that André is an android. Though it's not certain if they're official or not.
21* ArtisticLicenseBiology: Per RuleOfFunny, Wally B.'s stinger is merely crumpled up after stinging André, as opposed to detaching his stinger like a real life bee would.
22* AsideGlance: When André tricks Wally into looking the other way, he smugly looks at the viewers before taking off.
23* BeeAfraid: André reacts with fear at the sight of Wally B. Then again, you'd be scared too if a giant bee with a stinger as long as your nose flew up to you.
24* BewareMyStingerTail: Wally B. has a ridiculously large stinger, which he ends up using on André.
25* BigCreepyCrawlies: Wally B. is far larger than any real life bee, and is almost as big as André's head.
26* CartoonCreature: André's species is completely indeterminate.
27* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: While its crew would go on to form Pixar, this first film was actually done as a project for Lucasfilm. Also, for a company that has "Story is King." as its mantra, it's somewhat odd that their very first film has no plot to speak of. (Granted, at the time, just having something resembling characters and a plot at all was considered impressive for a CGI film.)
28* FloatingLimbs: Wally B.'s legs float independently of his body.
29* FourFingeredHands: André has these, as part of his design being a Mickey Mouse homage.
30* GagNose: André's nose is very big. Wally B. takes notice of it and messes with it like it's a doorstopper.
31* {{Irony}}: André has a bee on his t-shirt, even though his tormentor ends up being a bee.
32* JigglePhysics: Oddly enough, in André's nose of all places, and his hat wiggles like jello too.
33* LookBehindYou: André uses this tactic to distract Wally B. so he can make a break for it.
34* MimeAndMusicOnlyCartoon: There is no dialogue, and the story is told entirely through pantomime and music.
35* MotionBlur: This short was notably the very first one to use it in CGI.
36* NonIndicativeName: André and Wally B. don't really go on any adventures in the two minutes the film runs.
37* NoPlotNoProblem: There is no plot. The film starts with André waking up, and then trying and failing to get away from Wally B. [[Administrivia/TropesAreTools Still one of the most important films in the history of animation and CGI.]]
38* OhCrap: André jolts up and shakes with fear at the sight of Wally B..
39* OffLikeAShot: Wally B. takes off after André like this once he realises he's been tricked.
40* PublicDomainSoundtrack: Almost all of the film's soundtrack is made of two PublicDomain music cues; the opening cue and second half of the film are from Music/GioachinoRossini's ''Theatre/TheBarberOfSeville'', and the Spring section of Music/AntonioVivaldi's ''Four Seasons'' is used for the credits.
41* PunnyName: Wally B., who is a bee.
42* RubberhoseLimbs: André is designed like this, or at least as close as you could get within the limitations of CGI in 1984.
43* SceneryPorn: The opening gives us a breathtaking establishing shot of the forest André is sleeping in. Per WordOfGod, there are 46,254 trees in it, and every single one of them is designed differently from each other!
44* ShortFilm: The film is only two minutes long.
45* ShoutOut:
46** André's appearance is based on the ''WesternAnimation/PlaneCrazy'' design of WesternAnimation/MickeyMouse. His laugh sounds like WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck's, and he also bellows a scream that sounds like WesternAnimation/{{Goofy}} at the end.
47** André's name is a tribute to the 1981 film ''Film/MyDinnerWithAndre''.
48** The lighting styles and colors were inspired by the works of painter and illustrator Maxfield Parrish.
49* SphereEyes: Both André and Wally B. have these.
50* StockScream: André lets out a hi-pitched Goofy Holler when Wally stings him.
51* TheTwelvePrinciplesOfAnimation: Notably, this was the very first CGI film to employ the classic Squash and Stretch techniques employed in older cartoons.
52* TheVoiceless: Neither of the characters are given dialogue. André only gives a snicker when tricking Wally and a holler at the end.
53* WeaponizedHeadgear: [[DownplayedTrope Downplayed]]. André throws his hat at Wally B. in retaliation for stinging him in the end, which sends the bee reeling away.
54* WhiteGloves: André wears a pair of these.

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