The Ultimate Disney DVD/Blu-ray

All topics relating to Disney-branded content.
Locked
User avatar
Big Disney Fan
Platinum Edition
Posts: 3110
Joined: Sun Oct 29, 2006 11:28 pm
Location: Any Disney park you choose

Post by Big Disney Fan »

TheSequelofDisney wrote:
Big Disney Fan wrote:Well, look, don't take this the wrong way or anything, but just because it's easy for you to come up with stuff for DVDs on your own, it doesn't mean it's easy for everybody. Some people can't always conjure up stuff of their very own, you know. I'm sorry, but not everyone has the supreme creativity that you have.
Yes, but not everyone cannot just copy or the world would just shatter into a million tiny pieces.
Why are you avoiding my above question?
Besides, that Robin Hood DVD of yours has stuff not owned by Disney! Your RH DVD proves you can only go so far! Did you know that?! Robin Hood Daffy is from Warner Bros., not DISNEY!!!! You can't use bonus features of stuff for Disney movies if they're not FROM Disney. When doing a Disney DVD, use only stuff related to Disney, not anything else, that's my rule.
Yes, that might be your rule, but it's not the rule, not that there even is one. Everything on a Disney DVD does not have to be completely Disney. You don't see just a particular studios film with bonus features by that particular studio. Mix things up a bit. On the French "Peter Pan" DVD it has the silent PARAMOUNT version on it, and Paramount certainly isn't Disney. Disney DVDs are banned to just Disney. You don't want a DVD to just to have experiences of Disney, but from the world, that's why DVDs are interesting, that's why I make DVDs, because they are interesting. The bonus features don't have to be pro-Disney, otherwise that takes the fun out of everything. More things from DIFFERENT cultures, studios, religions, everything makes it a worthwhile set. So Disney DVDs aren't limited to just Disney. Did you see my "Sleeping Beauty" set? There were things on there that weren't Disney at all. So there really isn't room for you to complain.
Well, it should be the rule, because I'VE never seen any bonus features on Disney movies that weren't pro-Disney. I want to make them look like real DVDs. That's why the Snow White, Pinocchio and Dumbo DVDs all have pro-Disney stuff. If you go with non-Disney features on a Disney set, you're going to run into all kinds of legal issues the likes of which would be like between Disney and Spielberg over Roger Rabbit. You spoke of cultures, studios, religions and all that, but what about contract negotiations? You could mix up the cultures and religions, but not the studios, unless you negotiated a contract or something. Be grateful few attorneys look at this forum or you'd be the one in hot water. Look, I'm just saying that pro-Disney stuff only is the practical way to go. Plus, the idea of WB toons on a Disney DVD makes my stomach turn. Whoever heard of WB toons on a Disney DVD?
And why would I create stuff for you? Being the notorious plagiarizer that you are, I wouldn't trust any of my stuff to go into your hands. So count me out. Oh yeah, and "your" Bambi DVD still has some stuff that wasn't yours, i.e. bonus features. Keep thinking about it, or I will actually get someone to close this thing.
Well, I need help. If you won't help me on the DVDs, who can? Also, are you saying that the Bambi bonuses should not come from any actual DVDs? Are you saying all bonuses should be ones not seen on the DVDs? Does EVERYTHING on a DVD have to be one's own original creation and not be found ANYWHERE on a real DVD? Because then you're being selfish. Some things seen on real DVDs need to be in your own ones. Didn't that ever cross your mind?! Not everyone has your creativity. Or didn't you know that?

Besides, if Person A created a DVD of one movie and Person B created another DVD of that same movie and then Person C wanted to do that same thing, I think it would only be practical that it would be difficult for Person B to come up with original ideas for the DVD after Person A finished first and then Person C after B. Person C would have no choice but to scrape the bottom of the barrel (so to speak) for bonuses if Persons B and C followed your "all bonuses must be original and not already appear on DVD, no exceptions" rule. You understand what I'm saying here?
Last edited by Big Disney Fan on Sat Mar 17, 2007 6:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
Big Disney Fan
Platinum Edition
Posts: 3110
Joined: Sun Oct 29, 2006 11:28 pm
Location: Any Disney park you choose

Post by Big Disney Fan »

****UPDATED!!!****

Page 1: 9
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (TheSequelofDisney) Version 1.0
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (netty)
The Rocketeer (Escapay) Version 1.0
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (TheSequelofDisney) Version 2.0
Beauty and the Beast (271286)
Hercules (TheSequelofDisney)
Alice in Wonderland (Disneykid)
Peter Pan (brownie)
Fantasia (Julian Carter)

Page 2: 7
Pinocchio (TheSequelofDisney)
The Black Hole (Escapay)
The Rocketeer (Escapay) Version 2.0
Bedknobs and Broomsticks (Escapay)
The Little Mermaid (azul017)
Treasure Planet (TheSequelofDisney)
The Little Mermaid (Dottie)

Page 3: 9
Walt Disney and the World's Fair (goofystitch)
Walt Disney Treasures: Totally 80s (slave2moonlight)
Walt Disney Treasures: Walt Disney Parks - Anaheim and Orlando and beyond (slave2moonlight)
The Black Cauldron (TheSequelofDisney)
Air Bud (Escapay)
Beauty and the Beast: Broadway Edition (bprovost27)
Saludos Amigos/The Three Caballerros (TheSequelofDisney)
101 Dalmatians (TheSequelofDisney)
The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad (Flanger-Hanger)

Page 4: 8
Peter Pan (Escapay) Version 1.0
Robin Hood (yamiiguy)
Peter Pan (Escapay) Version 2.0
Robin Hood (TheSequelofDisney)
The Aristocats (TheSequelofDisney)
The Great Mouse Detective (Flanger-Hanger)
The Rocketeer (Escapay) Version 3.0
Fantasia (yamiiguy)

Page 5: 13
Fantasia (TheSequelofDisney)
Fantasia 2000 (yamiiguy)
Chicken Little (Timon/Pumba fan)
The Watcher in the Woods (Escapay)
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (Josh)
The Mighty Ducks Trilogy (Escapay)
The Happiest Millionaire (Flanger-Hanger)
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (TheSequelofDisney)
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (DisneyFreak5282)
Song of the South (DisneyFreak5282)
Song of the South (Escapay)
The Rescuers (TheSequelofDisney)
The Rescuers Anthology (Simba3)

Page 6: 13
Pinocchio (yamiiguy)
Dumbo (yamiiguy)
The Aristocats (yamiiguy)
The Rescuers (yamiiguy)
The Rescuers Down Under (TheSequelofDisney)
The Black Cauldron (yamiiguy)
The Jungle Book (Josh)
Oliver & Company (TheSequelofDisney)
The Little Mermaid (TheSequelofDisney)
The Aladdin Trilogy (Escapay)
Pete's Dragon (Flanger-Hanger)
The Black Cauldron (TheSequelofDisney) Version 2.0
The Halloweentown Trilogy (Escapay)

Page 7: 4
The Lion King (yamiiguy)
The Lion King (TheSequelofDisney)
The Sword in the Stone (TheSequelofDisney)
Beauty and the Beast (Escapay)

Page 8: 7
*incomplete*Walt Disney's Animated Classics: The Legacy Series, Volume One - The Essentials - Milestones in Disney Animation (Escapay)
Pinocchio (Big Disney Fan)
The Little Mermaid Trilogy (yamiiguy)
Walt Disney Eras - The 1920s (yamiiguy)
Tarzan (Escapay)
The Black Cauldron (TheSequelofDisney) Version 3.0
Princess Mononoke (TheSequelofDisney)

Page 9: 5
Fantasia (TheSequelofDisney) Version 2.0
Hocus Pocus (TheSequelofDisney)
Walt Disney Treasures: UltimateDisney.com: The Ultimate Guide To Disney DVD (Timon/Pumbaa Fan)
*incomplete*Walt Disney's Animated Classics: The Legacy Series, Volume 2 - Heroes & Legends (Escapay)
Fantasia (DisneyFreak5282)

Page 10: 5
Walt Disney Treasures: The Ultimate Chronological Donald Duck (Big Disney Fan)
The Zenon Trilogy (Blissey02)
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (Big Disney Fan)
Walt Disney Treasures: A Tale of Two Canines - Goofy & Pluto (Big Disney Fan) Version 1.0
Fantasia (Escapay)

Page 11: 7
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (netty) Version 2.0
Home on the Range (ichabod)
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (TheSequelofDisney) Version 3.0
Walt Disney's Sing-Along Songs: The Complete Collection (DisneyFreak5282)
Walt Disney's Fab Four Collector's Set (Simba3)
Lilo & Stitch: Franchise Collection (Blissey02)
Walt Disney's Dog-Gone Dogs Movie Pack (DisneyFreak5282)

Page 12: 6
Walt Disney's Classic Collection: Dumbo (TheSequelofDisney)
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (TheSequelofDisney) Version 4.0
Walt Disney Legacy Collection: A Tale of Two Canines - Goofy & Pluto (Big Disney Fan)
Pocahontas (Escapay)
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (TheSequelofDisney) Blu-Ray
Peter Pan (Escapay) Version 3.0

Page 13: 4
Sleeping Beauty: 4-Disc 50th Anniversary Edition (TheSequelofDisney) Version 1.0
Sleeping Beauty: 6-Disc 50th Anniversary Edition (TheSequelofDisney) Version 2.0
Pinocchio Legacy Edition (Big Disney Fan) Version 2.0
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs Legacy Edition (Big Disney Fan) Version 2.0

Page 14: 5
Fantasia Legacy Edition (Big Disney Fan)
Something Wicked This Way Comes (2099net)
Dumbo Legacy Edition (Big Disney Fan)
Disney Classics Collection Wave One (yamiiguy)
Bambi Legacy Edition (Big Disney Fan)

Page 15: 3
Fab Five Box Set (Big Disney Fan)
Robin Hood: 6-Disc 35th Anniversary Edition (TheSequelofDisney)
Bambi Legacy Edition (Big Disney Fan) Version 2.0

