MagicMirror wrote:The shot in 'Sleeping Beauty' with the fireplace is really the only part I find creepy - the rest of it is more adventure than terror
I suppose there has never been (that I've seen) any
pure terror in any of Disney's films. But don't think for a second that Pinocchio or Fantasia are more terror than adventure.
MagicMirror wrote:For suspense, perhaps no scene is better than when the Witch is offering the apple to Snow White
Well, sure. I guess there is a sort of Hitchcockian thing about us the audience knowing something terrifying that the character who is in danger does not. But don't you agree with anything I said? That knowing too much diminishes scare factor? It's much better to have a place where your imagination goes off on its own. Snow White showed you everything and then, told you how you were supposed to react.
MagicMirror wrote:as far as mystery is concerned, the Queen's laboratory and dungeon, while perhaps not as OTT as Maleficent's domain, is to me more successful at creating a sinister atmosphere.
Actually, when I was refering to atmosphere - I was talking about the entire movie. I was saying, everywhere you turn,
everywhere, there is the mood of darkness. That's not true of Snow White. The point is not that when you get to Maleficent's forbidden domain, that you find it more sinister or mysterious. In fact, it's scarier that it is just as sinister and mysterious as every location in the movie. In almost every scene, the characters, the three good fairies (who are in a sense on-the-run), keep reminding us that they have to hide because nowhere is safe. Didn't you pick up on any of that?
MagicMirror wrote:You don't see the Witch transformation in all stages - her face is not revealed until the very end. What we do see are a series of expressionistic shadows and backgrounds, suggesting what is happening inside her, and reflecting her madness.
Well what I meant is that you still see the transformation. But, I'm also saying that you see everything she is and does and her behavioral changes. You see everything that Snow White is threatened by. So, where's the surprise? Only one shot in the movie, and that is where the Old Peddlar Woman casts a shadow over the pies. That's the only thing that isn't completely telegraphed before we see it.
MagicMirror wrote:Maleficent's transformation is shown in more detail, and nothing Maleficent does (or threatens to do) is actually very frightening. The Queen wants the heart of her unwitting rival cut out, and later relishes the moment as she watches it stop. That's chilling.
Well, there's another funny detail about Snow White's Queen. And that is, the moment after she announces she wants the Huntman to cut out the heart... the movie cuts right to Snow White happy, singing, picking flowers... Through the entirety of Sleeping Beauty, Maleficent's presence is felt after she goes away. People actually react to her. The music doesn't pick up on a completely divergent note. That's how much of an impact she makes in her own movie. Snow White is hilariously bi-polar in that way.
But you're very much correct that if we're judging by intentions, the Queen is a darker figure. But I think if we do that, it's like taking them out of the movie. And if you do that, than we subject them to questions of reality. And none of Disney's animated films would work in reality. The most naturally-themed Disney animated films all have talking animals.
MagicMirror wrote:I bring up 'Pinocchio' in particular because it's world is far more bleak and sinister than 'Sleeping Beauty's. Absolutely no one Pinocchio meets outside of Gepetto's workshop does him any good, so in my mind it's a far better example of darkness lurking around every corner.
Very good point. What I was saying though, and it certainly makes the two movies very different, is- Sleeping Beauty is a supernatural film compared to Pinocchio, if we're accepting that the evil is people (and an animal, who doesn't talk). That the world is evil. It's a realistic evil. I think Sleeping Beauty works on a more eternal, naive level. And by that I mean, it reaches more people. Anyone can be naive or become or reduce themselves to that. You don't have to know to fear the unknown. Pinocchio is a movie where if you've met one villain, you know what to expect from everyone. But still I think, with Sleeping Beauty- you never know what to expect.
However, the more I think about it, the more I think you're really onto something.
MagicMirror wrote:The Monstro sequence is in my mind the best action sequence/climax Disney has ever done.
Yeah, but how scary are action scenes? Generally speaking... Action scenes, and the one in Pinocchio as well, is about reacting to what you see as you see it. It's more about excitement than fear.
MagicMirror wrote:the Blue Fairy specifies that she can't help him later, and, unlike the fairies in 'Sleeping Beauty', she keeps that promise.
Again, you're making perfect sense. But do you think Aurora is the only person in the film we should be afraid for? The only person who finds themself in a scary situation? The only person who takes on any danger? If you stick to the story idea, than you're...stuck. But are you in the habit of tying yourself down as a viewer? Saying, there's only one way to respond to something? Nothing that happens as the movie progresses will change your mind?
MagicMirror wrote:It's a young wooden boy, an old man and an insect versus the biggest, loudest monster ever animated. Monstro's not a thinking villain like Maleficent, he's a sheer force of nature and the heroes clearly have no hope of defeating him. 'Sleeping Beauty' has a world where good will always prevail over evil, while the world of 'Pinocchio' is a vast complex of merciless crooks, villains and monsters.
