Goliath wrote:Wonderlicious, my compliments on your post. It's been a long time since I've read such an informative, well thought-through post on UD.
Wahoo! Go me!
Around Christmas 2007, I finally read Barrie's novelization of the original play (the play was first staged in 1904, Barrie wrote the definitive novel version in 1911, perhaps so that he could immortalise it himself on page before anyone else came and novelised it for him). I was quite intrigued by its naturalism of sorts; Barrie wrote the novel in the style of an oral storyteller reciting the story to young children, incorporating lots of nuances usually associated with spoken English, and at one point "tossing a coin" so as to choose which exact Neverland adventure to retell (the rescuing of Princess Tiger-lilly is chosen eventually). But what struck me the most was how bittersweet it actually is. Peter tries to go back to his mother, but the window is nailed shut after Peter vanished, and his mother is preoccupied with a new baby (Disney did actually consider this scene during development; it's one of the deleted scenes in the documentary on the Platinum DVD). Equally, Barrie added an ending scene in his eventual novelization of the play where Peter came back every so often to play with Wendy, only to one day come back and see that she had grown up and had children of her own (true, we meet Wendy's daughter Jane in the cheapquelGoliath wrote:I never knew that about Peter Pan. Sounds like a fantastic idea to turn into a Disney film. I like the Disney-film, but mostly because of all the characters around Peter (Mr. Darling, Tinkerbel, Captain Hook, Mr. Smee and yes, the indians). I never cared much for Peter, but then again, there is nothing to care about. Peter has no real personality and that's the film's biggest flaw.
Darn it, I forgot about that one. And I was one of the puzzled eight year olds back in 1996 who watched it again as a teenager after a few years and was shocked to see how dirty Frollo actually was! Forgetting about Quasimodo and chums is obviously a sign of what happens when you have all the princess and fairy films floating around as the prime examples.Goliath wrote:I have to disagree, though, on what you said about not overstating the complexity of Disney's movies. While it's true in most cases that they are simple stories, I think Hunchback of Notre Dame is hard to grasp fully for children. I think only adults can really appreciate every layer of that movie.
I agree that showing a stressed-out and constantly upset kid in a Disney cartoon of the 1950s isn't the best place to display a constantly stressed out and tortured child. I think that I may have exaggerated Peter's position a bit too much; by tortured soul, I meant that he was unhappy deep down with his predicament, and the childish hell really is that all he gets to do is play while his playmates from the real world (and Neverland - it's implied that Tink dies) grow up and eventually vanish.Disney Duster wrote:I suppose if Peter could always leave Neverland the original message wouldn't be do bad, but if Peter was a tortured soul stuck in a childish hell, that would be nothing short of horrible. But I think Walt was saying it's not bad to be a kid forever. Walt even said "adults are just children grown up" and believed in "the child in us all". I think Walt thought it was okay for adults to be like children, or to hang on to the best things of childhood, forever.
But what message you've got is pretty much spot on in my opinion (and practically everyone else's
That's what I've been trying to say.Disney Duster wrote:Even if there is no big amount of high intellectuality to the films, Disney may be saying who needs super complicated intellectual stuff anyway? I think Walt Disney is smarter in saying that you don’t need that, when his films speak to every single person, and when they don’t require that stuff for people to love them. It shows life is not about that intellectual stuff, it is about feelings. Intellectual stuff can give you certain feelings, I know, but his films are about the feelings that are really important and we really need.
A lot of people from under-privileged backgrounds who go up in the world tend to want to dabble in high culture and general "improvement" so as to catch up with what they missed when they weren't as fortunate. There was an exhibition in Paris a few years ago, which eventually also got shown in Quebec and Munich, called "Once Upon a Time...Walt Disney", which showcased the influence of European high culture upon the Disney studio. As well as a lot of the source stories for Walt-era films coming from European authors (British Lewis Carroll, French Charles Perrault, German Brothers Grimm etc), a lot of the artwork was inspired in part by both fine and popular art from the European continent. Sleeping Beauty seeks inspiration from modernist art and a classical ballet score while still being a bankable girl-meets-guy fantasy adventure, and of course, Fantasia tries to promote classical music by setting it to a popular art form.Disney Duster wrote:And I guess you could reach all people and still put intellectual stuff in there. Some people will get it, but the ones who don't would still enjoy the film. I mean, I think that's possible...
Okey dokey. The "fable factor" (as I'll call it) varies from film to film. Sometimes, it can have to do with just an amusing representation or observation of human personality (everybody knows somebody who is just like a character in Winnie the Pooh, or 101 Dalmatians being essentially a WW2 escape movie restaged in quaint English settings). Other times, it can be emotional or societal representation (basically, the ones I listed). The latter works especially well in films where there is clearly no arch-villain (Dumbo, Mary Poppins), or where the protagonists may have faults that affect the plot of the film (Pinocchio, Lady and the Tramp, Aladdin) - just like real life. Plus, the best villains are not necessarily the ones who shout and scream, but the ones who have real-life counterparts: the pathologically manipulative evil stepmothers, the mindless hunters, the sly foxes who lead people astray and the moody, power-hungry uncles intent on ruining their nephews' lives to get what they want.Disney Duster wrote:I want you to.
If only enlightenment were available in the form of a simple needle injection.Timon/Pumbaa fan wrote:Well considering there are college course that deeply study and analyze this than I'd say you can analyze Disney films in-depth.



