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[personal profile] acroyear
Disney's made the announcement for the next set of "Walt Disney Treasures" DVDs to come out in early December. These two disc sets have been the highlights, outside of the Platinum dvds (Snow White, Beauty and the Beast, this month's Lion King) of Disney's dvd releases, and the coming 4 are no exception. They usually retail at $37.99, but CostCo had them as low as $21.99, so keep an eye out.

For the kiddies, we have part 2 of "Mickey Mouse in Color", including the full-length "Mickey's Christmas Carol" and "Prince and the Pauper" (nicely saving me from buying the former on its own), and "The Chronological Donald Duck Volume 1", which is self-explanatory. Hopefully, it'll be as well put together as "The Complete Goofy", which has the amazing ability to refresh our memories of childhood and its influences. The Complete Goofy included the fascinating "Motor Mania", which in 1950, showed us that road rage as a behaviour was as old as the car itself.

For the adults with odd memories, there's "Tomorrowland", which highlights the Disneyland Television Show's documentaries on the atractions that were part of Tomorrowland throughout its early history, including California's Mission to the Moon, and the Mission to Mars that held its place in Florida.

Sadly, it doesn't look like any documentary exists for "Adventures into Inner Space", arguably the most educational attraction Disneyland CA ever had (and now a part of Yesterland like many other things from before the 90s revamping of Tomorrowland CA). It was my personal favorite of the California attractions when I was 10, and as strong an influence for me to become a scientist (in thinking and study, if not in career) as Carl Sagan ever was.

The real highlight, from an educational point of view, of the upcoming treasures is "On The Front Lines". This is supposed to be a documentary, plus the animated films themselves, of Disney's work for the U.S. Government and Department of War (there wasn't a Department of Defense at the time). These include propaganda films for the newsreels, and training and morale films for the troops themselves (Warner Bros. also produced a number of films like this, only a handful of which are still shown in Cartoon Network's marathons; one hopes this release will lead to WB following suit).

My hope is that this is relatively complete, with all footage left alone, and that political correctness or public image doesn't water them down too much. (Disney often rewrite his own history publically, as far as his conversations with the press goes, even when his studio at his order maintained documentary evidence to the contrary).

The one thing that leads me to have hope at all is the fact that "Mickey in Black and White" from the 2nd set of Treasures, included several cartoons that involved what in hindsight we consider racist or racial stereotypes, with the caveat from Leonard Maltin that these were the sign of the times, and should be taken with a grain of salt.

My personal take goes even further. The fact that we *don't* laugh at those artistic stereotypes now shows how far we've come as a society, and its a good thing to watch these and remember what was...failure to see what was is the leading cause of falling into the same traps later...

(So get over the possible NAACP crapola and release Song of the South in the states, m'kay?)

Re: Disney's Visions

Date: 2003-10-14 07:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] acroyear70.livejournal.com
yeah, the animated stuff was included in the sing-a-long videos (meaning hard-captions). The original is available, likely not remastered or anything, in Germany of all places...or at least it was.

and i'm just looking at it from a completist point of view, having not seen anything of the film since the mid-70s.

I'm a little bit more annoyed that their current direction involves re-releasing things on DVD that have already been out on DVD, like Mary Poppins, Alice in Wonderland, Pocahontas, and Lilo & Stitch, all coming out in 2-disc sets (and with MP, that makes it the *third* release of it on DVD) in the next year. Not that I don't love the 2-disc releases (I watch the makings-of Atlantis and Emperor's New Groove more often than the films themselves), but dammit, i've already got those movies! :)

And the "Platinum" editions, meant for the real highlights of Disney, are more focused on the recent things and not the classics (the list includes Snow White, then Beauty, Lion King, and next year is Aladdin). Meanwhile, Bambi hasn't seen a DVD release at all (even after a first-stage cleanup in 1991 a-la Fantasia's 1990 first pass restoration), and Cinderella and Pinochio are both in serious need of a proper Sleeping Beauty style restoration effort.

go fig.

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