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Post a Comment On: Mayerson on Animation

"The Animated Man"

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July 08, 2007 2:47 PM

Blogger Jenny Lerew said...

Great review.

Of course everyone's got to disagree with something, and I'd take issue with the statement "His expansion into live action films and TV rarely resulted in anything, nostalgia aside, that's stood the test of time". I think that given the ravening maw of what is 20th century(and beyond)culture Disney was a better than average success in both TV and live action. But that's quibbling.

I really would have liked to see your review on the pages of the NY TImes' weekly section, but in any case the book is certainly going to be the new standard for any other scholarship on its subject.

July 08, 2007 2:49 PM

Blogger Thad said...

Actually, I think Barrier was on the mark with his comments on the live-action and TV work of the Disney Studio.

July 08, 2007 4:04 PM

Blogger Pete Emslie said...

I'd agree with Jenny regarding Disney's live-action films and TV projects of that era. Whether any of these were important films, in the way a "Casablanca" or "Citizen Kane" was, is debatable I suppose. But Disney's live-action output was always a feast for the senses, what with lavish sets and costumes, gorgeous colour and music scores, and just handsome production values in every way. Personally, I feel that no other mainstream Hollywood studio was as readily identified with its live-action films than was Walt Disney Productions. Their "look" was unmistakeable. (Only smaller British studios such as Rank and Hammer seem to have as identifiable a brand on their film library as did Disney, in my opinion.)

In regards to Disney films not featuring a "strong male lead" of heroic proportions like a John Wayne, I'd agree with that in general, as only Kirk Douglas in "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" comes close that I can think of offhand. However, what of it? I think it's fair to say that Walt prefered the type of underplayed hero that Frank Capra also brought to the screen: the outsider who has to rise above adversity with perseverence, honesty and a quiet dignity. Fred MacMurray certainly was a Capra-esque hero in "The Absent-Minded Professor", sort of playing the part as Jimmy Stewart might have. Likewise, that1960's regular, Dean Jones, was sort of an Americanized, poor man's Cary Grant if you will, with a genuine affability and charm that made you root for him in his struggles.

I think Walt just naturally gravitated towards this type of "little guy", overcoming all of the obstacles thrown his way. You can see how even Mickey Mouse is really just Walt's version of Chaplin, the ultimate "little guy", and how most of his adversaries were usually bigger and stronger than he was, therefore he had to outwit them in order to win the day. I'm sure that Walt even saw himself as the "little guy" among Hollywood's studio moguls - the outsider and upstart who was going to succeed by marching to his own drum. And I reckon he did just that.

July 09, 2007 12:53 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

The comedies made by the British Ealing Studio bear the closest "brand" resemblance to the live action house style of late 1950's and later Disney films. Peter Ellenshaw worked painting mattes at Ealing before he came to Disney.

July 14, 2007 5:00 PM

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