By SequelofDisney: 30
The Hunchback of Notre Dame Version 1.0
The Hunchback of Notre Dame Version 2.0
Hercules
Pinocchio
Treasure Planet
The Black Cauldron Version 1.0
Saludos Amigos/The Three Caballerros
101 Dalmatians
Robin Hood
The Aristocats
Fantasia
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
The Rescuers
The Rescuers Down Under
Oliver & Company
The Little Mermaid
The Black Cauldron Version 2.0
The Lion King
The Sword in the Stone
The Black Cauldron Version 3.0
Princess Mononoke
Fantasia Version 2.0
Hocus Pocus
The Hunchback of Notre Dame Version 3.0
Dumbo
The Hunchback of Notre Dame Version 4.0
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
Sleeping Beauty: 4-Disc 50th Anniversary Edition Version 1.0
Sleeping Beauty: 6-Disc 50th Anniversary Edition Version 2.0
Robin Hood: 6-Disc 35th Anniversary Edition

By Escapay: 20
The Rocketeer Version 1.0
The Black Hole
The Rocketeer Version 2.0
Bedknobs and Broomsticks
Air Bud
Peter Pan Version 1.0
Peter Pan: Version 2.0
The Rocketeer Version 3.0
The Watcher in the Woods
The Mighty Ducks Trilogy
Song of the South
The Aladdin Trilogy
The Halloweentown Trilogy
Beauty and the Beast
Walt Disney's Animated Classics: The Legacy Series, Volume 1 - The Essentials - Milestones in Disney Animation
Tarzan
Walt Disney's Animated Classics: The Legacy Series, Volume 2 - Heroes & Legends
Fantasia
Pocahontas
Peter Pan Version 3.0

By yamiiguy: 12
Robin Hood
Fantasia
Fantasia 2000
Pinocchio
Dumbo
The Aristocats
The Rescuers
The Black Cauldron
The Lion King
The Little Mermaid Trilogy
Walt Disney Eras - The 1920s
Disney Classics Collection Wave One

By Big Disney Fan: 12
Pinocchio
Walt Disney Treasures: The Ultimate Chronological Donald Duck
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
Walt Disney Treasures: A Tale of Two Canines - Goofy & Pluto Version 1.0
Walt Disney Legacy Collection: A Tale of Two Canines - Goofy & Pluto Version 2.0
Pinocchio Legacy Edition Version 2.0
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs Legacy Edition Version 2.0
Fantasia Legacy Edition
Dumbo Legacy Edition
Bambi Legacy Edition
Fab Five Box Set
Bambi Legacy Edition Version 2.0

By DisneyFreak5282: 5
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
Song of the South
Fantasia
Walt Disney's Sing-Along Songs: The Complete Collection (DisneyFreak5282)
Walt Disney's Dog-Gone Dogs Movie Pack (DisneyFreak5282)

By Flanger-Hanger: 4
The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad
The Great Mouse Detective
The Happiest Millionaire
Pete's Dragon

By netty: 2
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Version 1.0
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Version 2.0

By slave2moonlight: 2
Walt Disney Treasures: Totally 80s
Walt Disney Treasures: Walt Disney Parks - Anaheim and Orlando and beyond

By Josh: 2
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
The Jungle Book

By LindaMYoung: 2
Scarecrow of Romney Marsh (Dr. Syn alias The Scarecrow)
Gallegher

By Timon/Pumba fan: 2
Chicken Little
Walt Disney Treasures: UltimateDisney.com: The Ultimate Guide To Disney DVD

By Simba3: 2
The Rescuers Anthology
Walt Disney's Fab Four Collector's Set

By Blissey02: 2
The Zenon Trilogy
Lilo & Stitch: Franchise Collection

By 271286: 1
Beauty and the Beast

By Kelvin: 1
Alice in Wonderland

By brownie: 1
Peter Pan

By Julian Carter: 1
Fantasia

By azul017: 1
The Little Mermaid

By Dottie: 1
The Little Mermaid

By goofystitch: 1
Walt Disney and the World's Fair

By bprovost27: 1
Beauty and the Beast: Broadway Edition

By ichabod: 1
Home on the Range

By 2099net: 1
Something Wicked This Way Comes
User avatar
Big Disney Fan
Platinum Edition
Posts: 3110
Joined: Sun Oct 29, 2006 11:28 pm
Location: Any Disney park you choose

Post by Big Disney Fan »

Here's a Legacy Edition of something I call Disney South of the Border!

Disc One: Saludos Amigos - Feature Film and Bonus Materials (Total running time: 53 minutes)
Technical Specs:
Digitally Remastered 1.33:1 Original Aspect Ratio
THX-Certified with Optimizer tests
5.1 Disney Enhanced Home Theater Mix (English)
5.1 Dolby Digital soundtrack (English, French, Spanish)
2.0 Original Mono Track
Subtitles (English, French, Spanish)
Closed-Captioned for the Hearing Impaired (English)
Full-Motion Interactive 16:9 Menus
Scene Selection with 18 Chapter Stops

Main Feature: (43 minutes)
- Saludos Amigos: The 1943 Disney Animated Classic with a new high-definition transfer utilizing the best film elements and pressed to DVD in the highest bitrate possible (and with the smoking scene unaltered!).

Backstage Disney:
- Animators' Audio Commentary: Moderated by Roy E. Disney, with pre-recorded comments from Leonard Maltin, John Canemaker, Frank Thomas, Ollie Johnston, Ward Kimball, Don Hahn and Jeff Kurtti
- Film Critics/Historians Audio Commentary: A second screen-specific audio commentary with Leonard Maltin and John Canemaker
- Isolated Music-and-Effects Track
- Text Commentary Track: Fact-filled commentary track all about the production of the film.
- Disney Time Capsule: 1943: A look at the year the film was released, talking about not only Disney but American culture in general.

Main Feature: (72 minutes)
- The Three Caballeros: The 1945 Disney Animated Classic with a new high-definition transfer utilizing the best film elements and pressed to DVD in the highest bitrate possible.

Backstage Disney:
- Animators' Audio Commentary: Moderated by Roy E. Disney, with pre-recorded comments from Leonard Maltin, John Canemaker, Frank Thomas, Ollie Johnston, Ward Kimball, Don Hahn, Jeff Kurtti and Tony Anselmo
- Film Critics/Historians Audio Commentary: A second screen-specific audio commentary with Leonard Maltin and John Canemaker
- Isolated Music-and-Effects Track
- Text Commentary Track: Fact-filled commentary track all about the production of the film.
- Disney Time Capsule: 1945: A look at the year the film was released, talking about not only Disney but American culture in general.

Disc Three: Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros - Bonus Materials
Technical Specs:
1.33:1 Academy Ratio - Original Aspect Ratio (Vintage Materials)
1.77:1 Anamorphic Widescreen - Original Aspect Ratio (New Materials)
5.1 Dolby Digital soundtrack (English)
Subtitles (English, French, Spanish)
Closed-Captioned for the Hearing Impaired (English)
Full-Motion Interactive 16:9 Menus

Main Feature:
- South of the Border With Disney: Exactly like the live-action sequences in Saludos Amigos the film, merely providing more thorough documentation of the Disney animators journey through the South American countries, and the societal and geographical items that inspired them.
- Donald Duck In Latin America: Why Donald is seen a lot in Latin America. Hosted by Tony Anselmo

Backstage Disney:
- Two Wars: A featurette on how the strike of '41 and then WWII had influenced Disney to create these two movies.
- Disney Legend: Clarence Nash: New featurette/tribute to Clarence Nash (voice of Donald Duck in both films)
- Latin American Customs: Featurette depicting the customs of Central and South America.
- Saludos Amigos Production Timeline
- The Three Caballeros Production Timeline
- The Three Caballeros: A Trip of a Different Type: A look at how and why The Three Caballeros is so surreal, it has been viewed in the 1960s as a prime example of psychidelia.
- Restoring Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros: New featurette detailing the restoration of the films from their original camera negatives, with composite restoration comparisons.
- True-Life Adventures: How the True-Life Adventures was partially based on these films.

Cartoon Shorts
- Pluto and the Armadillo
- The Pelican and the Snipe
- Contrary Condor

Educational Shorts
- The Winged Scourge
- The Grain That Built a Hemisphere
- Cleanliness Brings Health
- What Is Disease
- Planning For Good Eating

Saludos Amigos Still Galleries:
- Visual Development Gallery
- Layouts and Backgrounds Gallery
- Photo Gallery
--Live-Action Reference Filming
--Studio Production
--Voice Talent
- Character Design & Concept Art
--Donald Duck
--Goofy
--Pedro
--Jose Carioca
--Miscellaneous
--Minor Characters
--Posters and Production Stills
--Miscellaneous
- Character Model Sheets
--Donald Duck
--Goofy
--Pedro
--Jose Carioca
--Miscellaneous

The Three Caballeros Still Galleries:
- Visual Development Gallery
- Layouts and Backgrounds Gallery
- Photo Gallery
--Live-Action Reference Filming
--Studio Production
--Voice Talent
- Character Design & Concept Art
--Donald Duck
--Jose Carioca
--Panchito
--Pablo the Penguin
--Aracuan Bird
--The Gauchito
--The Flying Donkey
--Miscellaneous
--Minor Characters
--Posters and Production Stills
--Miscellaneous
- Character Model Sheets
--Donald Duck
--Jose Carioca
--Panchito
--Pablo the Penguin
--The Gauchito
--The Flying Donkey
--Miscellaneous

Disc Four: Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros - Bonus Materials
Technical Specs:
1.33:1 Academy Ratio - Original Aspect Ratio (Vintage Materials)
1.77:1 Anamorphic Widescreen - Original Aspect Ratio (New Materials)
5.1 Dolby Digital soundtrack (English)
Subtitles (English, French, Spanish)
Closed-Captioned for the Hearing Impaired (English)
Full-Motion Interactive 16:9 Menus

Main Features:
- Inside the Disney Archives
- The Walt Disney Comedy and Magic Revue: 1985 video
- Gran Fiesta Tour Starring the Three Cabelleros : A virtual ride-thru of the new ride at Epcot's Mexico pavilion

Cartoons Shorts:
- The Gallopin' Gaucho (1928)
- El Terrible Toreador (1929)
- The Cactus Kid (1930)
- Don Donald (1937)
- Clown of the Jungle (1947)
- Pueblo Pluto (1949)
- For Whom the Bulls Toil (1953)

Publicity Galleries
- Trailer Gallery
--Original Theatrical Release of Saludos Amigos (1943)
--Original Theatrical Release of The Three Caballeros (1945)
--Theatrical Re-release of Saludos Amigos (1949)
--Theatrical Re-release of The Three Caballeros (1977)
--Home Video of The Three Caballeros (1982)
--Home Video of The Three Caballeros (1988)
--Home Video of The Three Caballeros (1995)
- Original Press Releases and Pressbooks
- Promotional Poster Gallery
--Domestic
--International
--Re-release
--Lobby Cards
--One-Sheets
--Half-Sheets
--Virtual Pressbook

PHYSICAL DESIGN:
- Full-Color Embossed Silver Metallic Tin Case that holds the DVDs. Similar design to Walt Disney Treasures, with the small iconic image being similar to original theatrical poster.
- Full-Color Four-Tray Spinal Digistak with pocket for booklet
- 16-page collectible booklet with Production Notes, Cast/Crew Bios, Scene Listing, and Bonus Materials Listing - Standard Black Amaray Case
- Full-Color Character Artwork (NOT transparent):
--DISC 1: Donald Duck
--DISC 2: The Three Caballeros
--DISC 3: Goofy and Pedro
--DISC 4: The Gauchito and Pablo the Penguin
- 18 Full Size Lobby Cards and Character Design Sheets
- Original Senitype Film Cel Reproductions
- Disney SOTB: Companion: Hardcover Collector's Book with rare photos, essays, interviews, and more
- Disney SOTB: Legacy Series Soundtrack: CD Soundtrack containing the original score and songs from the film, as well as additional demo reels, unused/alternate score, audio outtakes, and radio spots/interviews.
- Dual-Disc Digipak for CD with pocket for booklet.
- 16-page booklet with liner notes and lyrics.

