Disney guy.
Fantasia (1940) -- Co-directed with Walt Disney, James
Algar, Samuel Armstrong, Ford I. Beebe, Jim Handley, Albert Heath, T.
Hee, Wilfred Jackson, Hamilton Luske, Bianca Majolie, Sylvia Moberly-Holland, Bill Roberts, Paul Satterfield, Ben Sharpsteen, and Norman Wright. Probably the best thing Walt Disney
ever did, though you can't really compare this movie to the others, since it's
not really a traditional movie at all. There's something really magic about this
movie, and it's truly
"something else." Every segment (including some of the goofier
interstitials) are great (the one with the hippos is my least favorite, but I
still like it), but the standouts are the Nutcracker Suite with its lazy
imagery, the creation of the world and the dinosaurs, and the best of all, the
"Night On Bald Mountain." The Mickey one was good too. A movie way
ahead of its time, if it had been a success, you might have seen a more artistic
Disney for the next several decades. Unique. (See Eric
Goldberg for the sequel, Fantasia 2000.)
Bambi (1942) -- Co-directed with James Algar, Samuel Armstrong, David Hand, Perce
Pearce, Bill Roberts, Paul Satterfield, and Norman Wright. If you don't count Fantasia,
this is the best Disney movie ever--and maybe even if you do
count Fantasia, since this is more or less a full-length
Fantasia segment, only this time with dialogue (little
as it may be), characters, and a plot. The beauty, music, and
magic of Fantasia is here, as is the hypnotic quality.
The only thing missing is the occasional yawn that inevitably
arises watching the lazy images of Fantasia. I've seen it over and over
and not gotten tired of it. This marks the end of the "Golden Age" of Disney.
Copyright (c) Apr 2003 - Nov 2006 by Rusty Likes Movies