Wow! So much to respond to!
feedmelinguini wrote:
Wow! I just quoted Aaron three times in a row. Soon, I'll have to pay royalties....
Yes, yes you will. For now on, I demand that $0.25 be transferred to my account via PayPal each and every time my name and/or posts are used or referred to. You quoted me three times and used my name twice, that's $1.25!
feedmelinguini wrote:Aaron, give the TLAs a chance. They really are entertaining and, to me, some of the finest work the studio has put out. Grand Canyon was NOT done in the style of the TLAs. It was a photographic interpretation of Grofe's Grand Canyon Suite. If it put you to sleep, you just may not be a fan of his music. The TLAs are among the first examples of the nature documentary. Despite his taking liberties with some of the material, Disney presented six films and seven featurettes that are remarkably entertaining and informative. I love them enough to have subscribed to the Disney Channel (back when they played Disney stuff!) just to record the seven featurettes. The six feature films were all released on VHS, so I was able to track them down. Secrets of Life alone is enough to get a doubter hooked.
rodneyf wrote:True Life Adventures are narrated stories about wildlife. They're not nearly as boring as the Grand Canyon sequence in Sleeping Beauty's DVD. They're engaging, entertaining, and educational documentaries about animals. Now, if you don't like animals or nature, than that's a different stories. They are entertaining though.
Thanks to both of you for these reassurances. I'm pleased to hear this, as I
want to like them, lol. As long as they aren't like straight-up National Geographic, then I can probably handle them, even though nature/animals aren't my thing. I figured Walt would make anything entertaining, anyways.
Lon & Henski, thanks for your explanations. I agree with you that a Universal/Disney joint venture with the Oswald series will probably never happen. Maybe somewhere down the road, Disney will make a purchase, but until then, it's doubftul.
Lon, your scenario of Disney remastering the shorts and then claiming the rights to them is interesting, indeed! It even sounds like something Disney would do, and it's bound to be worth it as a Treasures set. I wouldn't think other distributors would be as eager to release them, anyways, as they don't hold much significance outside the Disney name. Then again, collectors will take what they can get. I say: Disney, get on the ball and do it!
Trojan Mouse- thanks, that's a great scoop! I am a bit disappointed that only 5 MMC episodes will make it on to the disc, but then again, I 'spose it can't have them all. I really want SOTS on DVD, so I'll take what we can get, but it's a feature film and a Disney classic- not a treasure (in terms of shorts or TV shows)! I think it deserves its own 2 disc release, just like any other popular Disney live-action feature would get.
-Aaron