What do you think, guys? And if you're reading this, TheSequelofDisney, THIS is original stuff that I created from my own mind!
8)
yamiiguy
Anniversary Edition
Posts: 1685
Joined: Mon Oct 09, 2006 12:52 pm
Location: United Kingdom

Post by yamiiguy »

Big Disney Fan wrote:
TheSequelofDisney wrote: I don't know, somewhere else. It's just sad that you can't make up something on your own. I already gave an example on how easy it is so there isn't any room for you to complain. I don't want you coming in here and copying everything that someone else did. In the US, that's ILLEGAL if you don't cite it. So just don't do it.

I made a new DVD of Robin Hood. A DVD made up completely from my brain without taking any other elements from anyone else except for myself and a little (like 5%) of Al's
Well, look, don't take this the wrong way or anything, but just because it's easy for you to come up with stuff for DVDs on your own, it doesn't mean it's easy for everybody. Some people can't always conjure up stuff of their very own, you know. I'm sorry, but not everyone has the supreme creativity that you have. Besides, that Robin Hood DVD of yours has stuff not owned by Disney! Your RH DVD proves you can only go so far! Did you know that?! Robin Hood Daffy is from Warner Bros., not DISNEY!!!! You can't use bonus features of stuff for Disney movies if they're not FROM Disney. When doing a Disney DVD, use only stuff related to Disney, not anything else, that's my rule.

Anyway, I'm considering redoing Bambi and Fantasia, but I can't really come up with stuff on my own. Maybe you could come up with some things? Provided those bonus things come ONLY from Disney and nowhere else!
Don't take this the wrong way either but it is quite easy for example Fantasia is about music so you could call the Making Of: Music to your Ears - The Making of Fantasia
User avatar
Big Disney Fan
Platinum Edition
Posts: 3110
Joined: Sun Oct 29, 2006 11:28 pm
Location: Any Disney park you choose

Post by Big Disney Fan »

yamiiguy wrote:Don't take this the wrong way either but it is quite easy for example Fantasia is about music so you could call the Making Of: Music to your Ears - The Making of Fantasia
Well, it's not that simple. Obviously, I know of some things I can do myself (i.e., making-of, etc.); it's some of the more subtle bonuses that I can't truly think up and that's what I'm trying to do here. Maybe YOU, yamiiguy, can give me some ideas... unlike other posters here I won't mention.

Oh, by the way, what happened to your Disney Classics Collection or whatever it was?
User avatar
Escapay
Ultimate Collector's Edition
Posts: 12562
Joined: Tue Jan 27, 2004 5:02 pm
Location: Somewhere in Time and Space
Contact:

Post by Escapay »

I think I've laid quiet from this thread long enough, and will post in here again. However, given the history that's happened with this thread, if I even see a hint of copy/pasting with a few quick title changes, I'll pull out once more.

What does that mean, exactly? Well, quite simply, I have no control over who gets to use phrases like THX-Certified, "Visual Development Gallery", or "Disney Time Capsule" . So stuff like that is practically universal.

BUT

There are several descriptions and types of featurettes that were once unique to my sets, and I do *not* want to see them copied simply to pad out someone else's set, or to save someone else the trouble of writing something new entirely. Stuff like this, I'd rather not see reproduced elsewhere anymore, either in full or slightly edited:
In Previous Ultimate Editions, I and others wrote:Main Feature: (X minutes)
-(Title) - The 19## Disney Animated Classic with a new high-definition transfer utilizing the best film elements and pressed to DVD in the highest bitrate possible.
There are a lot more ways to say how a transfer is a newly restored and remastered one, and how it's being presented with the best quality possible for DVD. I'd like to think this was my way of saying it, and prefer if people respected that and wrote something of their own. I've actually changed mine since this old version, to this, and still would like if people would not simply copy/paste it for theirs:

-(Title) - The 19## Disney Animated Classic with a newly restored high-definition transfer utilizing the best film elements and preserving the original colors and look of the film, pressed to DVD in the highest bitrate possible.
In Previous Ultimate Editions, I and others wrote:Main Feature: (X minutes)
-Title: The Animated Experience - a unique way to view the entire original theatrical version of the film, as new and vintage interviews provide a running commentary of the animation process and how the film was made, interspersed with footage of various storyboards and rough animation as well as live-action reference footage, behind the scenes material, and the final animated film.
-Angle 1: Theatrical Film with Commentary
-Angle 2: Storyboards with Commentary
-Angle 3: Rough and Clean-Up Animation with Commentary
-Angle 4: Live-Action Reference and Behind the Scenes Footage with Commentary
-Angle 5: Weaving Clips of All Four, with Video Footage of Animators (Similar to the Narnia 4-disc "Visualizing...: The Complete Production Experience").
I like the idea, and admit that I did borrow it from Narnia and Bambi, so I can't claim exclusive ownership of it. However, I did write out my own description as well as the order of angles, and would prefer if others write out their own description instead of copying mine.

Since then, though, I've removed the Angles aspect, and honestly don't care to use it again beyond other featurettes (which I'll get to later). So the use of a full feature film with multi-angles is up for whoever wants it.
In Previous Ultimate Editions, I and others wrote:Packaging and Disc Art:
-Full-Color Embossed Silver Metallic Tin Case that holds the DVDs. Similar design to Walt Disney Treasures, with the small iconic image being similar to original theatrical poster.
-Full-Color #-Tray Spinal Digistak with pocket for booklets
-16-page collectible booklet with Production Notes, Scene Listings, and Bonus Materials Listings
-Full-Color Character Artwork (NOT transparent)
*Disc # - artwork
*Disc # - artwork
*Disc # - artwork, etc.
-18 Full Size Lobby Cards and Character Design Sheets
-Original Senitype Film Cel Reproductions
-(Title): Companion - Hardcover Collector's Book with rare photos, essays, interviews, and more
-(Title): Legacy Series Soundtrack - (number)-CD Soundtrack containing the original soundtrack as well as unused songs and radio spots/interviews
-Dual-Disc Digipak for CD with pocket for bookle.
-16-page booklet with liner notes and lyrics.
Once again, there is more than one way to describe packaging. And there probably should be a quick lesson as to the differences between amaray cases, snappers, digipaks, digistaks, etc.

Amaray - the normal case everyone uses.
Snapper - the cardboard and plastic case WB used on single-disc titles from 1997 to 2003/2004.
Digipak - A plastic tray, usually holding one or two discs (single-disc/dual-disc), attached to a piece of cardboard that wraps around it. WB and 20th Century Fox used them for their two-disc sets, and many TV shows are packaged in this way as well.
Digistak - the plastic trays from a digipak are bound on one side, making it like a book, with the cardboard still as a wrap around. See Ultimate Superman Collection or One Tree Hill season sets for reference.

So...please, when describing the packaging, learn to do it right. And make it unique to your sets, and again, not just a simple copy/paste of mine without knowing what it is.

As for the banner title on DVDs and CDs...well, both Disney and Universal use the "Legacy" banner, so I have no control over that. But once again, it boils down to descriptions. There's more than one way to describe something. Not everything needs to be called a "Legacy Edition" anyway. Anniversaries always work, and there's other words to describe a multi-disc set. I was the first to use "Legacy Edition" in this thread, and would have preferred if others simply made their own title instead of associating their stuff with mine.

The "Companion" books are similar to the ones in Platinum Gift Sets, though again, it's another "you can write your own descriptions, I'd appreciate if mine wasn't being used all the time". Someone could use "(Title): The Insider's Guide" or even "(Title): The Complete Scrapbook" and it'd be the same thing.

What bothered me most about a certain Fantasia set was that it simply copy/pasted mine, did a bit of editing to remove the color tabs I made, changed a couple words around for some of my features, and simply added a few new featurettes. For example, I used the phrase "Music is Better than Words" for a featurette, as it was a song from the film It's Always Fair Weather, and I felt it captured the essence of the film nicely, especially concerning what the featurette was about. Having it changed simply to "Music Speaks Louder than Words" was such a slap in the face to me and the original song title, that it was one of the big reasons I left.

I liked my design of the Segment Galleries, and enjoyed how each segment had their own set of galleries, as that's what a segment gallery is. So to see it simply copy/pasted and removing the names of segments (instead having them under one banner) made me a bit mad. Once again, I stress that things like "Still Gallery" and "Visual Development", etc. can't be said any other way, the presentation of the segments could be. Having it simply copied just meant someone was trying to take credit for how I wrote something myself.

As to the remark of "Did he listen to reason? NO!". All I can do is :roll:

I simply said someone could make their own set for Fantasia if they wish. After all, just because I make a set doesn't mean someone else shouldn't. But that did not mean I was allowing them to copy the majority of my article and change a few things to call it their own. There's no questioning about "listening to reason" here. It was simply me saying, "Well, you can make your own, I won't stop you". It was not an invitation to take mine and call it theirs. Perhaps they should have listened to reason and thought, "Wait...he'll recognize this is his...maybe I don't need to do a Fantasia set now, I'll do one later when I can come up with things for myself."

