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"101 Dalmatians: Part 18A"

6 Comments -

1 – 6 of 6
Blogger Michael Sporn said...

The amazing thing to me is that despite all the reuse and reworked animation, the film remains one of Disney's best - in my opinion. The story and characters are well developed, and the picture moves at a good pace. Somehow they got real heart in there that rarely returned after this film.

October 10, 2008 8:35 AM

Blogger Yeldarb86 said...

Really, Disney had been recycling animation long before it became standardized in the 1960's.

Reusing animation is only a problem when you're trying to merge mismatch styles for the same character or setting. In Goliath II, the owl was first reused from Sleeping Beauty, and later from Bambi (with the latter awkwardly placed in the tree trunk). Two completely different characters disguised as a third character.

October 10, 2008 4:43 PM

Blogger Floyd Norman said...

Back in the sixties, the pressure was on animation to reduce costs. Overall, Woolie did a good job in not compromising his film.

The same thing continues today, as producers try to minimize production costs. However, we have even more tools at our disposal. They can be a big help if used wisely.

October 10, 2008 7:31 PM

Blogger Steve said...

It's only a problem to me if the reuse attracts attention to itself. "Jungle Book" unfortunately for me, reused too much from within and without. The Dalmation puppies wagging their tails (page 31, shot 7 in your posts) became wolf pups wagging their tails in "Jungle Book."

October 11, 2008 2:57 AM

Blogger Holger said...

Hi Mark,
thanks again for the great blog.
It would be nice if you could display the labels in your side bar to make it easier to find specific mosaics.

October 11, 2008 3:50 PM

Blogger Mark Mayerson said...

Holger, I'm working on it. Blogger is not the most efficient piece of software to do editing in, but I'll get there eventually.

Michael, I'd love to know more about Ham Luske as a director, This film and The Rescuers are the two best Reitherman films, and he shared director credit on both. Gerry Geronimi directed some shorts that were not earth-shaking, so I'm guessing that Luske's input as director was at least partially responsible for 101 Dalmatians being as good as it is.

October 11, 2008 8:29 PM

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