I think you meant to tell me that in Pinocchio, the good guys were never given a guarantee that they would make it. And if you had said that, you'd be right on the money. But I think again, that's a bit of an afterthought. If I may be so bold, another example of responding to the source material - the fairytale, a classic story - a book, rather than the film itself. Taking characteristics out of the film and saying, as long as Disney tries, the idea will always trump this other idea (Sleeping Beauty). But again, Sleeping Beauty brilliantly used all the tools at its disposal to make everything sinister. Not just a few situations, events. Everything.
MagicMirror wrote:I think the donkey sequence is more scary, and the Monstro sequence more intense, than anything 'Sleeping Beauty' can come up with.
Intense, yes. But, I think only if we take them out of fantasy and put them in another kind of movie.
MagicMirror wrote:Children watch 'Sleeping Beauty' and, though they may be caught up in the excitement of the climax, they can watch it again because they know good will destroy evil in the end. They watch 'Pinocchio' and are often so disturbed by it that they refuse to watch it again for years - which is the more powerful film? That 'Pinocchio' may have more terror in it's subtext seems to me rather a weak argument for it not being as chilling. 'Pinocchio' gets the title of scariest Disney film from me, without any question.
I can't say you haven't presented an excellent argument. You have. But I swear we're both on different wavelengths.
MagicMirror wrote:'Night on Bald Mountain' was one of the sequences I was referring to, but the general 'mise en scene' of at least half of the film is very sinister, like a Murnau film. In 'Rite of Spring', the real world is a merciless one, where there is no justice but simply survival of the fittest. That scene where the dinosaurs walk to their death, gradually thinning in numbers as they drop dead one by one, is a very chilling moment.
Oh, the Rite of Spring scene (the entire epic thing) is no competition for Sleeping Beauty in the scary department. These are two entirely different things. There is no mystery to that scene at all. In fact, its intensity comes from trying to give us a somewhat realistic document of the - as you said - survival of the fittest aspect. Worlds away from Sleeping Beauty.
I think now what you're doing is trying to out-intense Sleeping Beauty. But you shouldn't mistake me- I'm not saying Sleeping Beauty is more intense than these films at all. No, the power of Sleeping Beauty is in what it suggests. Not what it shows. You can't argue that these films are all scarier just because they decided to do the opposite. They did it differently, that's all. And in fact, that's what makes Sleeping Beauty so extraordinary.
MagicMirror wrote:There's also a wonderful sense of mystery - perhaps more than in any other Disney animation - in 'The Sorcerer's Apprentice', with it's vaulted, cavernous chambers and high shadows.
I'm going to stop you there. Please, go no further. Because Fun and Fancy Free's entire Giant sequence, from where we meet Willy to where he crashes to his demise, is much scarier than The Sorcerer's Apprentice scene from Fantasia. Though I must say I'm impressed with your visual reference in Fantasia, you then have to connect a threat. Which, there is none. I agree with the mystery element, though. The Sorcerer himself is a scary-looking guy but he never does anything scary. And, though the mops/brooms getting out of control is a decent bit at inducing some dread, it's aim is merely to enchant in the end. It's a short piece anyway, where there is much more focus on Mickey's sense of wonder and his exciting dreams than on anything scary. Which of course is why it's so great. I love that moment where he flies to the sort of mountain cliff and summons the oceans...
MagicMirror wrote:Though I suppose 'Night on Bald Mountain' isn't as conceptually frightening I brought it up because a chilling atmosphere was one of your main arguments in favour of 'Sleeping Beauty' and I think 'Bald Mountain' is a better example, with all those weird camera movents and that art-nouveau pattern in the way the smoke swirls and the damned writhe, and, of course, Tytla's Chernabog.
A better example? Not really. And there would really be no argument if I thought you seemed to respect the film more than you do. I think you're really underestimating it. Night on Bald Mountain is too brief to have as much impact as Sleeping Beauty did. It's a more fun sequence than Sleeping Beauty is, for its shortness they made it a good party. But Sleeping Beauty had a little more going for it as a frightening work of art.
MagicMirror wrote:There's also a considerably 'sappy birth celebration' in 'Sleeping Beauty'
I hope you get as much of a kick out of what I'm about to say as I do: you remember the birth scenes in Bambi, right? What would you say made them different from Sleeping Beauty? The gatherers, well-wishers; what was different about them?
Let me kill-the-suspence here and just say it- they had no faces. Do you remember seeing any? Any faces of characters that didn't become main characters? And, that weren't guards- whose faces were shown to evoke the terror that Maleficent had on other people... Eh? You can't have a true "sappy celebration" scene without reactions on other characters' faces. Unless of course, you know a great deal more about contemporary European art films than I do (though I don't consider that to be imperative here).
MagicMirror wrote:She's only a threat in the scenes where she is actually physically present - one of my main complaints about her.
Do you have any imagination...at all?
MagicMirror wrote:The only scene where Maleficent is a little frightening is when she appears in the fireplace and, yes, it is the eyes, but even they are rather tame as far as Disney Villain eyes go.