The excuse of "it's hard for me to think these things up" is ridiculous. If you can't think of it, put it on the backburner, and come back to it later. No one should ever resort to copying someone else's work because they're in a rush to present an article on a thread not that many people read anyway.

All in all, I've put it behind me now. It's the internet, ownership issues are always a gray area. But on a messageboard like this, where it's obvious who had ideas first and who copied them later, it's inexcusable.

Anyways, I've said enough in this post, so the next one will be my fourth-time revised Legacy Edition for Peter Pan.

And I will say this once, and only once:

I hope I will not regret returning to this thread later on and that some people have learned their lesson. I hope that any future posts after mine will not contain anything remotely similar to descriptions and names for bonus features, packaging, banner names, etc. From now on, if any of my new descriptions or featurettes are copied and slightly modified for someone else's set, I will pull out once again, and simply ignore that user's messages on the boards. It's not my thread, but I'll ask Sequel to once again ask for it to be closed, to further prevent more acts of plagiarism.

Escapay
WIST #60:
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion? :p

WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
User avatar
Escapay
Ultimate Collector's Edition
Posts: 12562
Joined: Tue Jan 27, 2004 5:02 pm
Location: Somewhere in Time and Space
Contact:

Post by Escapay »

2099net wrote:I think some people here get a little carried away with just what is possible/available for a DVD release. Anyhow, for Escapay, here's my latest effort:

Something Wicked This Way Comes Special Edition

Picture: anamorphic widescreen 1.66:1 enhanced for Widescreen TVs
Soundtrack: English 2.0, English 5.1, Spanish 5.1, French 2.0

Supplements
(all suppments 1.78:1 anamorphic widescreen, enhanced for Widescreen TVs)

Director's Commentary Scene specific commentary from director Jack Clayton.

The Making of 'Something Wicked This Way Comes' Original 1983 TV special. (This is presented in its original 1.33:1 aspect ratio)

The Bradbury Chronicles An interview with author Ray Bradbury, where he talks about writing Something Wicked This Way Comes and the process of adapting it to a Disney film, as well as a wider discussion about his life and works.

An American Tradition Looks at the structure, style and concepts of Something Wicked This Way Comes, comparing it to American authors such as Edgar Allan Poe, H P Lovecraft, Robert Bloch and others.

Embracing The Dark Actor Jonathan Pryce discusses how he approached playing the role of principle villain "Mr Dark"

Wicked Deeds Director Jack Clayton discusses directing Something Wicked This Way Comes, discussing if he felt the horrific content of the movie harmed or enhanced the "Disney" brand name, if he felt he went too far with the scares, or even if he felt he could go even further! Film historians give their thoughts and perspectives on the debate.

Something Different This Way Comes Discussing how SomethingWicked This Way Comes inspired the decision to create Touchstone Pictures – a subsidiary of Walt Disney Pictures to cater for more adult content.
I finally can comment on this now that I've returned to the thread.

I'm really liking this SE, netty. Do you know how long the TV special ran?

Also...no trailers? :( :cry: I'm guessing you're adding the realistic part of the set by being like Disney and not including the trailer anymore. :P

Escapay
(who lied about his next post being yet another Peter Pan: Legacy Edition, because he'd rather comment on netty's kickassness at doing justice to an underrated Disney film)
WIST #60:
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion? :p

WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
User avatar
Big Disney Fan
Platinum Edition
Posts: 3110
Joined: Sun Oct 29, 2006 11:28 pm
Location: Any Disney park you choose

Post by Big Disney Fan »

Hi, Escapay. You came back, huh? Welcome back. I thought I'd seen the last of you. I'm sorry for copying your Fantasia set. Honest I am. It's just that your set was such that it would be difficult to top. But anyway, I'm sorry and I didn't mean to do you wrong by copying your set. Can you ever forgive me? Friends?
User avatar
Escapay
Ultimate Collector's Edition
Posts: 12562
Joined: Tue Jan 27, 2004 5:02 pm
Location: Somewhere in Time and Space
Contact:

Post by Escapay »

Big Disney Fan wrote:Can you ever forgive me? Friends?
Water under the bridge, BDF. Water under the bridge.

Escapay
WIST #60:
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion? :p

WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
User avatar
Big Disney Fan
Platinum Edition
Posts: 3110
Joined: Sun Oct 29, 2006 11:28 pm
Location: Any Disney park you choose

Post by Big Disney Fan »

Escapay wrote:
Big Disney Fan wrote:Can you ever forgive me? Friends?
Water under the bridge, BDF. Water under the bridge.

Escapay
And what does that mean? Also, can you tell where I can go to study fancy tactics to creating fancy DVDs like you did so I won't make the same mistake twice? Because I don't want you to leave again.
User avatar
Escapay
Ultimate Collector's Edition
Posts: 12562
Joined: Tue Jan 27, 2004 5:02 pm
Location: Somewhere in Time and Space
Contact:

Post by Escapay »

Big Disney Fan wrote:
Escapay wrote: Water under the bridge, BDF. Water under the bridge.

Escapay
And what does that mean?
:lol: I've gotta stop using old phrases.

Basically it means whatever troubles there were between us are long gone and passing (like water under a bridge, hence the phrase), and doesn't need to be dwelled upon anymore.
BDF wrote:Where I can go to study fancy tactics to creating fancy DVDs?
It's not so much studying fancy tactics as it is a "what would I like to see in a DVD release and how would I organize it?" I like to organize a lot of things (in real life and on my laptop), so if it's just a list that has no

I simply make a template of each disc, and try and follow it with relevant pieces that would work.

For example, let's take the template for the old Vault Disney DVDs. Each of titles in the line followed the same template, though most often they varied a bit in the Production Archives, offering a type of featurette or option in one DVD that's not available in another...

Disc One:
-The Movie
-Commentary
-Animated Short - aired with movie in theatres

Disc Two:

The Vault: Left Side
-Main Documentary
-"Conversations With" featurette
-Montage Featurette

The Vault: Right Side
-Lost Treasures featurette
-Disney Studio Album
-Production Archives

Production Archives: Part One (Left)
-Production Stills
-Production Art
-Publishing/Documents
-Cast/Crew Biographies
-Advertising
-Screenplay Excerpt

Production Archives: Part Two (Center)
-Production Gallery Montage
-Trailers and TV Spots
-Disneyland Episodes (and in some cases, TV Introductions)
-Vintage News Segments
-Vintage and New Featurettes
-Storyboard to Scene Comparisons
-Film Excerpts
-Deleted Scenes
-Film Trims

Production Archives: Part Three (Right)
-Radio Spots
-Sound Studio (Audio Mixing Featurettes)
--Story Album Read-Along
-Songs from the Movie
-ADR Tracks

So if I wanted to make a Vault Disney release for a film that didn't get one (like, say Song of the South), then I'd simply use the above as a template and organize it in my article.

The templates I use for my Legacy Series titles basically is broken down into several sections:
-The Movie
-The Animated Experience
-Backstage Disney - with subsections like Deleted Materials, Music Gallery, Art Through Animation, and Publicity Department
-(Film Title) in the Parks - focuses on park-specific extras
-Vault Disney Collection: Vintage Memories - a new section I've been working on, focusing specifically on older materials
-Beyond Backstage: The Production Archives - another new section I've been working on
-(Film Title) In Progress: Behind the Scenes Archives - yet another new section I've been working on
-DVD-ROM Exclusive: The (Film Title) Papers - even more from the "another new section" series...

Then within each section it's broken up into stuff like documentaries, featurettes, still galleries, etc.

I try not to include games and activities, mainly because I doubt a family would buy a ten-disc set for The Black Cauldron so their kids can play Quest for the Black Cauldron set-top game. Also, music videos are usually included mainly as promotional and period pieces, though I only really include it if it's a version I like. So if I ever get around to making a Legacy Series edition of The Lion King, it will *not* include Disney Channel Circle of Stars.

Escapay
WIST #60:
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion? :p

WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
User avatar
Big Disney Fan
Platinum Edition
Posts: 3110
Joined: Sun Oct 29, 2006 11:28 pm
Location: Any Disney park you choose

Post by Big Disney Fan »

Okay, thanks. I hope to see more sets from you sometime, like maybe for Black Cauldron. But you didn't explain alternate methods to your multi-angle versions of the film or to your covers. Well, you did, but not too clearly.
User avatar
Escapay
Ultimate Collector's Edition
Posts: 12562
Joined: Tue Jan 27, 2004 5:02 pm
Location: Somewhere in Time and Space
Contact:

Post by Escapay »

Big Disney Fan wrote:But you didn't explain alternate methods to your multi-angle versions of the film or to your covers. Well, you did, but not too clearly.
For the multi-angle versions, I basically don't use them anymore when it concerns the Animated Experience, as I've changed that to simply be the same thing as the Narnia and Bambi ones (interweaving pictures). So anyone can pretty much use an "Enhanced Multi-Angle" version of the film (storyboards/rough animation/live-action reference/theatrical film), but I don't bother with it anymore, as my (Film Title) in Progress: Behind the Scenes Archives uses the idea of it differently, and in different featurettes. The multi-angle option for the entire film is basically the same as the Studio Ghibli films (which offer the storyboards on a separate disc, or if the movie's distributed by another studio, multi-angle), and as the short featurettes like Production Progression and Storyboard-to-Film comparisons.

For the covers, basically just the phrase "Full-Color Embossed Silver Metallic Tin Case that holds the DVDs. Similar design to Walt Disney Treasures, with the small iconic image being similar to original theatrical poster." is just something that I got tired of seeing repeated ad nauseum. I mean, the idea itself (DVD cover resembling theatrical poster) has been used in real DVDs, but doesn't always have to be repeated. Heck, I don't even use that anymore (the "similar design to..." line), as I've changed it for later Legacy Series sets I'm doing.

The Black Cauldron's been finished for awhile, in terms of what features I want in it, but I'm unsure if I'd re-arrange it to better fit the templates I've used for other sets. So far that one, Fantasia, and Beauty and the Beast use a different template than other titles I did, because they're much larger sets and cover more information.

