Fantasia (1940) | |
Background
Fantasia (1940), a Disney animated feature-length "concert" film milestone, is an experimental film integrating eight magnificent classical musical compositions with enchanting, exhilarating, and imaginative, artistically-choreographed animation. The conceptual framework of the individual pieces embraces such areas as prehistoric times, the four seasons, nature, hell/heaven, the themes of light vs. darkness and chaos vs. order, dancing animals, classical mythology, and legend. This Disney production was an ambitious experiment to try to popularize classical music, especially by accompanying it with animation. Originally, the film was to consist of only The Sorcerer's Apprentice segment, but it was expanded to include the full anthology of shorts. Other segments, such as Ride Of The Valkyries, Swan of Tuonela, and Flight of the Bumblebee were storyboarded but never fully animated, and thus were never put into production for inclusion in future Fantasia-style releases. It introduced a very expensive, "Fantasound" 'stereo-like', multi-channel soundtrack (an optical 'surround-sound' soundtrack printed on a separate 35mm reel from the actual video portion of the film). The film received a special certificate at the 1941 Academy Awards for its revolutionary Fantasound (early stereo or 'surround-sound'). Fantasia was slightly controversial for its depiction of bare-breasted centaurettes in the Pastoral Symphony segment and other stereotypical racial depictions. [Adhering to the Hays Production Code and its strict rules, the figures were garlanded with flower bras for cover-up after swimming topless (still uncensored) in a waterfall and pond (seen from a distance). Also, in later releases of the film, in the Pastoral Symphony segment (again), two black Nubian/zebra centaurs who attend the Bacchus celebration were edited out, along with a female pickaninny centaurette with braided hair named Sunflower who shines the hoof of a white female centaurette. The black centaurette was first abruptly cut from the film and as technology improved, the scene was edited or 'resized' by zooming in on the frames with the character in them so that she was not seen in the shot.] The film, with a production cost of more than $2 million (about four times more than an average live-action picture), initially failed at the box-office (partially due to the expensive installation of "Fantasound" sound reproduction equipment in theatres), but then its popularity increased and its cult status was assured when the members of the 60's drug culture adopted it as a favorite hallucinatory experience when it was re-released (alongside other counter-cultural, head-tripping favorites, including 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), Easy Rider (1969), and the re-released Alice in Wonderland (1951) in 1974). Because of the studio's financial difficulties, its next animated feature, Dumbo (1941), was a low-budget offering. Since the late 60s, Fantasia has been warmly embraced, and a sequel titled Fantasia 2000 (1999) appeared as a widescreen IMAX attraction. Fantasia 2000 was the first feature-length animated film released in the IMAX format. The film illustrated seven new classic pieces, including:
A variation on this type of film was Disney's own 'unofficial' sequel Make Mine Music (1946), its 8th full-length animated feature, that substituted pop music for the classics. Two of its most famous segments (of ten animated vignettes) were (1) Prokofiev's Peter and the Wolf (narrated by Sterling Holloway) [distributed with the re-release of Fantasia in 1947 as an 'update'], and (2) Casey at the Bat. Another of the segments, Blue Bayou, was originally set to Debussy's Claire de Lune and was intended to be included in Fantasia, but it was cut due to length. There have been at least two satirical Fantasia spoofs: (1) WB's A Corny Concerto (1943) with Elmer Fudd impersonating Deems Taylor introducing animated shorts (Tales from the Vienna Woods and the Blue Danube), and (2) Bruno Bozzetto's Allegro non Troppo (1976) with six famous classical musical pieces visualized by a live-action story and animation (Debussy's Prèlude à l'après-midi d'un faune, Dvorak's Slavonic Dance, Ravel's Bolero, Sibelius' Valse Triste, Vivaldi's Concerto in C-Dur, and Stravinsky's The Firebird). Plot Synopsis[The original film ended without customary credits - with only the film's title, the words "Color by Technicolor," and "Distributed by RKO Pictures."] As the film begins, orchestral musicians (including cellists, violinists, brass and wood-wind players) - all studio musicians from the Los Angeles area, are to be conducted by Leopold Stokowski, the Philadelphia Orchestra's conductor from 1912 to 1938. The musicians are displayed in shadow and color and are silhouetted against a blue backdrop in the opening as they take their accustomed places and tune their instruments. [Note: The players shown were told not to play at all, just pretend to play, since the soundtrack used the Philadelphia Orchestra's recording.] Screen narrator Deems Taylor (popular musical commentator with the New York Philharmonic radio broadcasts) welcomes the audience to a "new form of entertainment," and in his introduction sets the scene:
The resident presenter of the NY first explains that there are three kinds of music: music that tells a definite story, music that paints a series of pictures, and "absolute music" that exists simply for its own sake. The eight memorable animated fantasies/sequences of the entire film begin with a pictorial kaleidoscope - a pure fanciful flight of imagination: 1. J. S. Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D Minor. This first piece is an example of "absolute music." Bach's music is interpreted in terms of light-hearted, abstract and semi-abstract forms and impressionistic images:
Taylor's introduction concludes with the figure of Leopold Stokowski moving center stage to mount the podium and call attention with his hands to orchestral members. As the piece begins, sections of the orchestra - shadows of the players including violinists, cellists, and French hornists - light up to emphasize their playing, against other colorful backdrops. After the opening Toccata, images of the orchestra's instruments and players turn more abstract and bizarre in the Fugue. The ends of violin bows become silver streaks darting through the heavens. Clouds and sky cover the screen. Music is projected as yellow streaks of light. Abstract forms and shapes (concentric circles, patterns, waves) move in a lively fashion, synchronized to the musical tones. Strings are suspended in air played with soaring bows. Discs or wafers resembling objects in space appear and disappear. As the music builds, sparkling bits of fireworks dance and explode in a metamorphosis of light and color. The piece concludes with a huge, orange sunset, over which is superimposed the black silhouette of conductor Stokowski - and then it all fades to black. Deem Taylor's continuing "music lesson" narration holds together various pieces of the film:
2. Tchaikovsky's The Nutcracker Suite (the original piece was shortened and the order of the movements was rearranged) - the familiar piece is an animated dance sequence celebrating nature through the changing seasons (from summer to winter), with six movements. The series of ballets are led by fairies, mushrooms in Chinese costumes, flowers and flower petals, underwater fan-tail fish, and thistles:
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