Name
one villain with scarier eyes. (I'm fully prepared that you might actually do that)
Okay... name one villain with scarier eyes - who
also has a scary voice. (A-ha! I think I covered myself this time

) One of the things that makes Maleficent's eyes so scary is that they work fully in conjuction with her spine-chilling voice. (And no, I won't consider Lady Tremaine - the reason is clear: Maleficent's scary eyes and voice work with her aura, where she is, something dangerous happens, but Lady Tremaine goes everywhere and her scenes are always supposed to be scary, just select ones).
MagicMirror wrote:I certainly don't sense any of her minions' presence, for example, in the scenes where Aurora's dancing in the forest or when the kings are getting drunk - and I don't think we're meant to anyway.
I don't think that's a very good point. Because I have an answer for it. Though it does seem somewhat out of line with what I said before, I agree those scenes aren't meant to be scary. What they are supposed to do is show you what Maleficent wants to take away from these characters. You have to feel for these fleeting moments (because they are fleeting, which again goes to support my argument that Sleeping Beauty is in fact a very scary movie if you think about it) that there is innocence and good in this world. So you're somewhat excited to see the battle Phillip embarks on when he's freed. I don't think the dragon scene is very scary. A little bit...not
very. Though it does serve to show us that Maleficent was always more dangerous than people like you assumed she was.
But you say that you don't sense her minions' presence. Did you forget all about the scenes where you see that Maleficent's minions have been searching everywhere trying to find Aurora and the fairies?? Her ghouls / demons make look oafish and indeed that's something of a flaw for the movie. But its proof that Maleficent is always out there somewhere. And just before that sequence, Flora clearly says that "even walls have ears." What do you think she meant? A servant might hear and tell the King and Queen (which is silly, since they told them anyway before running off into the night)? Now- it means that Maleficent's power is greater than you're giving it credit for, and she always has something out there to hear and see what others are doing. Then, you know she's sent her crow (or raven) out after Aurora. More proof that she's always around somehow. And when she's found something out... Are you going to tell me you knew exactly what would happen? A great deal of s
Do you have to be beaten over the head with everything to see it / feel it / know it's there? I don't.
MagicMirror wrote:The fact that they don't make the prince and princess the main characters isn't really the trouble - they do that to an extent in 'Snow White' and 'Cinderella' as well. It's just that the three fairies are all too nice, by their nature. There's no Grumpy equivalent to spice them up and they can't really carry the film by themselves, which is what they are nevertheless delegated to do. Even in 'Cinderella' the Mice weren't asked to carry the whole film.
Grumpy was silly. The whole way through. He wasn't exactly what I'd call spice. In fact, I would have to give Sleeping Beauty the edge, because it got the message that you can't create 7 completely different individual characters. Half of them blend together and have no distinctive personalities. For a lot of people, it's even a chore to remember all of the names correctly. I don't think you're making a quality comparison (or contrast). In Cinderella, only two mice stood out. And they were Cinderella's cheering section. But the fairies had their own identities and even their own duties. You felt the weight of their struggle to keep order and you felt their humanity too. I'm not saying their going down in the history books as amazing characters. But no more or less should they, than should the seven dwarfs. For the very reason I mentioned- they'll always be more famous for a quote or one facial expression than for a well-developed character.
The fairies aren't supposed to carry the whole film, only their section of it. Which they do, masterfully. Everyone in the film gets a different section. And each has a different purpose. And all fit perfectly into the film. The film is a near-perfect picture of a magical animated masterpiece. A film, different than its story. And I don't care what element bothered anyone. They can only argue that it didn't do the fairy tale justice or that it's not the same as the other Disney animated films. And the latter is exactly what makes it so great.
MagicMirror wrote:I think another problem is that we aren't really given enough time to get to know Aurora, the character everyone is trying to protect from Maleficent. Snow White and Cinderella were both developed sufficiently to inspire their friends with their intrinsic goodness; Aurora really just comes off as a blonde bimbo with a nice voice.
Depending on how you want to see her, I'll agree with you. Yes she isn't a very well-developed character, sure. But, why does she have to be? I don't agree that this movie has to fall in line with Disney's other princess films. If you do, that's like sentencing the film to in some way do things the same way as those other films. And I hope you're listening very closely - there's no way on earth this film would be as beloved as it is with the people who love it now, if it were the slightest bit different. This is a true individual among Disney's filmbase.
MagicMirror wrote:She's not a powerful enough force for us to care about her being saved all that much, which makes the kiss at the end of the film ultimately hollow.
The point of the kiss is not to match Snow White's kiss. And if it had, that would not make the movie any better.
MagicMirror wrote:I'm not denying that the film has it's individual merits, but I don't think it's successful as a whole.
Well, I can understand that. You have your loyalties. I have mine.
MagicMirror wrote:To be honest, none of Maleficent's moves are calculated - she tries to scheme but at the end of the day is forced to act on the moment, perhaps one of the reasons for her popularity.
Well, do you think you understand her popularity?