Escapay
WIST #60:
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion? :p

WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
User avatar
Big Disney Fan
Platinum Edition
Posts: 3110
Joined: Sun Oct 29, 2006 11:28 pm
Location: Any Disney park you choose

Post by Big Disney Fan »

Alright, thanks for clearing the air. From now on, I will use something like, say, "(Name of movie): A Work In Progress With the Disney Archives". That has a good ring to it. Got any other movies in the pipeline?
User avatar
Escapay
Ultimate Collector's Edition
Posts: 12562
Joined: Tue Jan 27, 2004 5:02 pm
Location: Somewhere in Time and Space
Contact:

Post by Escapay »

BDF wrote:From now on, I will use something like, say, "(Name of movie): A Work In Progress With the Disney Archives". That has a good ring to it.
Sounds great!
BDF wrote:Got any other movies in the pipeline?
Working on The Fox and the Hound and Chicken Little, which is replacing The Emperor's New Groove in my Volume One: The Essentials - Milestones of Disney Animation boxset. Then I'd actually and finally finish the first boxset for my Walt Disney's Animated Classics: The Legacy Series. :lol:

Escapay
WIST #60:
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion? :p

WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
TheSequelOfDisney
Signature Collection
Posts: 5263
Joined: Wed Nov 09, 2005 3:30 pm
Location: Ohio, United States of America

Post by TheSequelOfDisney »

Yippe your back! :D

Now a "Treasure Planet" update:

Treasure Planet: 5-Disc Collector's Edition

Image

Disc One: Treasure Planet - Theatrical Edition (95 minutes)

Technical Specifications: (May Only Apply To Feature Film)
1.66:1 Anamorphic Widescreen - Theatrical Aspect Ratio
THX-Certified with Optimizer tests
6.1 Dolby Digital DTS-ES (English)
5.1 Dolby Digital EX Disney Enhanced Home Theater Mix (English)
5.1 Dolby Digital (English, French, Spanish, English Commentary)
Subtitles (English, French, Spanish, English Commentary)
Closed-Captioning for the Deaf and Heard of Hearing (English)
Full-Motion Interactive 16:9 Menus
20 Chapter Stops (Feature Film)

Feature Film: (95 minutes)
-Treasure Planet - Presented in the best quality imaginable, contains a brand new digital trasnfer and sound to insure the best viewing experience.

Backstage Disney:

Audio Commentaries:
-Animator's Commentary - Glen Keane, John Ripa, Ken Duncan, John Pomeroy
-Director Commentary - John Musker, Ron Clements
-Voice Actor Commentary - Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Brian Murray, David Hyde Pierce, Martin Short, Emma Thompson, Laurie Metcalf

Stories of Interest:
-Visual Commentary - Roy Conli, John Musker, Ron Clements and others

Music & More: (8 minutes)
-Isolated Music Track - Presented in 5.1 Dolby Digital EX
-Isolated Effects Track - Presented in 5.1 Dolby Digital EX
-Multi-Language Reel - "I'm Still Here"
-"I'm Still Here" Music Video - Performed by John Rzeznik
-Doppler's Discoveries: "Treasure Planet" Trivia Track

Disc Two: Treasure Planet - The Animated Multi-Angle Experience Edition (95 minutes)

Technical Specifications: (May Only Apply To Feature Film)
1.66:1 Anamorphic Widescreen - Theatrical Aspect Ratio
THX-Certified with Optimizer tests
6.1 Dolby Digital DTS-ES (English)
5.1 Dolby Digital EX Disney Enhanced Home Theater Mix (English)
5.1 Dolby Digital (English, French, Spanish)
Subtitles (English, French, Spanish)
Closed-Captioning for the Deaf and Heard of Hearing (English)
Full-Motion Interactive 16:9 Menus
20 Chapter Stops (Main Feature)

Main Feature: (95 minutes)
-Treasure Planet - The Animated Experience Edition (similiar to the "Visualizing The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe")
-Enhanced Multi-Angle Feature - Alternate throughout the film between storyboards, CGI animation, rough animation, clean-up animation, and the actual film

Disc Three: Treasure Planet Bonus Materials Disc One (Complete Runtime: 197 minutes)

Technical Specifications:
1.33:1 Fullscreen - Original Aspect Ratio (Vintage Material)
1.78:1 Anamorphic Wide Screen - (New Material)
5.1 Dolby Digital (English)
Subtitles (English, French, Spanish)
Closed-Captioning for the Deaf and Heard of Hearing (English)
Full-Motion Interactive 16:9 Menus
11 Chapter Stops (Main Feature)

Main Feature: 90 minutes
-Unlocking the Treasure: The Making Of Treasure Planet - All new documentary detailing the production of "Treasure Planet"

Stories of Interest: (100 minutes)
-A CG World - 35-minute featurette detailing the CG animation found throughout the film
-"Treasure Island" - "Treasure Planet" Comparison - 25-minute featurette comparing Walt Disney's "Treasure Island" with Walt Disney Pictures "Treasure Planet". With Commentary by John Musker and Ron Clements
-Pirates of the Past - 25-minute featurette discussing the many pirates that came before "Treasure Planet"
-Pirates of the Future - New 10-minute featurette discussing the pirates that have been discovered after "Treasure Planet"

Deleted Characters: (12 minutes)
-Blind Pew: (4 minutes)
-Pew's Original Purpose
-Blind Pew Gallery
-Ethan (4 minutes)
-Ethan's Original Purpose
-Ethan Gallery
-Original Scroop (4 minutes)
-Original Scroop
-Scroop's Redesign
-Original Scroop Gallery
-Other Misc. Pirates
-Other Misc. Characters

Disc Four: Treasure Planet Bonus Materials Disc Two (Complete Runtime: 200 minutes)

Technical Specifications:
1.33:1 Fullscreen - Original Aspect Ratio (Vintage Material)
1.78:1 Anamorphic Wide Screen - (New Material)
5.1 Dolby Digital (English)
Subtitles (English, French, Spanish)
Closed-Captioning for the Deaf and Heard of Hearing (English)
Full-Motion Interactive 16:9 Menus
6 Chapter Stops (Main Feature)

Main Feature: 70 minutes
-A Galactic Journey: Chronicles of the Directors - All new documentary detailing the journey of John Musker and Ron Clements throughout their Disney history

Stories of Interest: (95 minutes)
-Designing the Planet - 40-minute featurette discussing/demonstrating the many different aspects that came into the creating of "Treasure Planet"
-Creating the Universe - 25-minute featurette discussing/demonstrating the creation of the "Treasure Planet"ian world
-Touring the RLS Legacy - 15-minute virtual tour of the RLS Legacy with optional commentary by John Musker and Ron Clements
-Touring Spaceport Crescentia - 15-minute virtual tour of Spaceport Crescentia with optional commentary by John Musker and Ron Clements

Original Song/Score Demos: (35 minutes)
-"I'm Still Here (Jim's Theme)"
-"Always Know Where You Are"
-"12 Years Later"
-"To The Spaceport"
-"Rooftop"
-"Billy Bones"
-"The Map"
-"Silver"
-"The Launch"
-"Silver Comforts Jim"
-"Jim Chases Morph"
-"Ben"
-"Silver Bargains"
-"The Back Door"
-"The Portal"
-"Jim Saves the Crew"
-"Silver Leaves"

Disc Five: Treasure Planet Bonus Materials Disc Three (Complete Runtime: 196 minutes)

Technical Specifications:
1.33:1 Fullscreen - Original Aspect Ratio (Vintage Material)
1.78:1 Anamorphic Wide Screen - (New Material)
5.1 Dolby Digital (English)
Subtitles (English, French, Spanish)
Closed-Captioning for the Deaf and Heard of Hearing (English)
Full-Motion Interactive 16:9 Menus
8 Chapter Stops (Main Feature)

Main Feature: 50 minutes
-Characters of Interest - All new documentary detailing the characters of "Treasure Planet" including new and old interviews from historians, critics, directors, voice actors, and Disney animators and artists

Stories of Interest: (90 minutes)
-The Journey of "Treasure Planet" - New 35-minute featurette detailing the dream of "Treasure Planet" ever since Musker and Clements brought up the idea in mid-to-late '80s
-Remembering the Magic: With Glen Keane - New 30-minute interview with Glen Keane about his memories working on the film
-The Brandywine School - 25-minute featurette detailing the art of the Brandywine School and how it relates in the film
-An IMAX Exhibition - 15-minute featurette discussing the process for creating the first Disney Animated Classic made for both regular and IMAX theaters

"Treasure Planet" Art Gallery: (20 minutes)

-Treasure Planet Art Review - 20-minute montage of various stills from the galleries with commentary by John Musker and Ron Clements

-Visual Galleries: (with optional Director Commentary) (~666 Stills)
-2-D Background Paintings (25 Stills)
-CGI Models (22 Stills)
-Character Galleries: (316 Stills)
-B.E.N. (20 Stills)
-Billy Bones (6 Stills)
-Blind Pew (4 Stills)
-Captain Amelia (24 Stills)
-Dr. Delbert Doppler (10 Stills)
-Flint (3 Stills)
-Hands (4 Stills)
-Jim (12 Stills)
-Morph (18 Stills)
-Mr. Arrow (7 Stills)
-Pirates (~60 Stills)
-Sarah Hawkins (5 Stills)
-Scroop (16 Stills)
-Silver (37 Stills)
-Spaceport Crescentia (~90 Stills)
-Color Keys (144 Stills)
-Moments (50 Stills)
-Painted CGI Backgrounds (10 Stills)
-Paintings (90 Stills)
-Story Art (28 Stills)
-Visual Development (128 Stills)

Deleted Scenes: (12 minutes)
-Alternate Ending: Rebuilding the Benbow Inn
-Jim Meets Ethan
-Original Jim Hawkins and Billy Bones Meeting
-Original Prolouge: Adult Jim
-Original Scroop Chasing Jim

Release: (4 minutes)
-Teaser Trailer
-Theatrical Trailer
-Posters (2 Posters)

"Treasure Planet" Cast and Crew Biographies
-Directors/Writers/Producers: John Musker and Ron Clements (18 Pages)
-Novelist: Rober Louis Stevenson (8 Pages)
-Writers: Ted Elliot and Terry Rossio (10 Pages)
-Actors: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Brian Murray, and David Hyde Pierce (20 Pages)
-Actors: Martin Short, Emma Thompson, and Laurie Metcalf (16 Pages)
-Supervising Animators: Glen Keane, John Ripa, Ken Duncan, and John Pomeroy (35 Pages)
-Musical Compisitioner: James Newton Howard (6 Pages)

Packaging, Disc Art, and Additional Special Features:
-Embossed Silver Metallic Tin Case that holds the digipak and additional materials
-Fold-Out Full-Color Five-Tray Dual-Disc Digipak for DVDs with pocket for booklets
-35-page booklet with Production Notes, Cast/Crew Bios, Disc Breakdowns, Scene Listings, and Bonus Materials Listing

-Full-Color Character Artwork on Discs:
*Disc 1: Jim Hawkins and the RLS Legacy
*Disc 2: John Silver and Morph
*Disc 3: Sarah Hawkins and Dr. Doppler
*Disc 4: Captain Amelia and Mr. Arrow
*Disc 5: Treasure Planet

-Film Cels - 3 Original Senitype Reproductions
-Character Design Sheets - 12 full-size reproductions
-Character Sketches - 9 reproductions
The Divulgations of One Desmond Leica: http://desmondleica.wordpress.com/
User avatar
Escapay
Ultimate Collector's Edition
Posts: 12562
Joined: Tue Jan 27, 2004 5:02 pm
Location: Somewhere in Time and Space
Contact:

Post by Escapay »

What better way to follow up a pirate movie than another pirate movie? At long last, I feel I've finally reached the point of too much of a good thing, with this multi-disc set for Peter Pan. So, here's Version 4.0 (followed in a month by Version 5.0, I'm sure...)

