Since the finer aspects of human character are not translatable in any reasonable way, "life," or character must be communicated with exaggerated renditions of the grosser aspects of life. To wit, the massive eyes of most cartoon characters.
In most cartoons, the life of the character, truly the character of the character is found in the eyes. In cartoons more so than in real life, the eyes really are the window to the soul. Black & white characters were designed to be in black & white, and as such that's where their soul lies. If they were going to be drawn in color, they would have been drawn differently.
Take a look at Mickey Mouse.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhtzhpbIoxOKgQSiYEGI0vidNnKurPmdb8SKRhQIBnye5nUJnl-TO9to3CHtt69Yn_RmNnxhFkU0oYlE1LfrvknYf2vCWV0WwUJ9OO2BOoh3wM-kyDJh3aTqNLHjTaowErk6dI7d3-8G5E/s400/history_of_mickey_mouse.jpg)
I had a similar complaint of the new Scooby Doo cartoons. The characters never seemed right to me. They look sort of like the original characters I loved. They sound sort of like them. But there was still something seriously off about them. I didn't then and still don't see them as the original characters because the soul behind the drawing is different. It took me forever to place it. Then it hit me; they have whites in their eyes. The animators fucked with the eyes and fucked with the soul of the characters.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiwE4aZg-0U0qax7LzrUS4w9biLlksbJxLaJpUkp-E0zms3AyYeptb6ne-38Oma9AVNkko-lRWkV7NduSmklRpqX9sYWjL-SV7ocR79_o4DEqyKmYjSDD5my81plk20skE0GebGdHPgYZ0/s400/scooby_doo_eyes.jpg)
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