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Post by CookiesNCream on Dec 22, 2017 4:08:13 GMT
Any thoughts on this Disney movie? Do you think it still hold up as a classic in animation?
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Post by Cooper, the Golden Retriever on Dec 22, 2017 4:09:24 GMT
Any thoughts on this Disney movie? Do you think it still hold up as a classic in animation? I do..!
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Post by MCDemuth on Dec 22, 2017 4:31:46 GMT
I think the movie looks great for having being made in 1937...
It's one of my favorite Disney films.
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Post by them1ghtyhumph on Dec 22, 2017 5:36:29 GMT
You can't beat Dopey.
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Post by jcush on Dec 22, 2017 7:48:33 GMT
I rewatched it a few months ago and I think it definitely holds up.
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Post by marianne48 on Dec 22, 2017 23:35:02 GMT
It's still one of the very best Disney animated movies.
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Post by BATouttaheck on Dec 22, 2017 23:39:35 GMT
Any thoughts on this Disney movie? Do you think it still hold up as a classic in animation? If it didn't we would not care that it is 80. It would have been forgotten ages ago.
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Post by petrolino on Dec 23, 2017 0:05:02 GMT
Charming music and animation.
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Post by Archelaus on Dec 23, 2017 0:18:36 GMT
I still love it. Memorable characters and songs and stellar animation that still holds up. The only things I would change is to give Snow White more personality and write her as a less passive character, and flesh out the relationship between her and the Prince.
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Post by TutuAnimationPrincess on Dec 23, 2017 0:19:25 GMT
I wish more people appreciated it for the piece of art and wonderful film it is rather than just viewing it as some sort of historical artifact. Yes, it was the first Disney film and the first animated film to be completely hand drawn, but it's so much more. Yes, it holds up and is an entertaining, artistic masterpiece to this day.
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Post by BATouttaheck on Dec 23, 2017 2:36:00 GMT
Even after eight decades, Snow White is still the fairest of them all. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs premiered 80 years ago, on Dec. 21, 1937, at the Carthay Circle Theatre in L.A. It was followed by a nationwide release on February 4, 1938. Adjusted for inflation, the animated movie is one of the Top 10 performers at the North American box office. In celebration of its 80th anniversary, E! News has rounded up 20 fun facts about the movie:
1. Walt Disney came up with the idea bring Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs to the big screen when he was 15 years old, after seeing a silent film version of the classic fairytale in Kansas City.
2. The movie was initially budgeted at $250,000, but due to various delays, it ballooned to $1.5 million—a big amount at the time. Disney later mortgaged his home to finance the production.
3. The film took roughly three years to produce, from 1934 to 1937.
4. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs is the first feature-length animated film in U.S. history.
5. Over 750 artists completed more than 2 million sketches. The film included 250,000 drawings.
6. Animator Ward Kimball nearly quit after his two main sequences were cut.
7. Disney tasked his team with creating the multiplane camera, a device capable of shooting several images at once in order to create more depth (and imagination) in the artists' drawings.
8. Convinced the film would fail, critics nicknamed the film "Walt Disney's Folly."
9. Early concept art depicted Snow White as a blonde. Her raven hair became one of her defining physical characteristics, as the Magic Mirror described her beauty in detail to the Evil Queen: "Alas, she is more fair than thee: Lips red as the rose, hair black as ebony, skin white as snow."
10. Blabby, Busy, Crabby, Daffy, Deefy, Dirty, Dumpy, Flabby, Gabby, Gaspy, Gloomy, Hotsy, Lazy, Nifty, Scrappy, Shifty, Snoopy, Stubby, Thrifty and Weezy were all considered for the dwarfs' names and personalities. Sneezy, for example, was actually a last-minute substitute for Deefy.
11. Happy is the only dwarf whom Snow White does not refer to by name.
12. In the dwarfs' cottage, nearly every wooden surface has an animal carved into it.
13. Twenty-five songs were written for the movie—but only eight were used.
14. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was the first movie to release a soundtrack for purchase.
15. It was the highest grossing film ever, until it was surpassed by Gone With the Wind a year later.
16. Deemed too scary for children in England, people under 16 had to be accompanied by a parent.
17. In 1939, Disney received a special Academy Award for the film—and seven smaller ones.
18. Disney Studios in Burbank was built with the profits from the movie.
19. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs is the first animated feature to be selected for the National Film Registry, recognized in 1989 for "being "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant."
20. The movie was first re-released in 1944, to raise revenue for the budding studio during World War II. It was re-released seven more times( in 1952, 1958, 1967, 1975, 1983, 1987 and 1993). On Oct. 28, 1994, the film was released for the first time on home video, on LaserDisc and VHS.
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Post by BATouttaheck on Dec 23, 2017 2:40:04 GMT
one minor total quibbly thing that has ALWAYS bothered me **SPOILER** as soon as the Prince arrives and they do the kiss and wake up part, she immediately runs off with him with hardly a fare-the-well to the seven steadfast men who took care of her. AND she skips one fella in her rush to leave (but I don't remember which one).
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Post by twothousandonemark on Dec 23, 2017 3:47:01 GMT
Definition of timeless.
It would make my top 200.
Animateds...? 1. Pinocchio 2. Peter Pan 3. Ratatouille 4. Aladdin 5. Snow White 6. Fantasia
Those are the ones I own & love.
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Post by politicidal on Dec 23, 2017 4:39:58 GMT
It's good.
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Post by them1ghtyhumph on Dec 23, 2017 6:00:07 GMT
one minor total quibbly thing that has ALWAYS bothered me **SPOILER** as soon as the Prince arrives and they do the kiss and wake up part, she immediately runs off with him with hardly a fare-the-well to the seven steadfast men who took care of her. AND she skips one fella in her rush to leave (but I don't remember which one). WOMEN!!!!!!!!!!
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Post by Deleted on Dec 23, 2017 11:38:48 GMT
Its good but i don`t enjoy it as much now as i did when i was a child.
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Post by darkreviewer2013 on Dec 24, 2017 1:12:35 GMT
First film I ever saw at the cinema during its final theatrical re-release back in the early 90s. The witch terrified my younger brother at the time. Don't think I've watched it since then, but it's a bone fide classic and deserves its high status. There are nonetheless numerous Disney flicks from later periods that I prefer.
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Post by CookiesNCream on Feb 5, 2018 1:08:09 GMT
Now it's the 80th Anniversary for the film's wide release!
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Post by politicidal on Feb 5, 2018 1:13:00 GMT
Yea, absolutely. Hard to believe it's that old. I can see a cynical person calling it outdated or too simple. But to me, that's why it holds up.
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