<center>Peter Pan: Six-Disc Legacy Edition

Image</center>

Disc One: Peter Pan - Feature Film and Bonus Materials (Complete Runtime: 91 Minutes)

Technical Specs:
Digitally Restored and Remastered 1.37:1 Original Academy Ratio
THX-Certified with Optimizer tests
5.1 DTS (English)
5.1 Disney Enhanced Home Theatre Mix (English)
5.1 Dolby Digital EX (English, French, Spanish, Isolated Score)
2.0 Dolby Surround (English Commentaries)
1.0 Original Mono (English, Isolated Score)
Subtitles (English, French, Spanish, Commentaries, Sing-Along Track)
Closed-Captioned for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing (English)
Full-Motion Interactive 16:9 Menus
31 Chapter Stops

Main Feature: (77 minutes)
-Peter Pan - The 1953 Disney Animated Classic with a newly restored high-definition transfer utilizing the best film elements and preserving the original colors and look of the film, pressed to DVD in the highest bitrate possible.

Backstage Disney:
-Audio Commentary (ported over) - Moderated by Roy Disney with Archival Contributions from Producer Walt Disney, Animators Frank Thomas, Ollie Johnston, Marc Davis, Ward Kimball, and Joe Grant, Film Historians Leonard Maltin, John Canemaker and Jeff Kurtti, Live-Action Model Margaret Kerry, and Voice Actress Kathryn Beaumont
-Audio Commentary (new) - screen-specific running commentary hosted by John Canemaker, with Kathryn Beaumont, Margaret Kerry, and Paul Collins

-Alternate Audio Track: Isolated Score - complete score of the film, in both 5.1 Dolby Digital EX and 1.0 Original Mono

-Text Commentary Track: Pan's Hidden Treasures - a fun and fact-filled commentary track all about the production of the film.
-Text Commentary Track: The Art of Animating Flight - a technical commentary track about specific animation aspects in the film.

-Disney Song Selection & Sing-Along Track - A sub-menu allows you to go straight to the songs, or have the option of playing the film with a special highlighting sing-along subtitle track. (14 minutes, 7 songs)
--"The Second Star to the Right" (2 minutes)
--"You Can Fly! You Can Fly! You Can Fly!" (4 minutes)
--"A Pirate's Life" (1 minute)
--"Following the Leader" (2 minutes)
--"What Makes the Red Man Red?" (2 minutes)
--"Your Mother and Mine" (2 minutes)
--"The Elegant Captain Hook" (1 minute)

Disc Two: Peter Pan - The Animated Experience and Bonus Materials (Complete Runtime: 197 minutes)

Technical Specs:
1.37:1 Academy Ratio - Original Aspect Ratio (Vintage Materials)
1.77:1 Anamorphic Widescreen - Original Aspect Ratio (New Materials)
THX-Certified with Optimizer tests
5.1 Dolby Digital (English - The Complete Animated Experience)
2.0 Dolby Surround (English - Bonus Materials)
Subtitles (English, French, Spanish)
Closed-Captioned for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing (English)
Full-Motion Interactive 16:9 Menus
31 Chapter Stops

Main Feature: (77 minutes)
-Peter Pan: The Animated Experience - a unique way to view the film, as a series of new and vintage interviews by animators, voice actors, historians, etc. provide a running analysis of the animation process and how the film was made. These interviews are continually interweaving with various footage of storyboards and rough animation as well as live-action reference footage, behind the scenes material, and the final animated film. This lengthy guided tour of the film offers a wealth of information that is further expanded upon in the rest of the DVD set, and is similar in format and design of The Chronicles of Narnia: Extended Edition's "Visualizing...The Complete Production Experience" and Bambi: Platinum Edition's "Inside Walt's Story Meetings".

Backstage Disney: (100 minutes)
-Peter Pan: From Page to Stage to Screen - a new documentary that takes a look at the different incarnations of Peter Pan over the years, from its novel origins to the popular stage plays, and its various movie and television adaptations. Hosted by Peter Pan portrayers Jeremy Sumpter and Cathy Rigby. (45 minutes)

-J.M. Barrie & The Great Ormand Street Hospital - new featurette about the life of J.M. Barrie and the hospital to which Barrie left the copyright of Peter Pan. Hosted by J.M. Barrie portrayer Johnny Depp. (35 minutes)

-Disney Legends: Bobby Driscoll - new featurette detailing the life of the late Bobby Driscoll, and his memorable contributions to Disney History (voice of Peter Pan, contract actor for Disney). Hosted by widow Marilyn Jean Rush. (20 minutes)

Peter Pan in the Parks: (20 minutes)
-Peter Pan's Flight: Magic in the Air - a featurette about the attraction from design to production to its enduring popularity. (15 minutes)

-Virtual Ride-Thru - virtual ride-thru of "Peter Pan's Flight". (5 minutes)

-Peter Pan in the Parks Gallery (300 Stills)
--Peter Pan's Flight - Attraction Concept Art (37 Stills)
--Peter Pan's Flight - Attraction Photos (59 Stills)
--Captain Hook's Pirate Ship/Chicken of the Sea Restaurant - Concept Art (35 Stills)
--Captain Hook's Pirate Ship/Chicken of the Sea Restaurant - Vintage Photos (35 Stills)
--Skull Rock - Concept Art (26 Stills)
--Skull Rock - Vintage Photos (15 Stills)
--Peter Pan and Company Through The Years - Meet and Greets (22)
--Peter Pan and Company Through The Years - Parades (20 Stills)
--Tinker Bell's Flight Down the Castle - Various Photos (23 Stills)
--Disneyland's Fantasmic! - Peter Pan Segment Photos (28 Stills)

Disc Three: Peter Pan - "Faith, Trust, and Pixie Dust" Bonus Materials (Complete Runtime: 206 minutes)

Technical Specs:
1.37:1 Academy Ratio - Original Aspect Ratio (Vintage Materials)
1.77:1 Anamorphic Widescreen - Original Aspect Ratio (New Materials)
2.0 Dolby Surround (English)
Subtitles (English, French, Spanish)
Closed-Captioning for the Deaf and Heard of Hearing (English)
Full-Motion Interactive 16:9 Menus
10 Chapter Stops (Main Feature)

Main Feature: (90 minutes)
-Faith, Trust, and Pixie Dust: The Making of Peter Pan - a new documentary about the making of Peter Pan, with various new and vintage interviews from Walt Disney, original animators, voice actors, and film critics/historians. Hosted by Kathryn Beaumont. (90 minutes)
--Introduction: The Peter Pan Legacy
--Origins: From JM Barrie to Walt Disney
--Finding the Look: Concepts and Designs
--Keeping the Narrative: Adapting the Story
--Giving Characters Life: Finding the Voices
--The Unseen Movie: Live-Action Reference Filming
--Setting the Bar: Natural Animation
--Ode to Never Land: The Music of Peter Pan
--A Bit More Pixie Dust: That Disney Touch
--Release and Reaction: The Peter Pan Legacy

Backstage Disney: (116 minutes)

Deleted Materials: (36 minutes)
-The Peter Pan that Almost Was - new featurette covering the 1930s and 1940s concepts and designs for Peter Pan, which were halted due to World War II. Hosted by Ron Clements and John Musker. (21 minutes)

-Deleted/Alternate Scenes - various sequences that were changed/removed from the film, presented in preliminary storyboards with newly-recorded dialogue. (15 minutes)

Music Gallery: (45 minutes)

-Original Song Demos - A collection of original demos for various songs used within the film, set to montages of concept art, storyboards, and behind the scenes photos. (14 minutes)
--"The Second Star to the Right" (2 minutes)
--"You Can Fly! You Can Fly! You Can Fly!" (4 minutes)
--"A Pirate's Life" (1 minute)
--"Following the Leader" (2 minutes)
--"What Makes the Red Man Red?" (2 minutes)
--"Your Mother and Mine" (2 minutes)
--"The Elegant Captain Hook" (1 minute)

-Multi-Language Reels - two songs from the film presented in various international dubs. (6 minutes)
--"The Second Star to the Right" (2 minutes)
--"You Can Fly! You Can Fly! You Can Fly!" (4 minutes)

-Lost Songs - a set of three songs deleted from the film and one song that was never completed for the film. The deleted songs are presented with original storyboards and concept art, and the lost song is presented as a music video. (14 minutes)
-Lost Song: Never Land - a featurette about the discovery of the lost song and its interpretation by Richard Sherman and Paige O'Hara (3 minutes)
--"Never Land": Lost Song (3 minutes)
--"Never Smile At A Crocodile": Deleted Song (3 minutes)
--"The Boatswain's Song": Deleted Song (3 minutes)
--"The Pirate Song": Deleted Song (2 minutes)

-Music Video: The Second Star to the Right - Jesse McCartney (3 minutes)
-Live at Disney Mania: The Second Star to the Right - Jesse McCartney (4 minutes)
-The Making of the Music Video: The Second Star to the Right - featurette with Jesse McCartney discussing his thoughts on the song and on Peter Pan. (4 minutes)

