Tagged: Disney

THE EASY ROAD TO SUCCESS

Without further ado the next day arrives, heralded by morning bells clanging in a steeple high above the village and sending doves aflutter. This is the opening shot of a 45-second multiplane camera truck-and-pan that remains a revered landmark in...

INSPIRATION AND JIMINY SINGS TITLESONG

With these difficulties of design and story finally resolved, full animation on Pinocchio resumed in September of 1938. The film’s marvelous visual intricacy is due in large part to the further inspirational graphic explorations of two veterans of classic European...

SOMEDAY MY PRINCE WILL COME

Happy now suggests that the princess “do something” and when she wants to know what, Sleepy suggests she tell them a story. Happy specifies a true story and Bashful wants it to be a love story. As Snow White obliging...

PEE-IN-PANTS SCAREY

Without a moment’s relief from this attempted murder, the film proceeds into another spectacular sequence of terror, a kaleidoscope of ever more frightening images brilliantly illustrating how the young girl’s panicking mind transforms all surrounding forestry into tormenting demons –...

ANIMATION = MIND-CONTROL

With this new emphasis on exploring and clearly defining personality in animated characters a more primitive “language” of cartooning gradually gave way to greater expressiveness in the drawing. Originally, character animators had done all of the effects in their own...

THE DIFFERENCE WAS WALT’S INVOLVEMENT

Walt Disney’s thorough undivided and detailed attention to any particular project – what is today called “micromanagement” – seems to have been the determining factor in that project’s artistic quality. Some would assert that Walt’s influence was limited mainly to...

AMONG THE WONDERS OF THE WORLD

Although Disney’s creations share with other forms of cinema the telling of stories, the big difference is that originally everything on the screen was drawn or painted by hand, a fact which aligns them more closely with pictorial fine art....

WHAT MAKES A MASTERPIECE?

Walter Elias Disney died December 15, 1966, just 10 days after his 65th birthday. During his lifetime he directed the creation of thirteen full-length animated films nine of which are masterpieces unequaled in that art form: Snow White and the...