Art Galleries: (10 minutes, 740 stills)

-Peter Pan: Art Through Animation - a featurette showcasing various stills of artwork from the film, with commentary by original Animator Ollie Johnston and modern animator Randy Cartwright. (10 minutes)

-Visual Development - 128 stills total
--Concept Art (55 stills)
--David Hall Concept Art (35 stills)
--Mary Blair Concept Art (38 stills)

-Layouts and Backgrounds - 57 stills

-Storyboard Art - 59 stills

-Character Design/Concept Art & Model Sheets - 393 stills total
--Peter Pan (44 stills)
--Captain Hook (25 stills)
--Wendy Darling (35 stills)
--Tinker Bell (38 stills)
--Mr. Smee (24 stills)
--John & Michael Darling (36 stills)
--George & Mary Darling (22 stills)
--Nana (18 stills)
--Lost Boys (30 stills)
--Indians (26 stills)
--Mermaids (28 stills)
--Pirates (30 stills)
--Crocodile (37 stills)

-Production Photos - 103 stills total
--Live-Action Reference (58 stills)
--Behind the Scenes (18 stills)
--Voice Actors & Recording Sessions (27 stills)

Publicity Department: (25 minutes)

-Trailers & TV Spots Gallery: (25 minutes)
--Original Theatrical Trailer (1953)
--Re-release Trailer & TV Spots (1958)
--Re-release Trailer & TV Spots (1969)
--Re-release Trailer & TV Spots (1976)
--Re-release Trailer & TV Spots (1982)
--Re-release Trailer & TV Spots (1989)
--Home Video Trailer & TV Spots (1990)
--Home Video Trailer & TV Spots (1998)
--Special Edition DVD Trailer & TV Spots (2002)
--Return to Neverland Trailer & TV Spots (2002)
--Platinum Edition DVD Trailer & TV Spots (2007)

-Promotional Poster Gallery (140 stills)
--Domestic Theatrical Posters (13 stills)
--International Theatrical Posters (15 stills)
--Re-Release Posters (10 stills)
--National Ad Campaigns (8 stills)
--Unused Concepts (12 stills)
--Lobby Cards (18 stills)
--One-Sheets (9 stills)
--Half-Sheets (5 stills)
--Virtual Pressbook (20 stills)
--Premiere & Publicity Stills (30 stills)

Disc Four: Peter Pan - "Return Flight" Bonus Materials (Complete Runtime: 208 minutes)

Technical Specs:
1.37:1 Academy Ratio - Original Aspect Ratio (Vintage Materials)
1.77:1 Anamorphic Widescreen - Original Aspect Ratio (New Materials)
2.0 Dolby Surround (English)
Subtitles (English, French, Spanish, English Commentary)
Closed-Captioning for the Deaf and Heard of Hearing (English)
Full-Motion Interactive 16:9 Menus
5 Chapters (Main Feature)

Main Feature: (60 minutes)
-Return Flight: Peter Pan's Opening Night at El Capitan Theatre - a new documentary that gives a behind-the-scenes look at the preparation for the film's return to the silver screen in 2007, along with extensive footage and interviews from the event, with special guests Kathryn Beaumont, June Foray, Paul Collins, Margaret Kerry, Eric Goldberg, and Richard Sherman. Hosted by Don Hahn. (70 minutes)
--Preparation
--A Reunion
--Panel Discussion
--Premiere
--Closing Thoughts

Vault Disney Collection: Vintage Memories (148 minutes)
-The Walt Disney Christmas Show: December 25, 1951 - the original television special promoting Peter Pan (60 minutes, 4 Chapter Stops)
--Audio Commentary: with Roy E. Disney, Kathryn Beaumont, and Paul Collins

-The Peter Pan Story - original 1952 Promotional Featurette. (12 minutes)

-You Can Fly: The Making of Peter Pan - original 1998 Laserdisc Featurette. (16 minutes)

-Radio Shows and Ads - a collection of various promotional interviews and ads for Peter Pan. (20 minutes, indexed)

-The Peter Pan Story Album - original LP recording of the storybook, set to a slideshow of stills from the storybook. (20 minutes).

-Disney Time Capsule: 1953 - a look at the various achievements of The Walt Disney Company, circa 1953. (10 minutes)
--Live-Action: Films and Shorts in Production
--Animation: Films and Shorts in Production
--Live-Action: Films and Shorts Released
--Animation: Films and Shorts Released
--26th Academy Awards: March 25, 1954
---Best Cartoon Short Subject: Toot, Whistle, Plunk and Boom (1953)
---Best Documentary Short Subject: The Alaskan Eskimo (1953)
---Best Documentary Feature: The Living Desert (1953)
---Best Two-Reel Short Subject: Bear Country (1953)

-Life at Large: 1953 - a retrospective look at the world of 1953. (10 minutes)
--Major News: Worldwide
--Major News: United States of America
--Technological Innovations
--Well-Known Media Figures
--Popular Songs
--Box-Office Hits and Misses
--Trends and Styles
--Everyday Life

Disc Five: Peter Pan - "The Archives" Bonus Materials (Complete Runtime: 207 minutes)

Technical Specs:
1.37:1 Academy Ratio - Original Aspect Ratio (Vintage Materials)
1.77:1 Anamorphic Widescreen - Original Aspect Ratio (New Materials)
2.0 Dolby Surround (English)
Subtitles (English, French, Spanish, English Commentary)
Closed-Captioning for the Deaf and Heard of Hearing (English)
Full-Motion Interactive 16:9 Menus

Beyond Backstage: The Production Archives (92 minutes)
-Peter Pan: The Restorations - new featurette about progressive digital restorations of the film from its original camera negatives, with composite comparisons of the film to its 1990, 1998, 2002, and 2007 restorations. Hosted by Scott MacQueen (15 minutes)

-John Canemaker Presents Nine Old Men and the Art of Animation - original 2002 featurette about the Nine Old Men, narrated by John Canemaker. (27 minutes)

-In Walt's Words: Why I Made Peter Pan - a featurette which offers a dramatic recreation of Walt's article written for "Brief" magazine explaining his reasons for making the film. Introduced by Ron Clements and John Musker. (8 minutes)

-Tinker Bell - A Fairy's Tale - a featurette about Tinker Bell with interviews by Disney Historians and portrayer Margaret Kerry. (8 minutes)

-Collector's Corner: Peter Pan - a featurette about the various merchandise, books, toys, and collector's items made for the film over the years. Hosted by Disney Historian and Collector Stacia Martin. (8 minutes)

-End of an Era: A Farewell to RKO - a featurette explaining the origins of Disney's own distribution company, Buena Vista, and how they began to ween themselves away from RKO Pictures, as Peter Pan was their final film released through the legendary Hollywood studio. (10 minutes)

-Beyond Never Land: Life after Peter Pan - a new featurette with an overview of what life had in store for the voice actors and animators after the film. (15 minutes)

-In Walt's Words: Why I Made Peter Pan - Still Gallery - the complete text for the article, provided through a series of 30 stills, with rare photos from Walt Disney's family album and Peter Pan's production, as well as stills from the actual "Brief" magazine article.

-Collector's Corner - Still Gallery - a gallery containing stills of the various products seen in the featurette. (127 stills)

Peter Pan in Progress: Behind the Scenes of Animation Archives (115 minutes)
-Within this section, viewers get a full insider's guide to the animation process of many of the key sequences of the film.

-A Tour Through Animation History: Peter Pan at Disney's Animation Research Library - Disney Animator Andreas Deja takes Kathryn Beaumont, Margaret Kerry, and Paul Collins on an exclusive tour of the Disney Animation Research Library, where they take a look at various surviving sketches, background paintings, maquettes, pencil animation, and other Peter Pan-related materials. (15 minutes)

-Peter Pan: The Closer Look - A trio of featurettes analyzing specific sequences of the film, with split-screen comparisons to storyboards and reference footage, and archival/new video commentary by original and present-day animators. Similar in style to The Complete Pluto, Volume Two's "Master Class" featurettes. (30 minutes)
--Animation Analysis - Peter Pan Searches For His Shadow (10 minutes) - commentary by Marc Davis (archival) and Eric Goldberg (new)
--Animation Analysis - "You Can Fly"/Flying Through London (10 minutes) - commentary by Ollie Johnston (archival and new) and Randy Cartwright (new)
--Animation Analysis - Showdown at Skull Rock (10 minutes) - commentary by Frank Thomas (archvial), Ward Kimball (archival), and Glen Keane (new)

-Character Building - a trio of featurettes that take an in-depth look at the styles and mannerisms of the characters through sketches and rough animation, why they were conceived the way they appear onscreen. Hosted by animation historian John Canemaker (10 minutes)
--Character Building - Peter Pan & Tinker Bell (4 minutes)
--Character Building - The Darling Children (3 minutes)
--Character Building - Lost Boys and Pirates (4 minutes)

-Animation Progressions - three multi-angle featurettes depicting the progression of animation through four angles: storyboards, live-action references, pencil animation, and finished animation. (10 minutes)
--Multi-Angle Progression - "Following the Leader" (3 minute)
--Multi-Angle Progression - "What Makes the Red Man Red"/Fun in the Hideout (6 minutes)
--Multi-Angle Progression - "The Elegant Captain Hook" (1 minute)

-Storyboard to Film Comparison - two sequences are presented in split-screen format in order to compare the initial storyboards to the final animation. (10 minutes)
--Storyboard to Film Comparison - A Close Shave for Hook
--Storyboard to Film Comparison - Fighting the Pirates/The Final Showdown

-Original Story Reels - two original storyboard reels for key sequences in the film. (10 minutes)
--Storyboard Reel - Nursery Games/Nana Must Go
--Storyboard Reel - Wendy Meets the Mermaids

-Animation Tests - a short collection of surviving pencil animation tests done for the film. Hosted by Scott MacQueen. (10 minutes)
--Animation Tests - Lessons in Flight
--Animation Tests - Various Character Tests
--Animation Tests - Lights and Colors

-Live Action Reference Footage - a collection of the reference footage of the live-action actors performing scenes for animators to study. (20 minutes)
--Live-Action Reference Footage - Bobby Driscoll and Kathryn Beaumont
--Live-Action Reference Footage - Bobby Driscoll and Hans Conried
--Live-Action Reference Footage - Margaret Kerry as Tinker Bell
--Live-Action Reference Footage - Flying Tests
--Live-Action Reference Footage - Miscellaneous Material

DVD-ROM Exclusives: The Peter Pan Papers
-Publicity Archive - News/Magazine Articles and Movie Reviews
-Publicity Archive - Press Materials and Press Books
-Original Source Materials - JM Barrie Novel and Play
-Original Source Materials - Story Outlines and Story Notes
-Music Archive: The Songs - Sheet Music for Piano

Disc Six: Peter Pan: 1924 and Bonus Materials (Complete Runtime: 190 minutes)

Technical Specs:
1.37:1 Academy Ratio - Original Aspect Ratio (Vintage Materials)
2.0 Dolby Mono (1924)
Subtitles (English French, Spanish)
Full-Motion Interactive 16:9 Menus
24 Chapter Stops (Main Feature)

Main Feature: (105 minutes)
-Peter Pan - the 1924 silent film by Paramount, with a newly restored high-definition transfer . (105 minutes)

Kino Video Presents: Behind the Scenes of Peter Pan: 1924 (85 minutes) (material in red appear in the current DVD by Kino Video)
-Audio Commentary - with film historians Rudy Behlmer and Jeanine Basinger
-Orchestral Score - a new orchestral score for the 1924 silent film, by Philip C. Carli
-Production Essay - written by film historian Frederick C. Szebin
-Photo Gallery: 1924 - a series of production stills and promotional materials for the film.
-Reminiscences: Esther Ralston - an interview with Esther Ralston, who portrayed Mrs. Darling in the film. (30 minutes)

-Reminiscences: Jack Murphy - an interview with Jack Murphy, who portrayed John Darling in the film. (30 minutes)
-Silent Stage: The Visual Effects of Peter Pan - a featurette detailing the then-revolutionary visual effects, and how they were used in conjunction with various traditional stage effects for the film. Hosted by well-known visual effects artist Bill George. (25 minutes)

Packaging:
-Steelbook Tin Case - a full-color and embossed silver tin case holds the DVDs and other materials. Similar design to Warner Brothers' Ultimate Collector's Editions tin cases, the cover art uses an animated rendition of the original theatrical poster.

-DVD Case - a six-tray spinal digistak (bound like a book), with glossy colored outer panels, contains a pocket for the DVD Guide and a special lenticular plastic outer covering featuring the scene of Pan and the children landing on the the hands of Big Ben.

-DVD Guide - a 32-page collectible booklet with a foreward by Kathryn Beaumont, an essay by Leonard Maltin, Production Notes, Cast/Crew Bios, Scene Listing, and in-depth Bonus Materials Listing with runtimes and descriptions.

-Disc Art - each disc contains full-color glossy character artwork, and is labeled according to its disc contents, with a composite runtime of materials on disc.
--Disc 1: Peter Pan - "Feature Film" and Bonus Materials
--Disc 2: Tink - "The Animated Experience" and Bonus Materials
--Disc 3: Hook, Smee - "Faith, Trust, and Pixie Dust"
--Disc 4: Wendy, John, Michael - "Return Flight"
--Disc 5: Lost Boys - "The Archives"
--Disc 6: Peter Pan (Betty Bronson) - "Peter Pan: 1924" and Bonus Materials

Special Print Materials:
-Lobby Cards - a set of nine reproductions of lobby cards made for the film.
-Character Sketches & Design Sheets - reproductions of eighteen various character sketches and design sheets.
-Senitype Film Cels - five original reproductions of film cels from the movie.

-The Peter Pan Companion - a 120-page Hardcover Collector's Book with additional and rare photos, essays, interviews, and more.

Legacy Series Soundtrack:
-Peter Pan: Legacy Series Soundtrack Two-CD Soundtrack containing the original score and songs from the film, as well as additional demo reels, unused/alternate score, audio outtakes, radio spots/interviews, and various cover versions of the songs by popular recording artists.

-CD Case - a dual-disc digipak holds the two CDs, contains colored artwork from the film, and track listings on two panels. There is also a pocket for the CD Guide.

-CD Guide - a 24-page collectible booklet with an introduction by Richard Sherman, various liner notes for each track, and lyrics for specific songs.

Legacy Series Track Listing:

Disc One: Peter Pan - Original Soundtrack
1. Main Title (The Second Star To The Right)/All This Has Happend Before - Sammy Fain/The Jud Conlon
2. The Last Night In The Nursery - Sammy Fain/The Jud Conlon Chorus
3. On The Rooftop/What's A Kiss/Perturbed Pixie - Sammy Fain/The Jud Conlon Chorus
4. You Can Fly! You Can Fly! You Can Fly! - Bobby Driscoll/Kathryn Beaumont/Paul Collins/Tommy Luske/The Jud Conlon Chorus
5. A Pirate's Life - Oliver Wallace/The Jud Conlon Chorus
6. Blast That Peter Pan/A Pirate's Life (Reprise) - Oliver Wallace/The Jud Conlon Chorus
7. The Legend Of The Croc/Double The Powder And Shorten The Fuse/Follow Tinker Bell - Oliver Wallace/The Jud Conlon Chorus
8. Just When I Brought You A Mother/Banished - Oliver Wallace/The Jud Conlon Chorus
9. Following The Leader - Oliver Wallace
10. Hide And Sneak/No Let' em Go - Oliver Wallace
11. Mermaid Lagoon/Bad Day At Skull Rock - Oliver Wallace
12. Plotting A Pixie's Plight - Oliver Wallace
13. What Made The Red Man Red/Tinknapped - Oliver Wallace
14. Rumor Has It/Hangman's Tree - Oliver Wallace
15. Big Chief Flying Eagle/I Had A Mother Once - Oliver Wallace
16. Your Mother And Mine - Sammy Fain/Kathryn Beaumont
17. Good-Bye Peter/Shanghaied - Sammy Fain/Kathryn Beaumont
18. Captain Hook Never Breaks A Promise/The Elegant Captain Hook/A Little Surprise... - Hans Conried/Bill Thompson/The Jud Conlon Chorus
19. No Splash/Take That/I'm A Codfish!/Crocbait/The Hero Of Never Land - Sammy Fain/Hans Conried/Bill Thompson/The Jud Conlon Chorus
20. Home Again/Mermaids,Pirates, And Indians/Finale - Sammy Fain/The Jud Conlon Chorus
21. The Second Star to the Right (Demo Recording) - Sammy Fain/The Jud Conlon Chorus
22. You Can Fly! You Can Fly! You Can Fly! (Demo Recording) - Sammy Fain/The Jud Conlon Chorus
23. A Pirate's Life (Demo Recording) - Sammy Fain/The Jud Conlon Chorus
24. Following the Leader (Demo Recording) - Sammy Fain/The Jud Conlon Chorus
25. What Made the Red Man Red (Demo Recording) - Sammy Fain/The Jud Conlon Chorus
26. Your Mother and Mine (Demo Recording) - Sammy Fain/The Jud Conlon Chorus
27. The Elegant Captain Hook (Demo Recording) - Sammy Fain/The Jud Conlon Chorus

Disc Two: Peter Pan - Additional Material
28. Never Smile At A Crocodile (Demo Recording - Deleted Song) - Sammy Fain/The Jud Conlon Chorus
29. The Boatswain's Song (Demo Recording - Deleted Song) - Sammy Fain/The Jud Conlon Chorus
30. The Pirate Song (Demo Recording - Deleted Song) - Sammy Fain/The Jud Conlon Chorus
31. Never Land (Reconstructed Lost Song) - Paige O'Hara, 2007
32. Studio Sessions: Alternate Scores Medley #1
33. Studio Sessions: Alternate Scores Medley #2
34. Studio Sessions: Alternate Scores Medley #3
35. Studio Sessions: Alternate Scores Medley #4
36. Voice Cast Recording Sessions: Audio Outtakes #1
37. Voice Cast Recording Sessions: Audio Outtakes #2
38. Radio Spots Package #1
39. Radio Spots Package #2
40. Radio Interviews #1
41. Radio Interviews #2
42. Radio Interviews #3
43. Peter Pan Medley: You Can Fly/Never Smile At A Crocodile/The Second Star to the Right - Five Star, 1989
44. The Second Star to the Right (Cover) - Jesse McCartney, 2002/2003
45. I'll Try - Jesse McCartney, 2002/2003
46. The Second Star to the Right (Cover) - James Taylor
47. The Second Star to the Right (Cover) -
+ More Covers

SRP $59.99 (Platinum Edition, Limited Edition Giftset)
WIST #60:
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion? :p

WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
User avatar
carter1971
Gold Classic Collection
Posts: 168
Joined: Sun Mar 11, 2007 7:42 pm
Location: Georgia

Post by carter1971 »

Wow, very nice, Escapay! I wish you were in charge of things at BVHE. And by the way, thanks for putting your older ones back in for us to see. I am fairly new to the forum and missed them when they were posted before. Nice stuff!
User avatar
Big Disney Fan
Platinum Edition
Posts: 3110
Joined: Sun Oct 29, 2006 11:28 pm
Location: Any Disney park you choose

Post by Big Disney Fan »

carter1971 wrote:Wow, very nice, Escapay! I wish you were in charge of things at BVHE. And by the way, thanks for putting your older ones back in for us to see. I am fairly new to the forum and missed them when they were posted before. Nice stuff!
You said it, carter1971. Can you imagine the reactions to people if ours were the kinds of Disney DVDs out there? Plus it would be a wonderful source of revenue.
User avatar
Big Disney Fan
Platinum Edition
Posts: 3110
Joined: Sun Oct 29, 2006 11:28 pm
Location: Any Disney park you choose

Post by Big Disney Fan »

So I looked at my Fantasia set idea and the negative responses about it. I have to admit that Escapay is right and I did copy most of his ideas for myself. So I decided to redo the set sometime later. This time, I will first examine what few bonuses were mine and retain them, but not Escapay's. Then I will examine the three-disc legacy edition of the movie that does exist and use that as a guide and to copy from. So I will still be copying from somewhere, but it won't be from Escapay that I do the copying. In fact, I think I will try to ignore the forums completely while redoing the set so that I don't copy anyone else either.

But Escapay, can I just copy the segment galleries from you for my Fantasia set? That's all I will copy, but if you want me to figure out other things for the galleries then I will try and do that.
Locked