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Fantasia (Special 60th Anniversary Edition, U
Aspect Ratio : 1.33:1
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
MPAA rating : G (General Audience)
Product Dimensions : 7.5 x 5.5 x 0.5 inches; 2.88 ounces
Director : James Algar, Samuel Armstrong, Ford I. Beebe
Media Format : Animated, Closed-captioned, DTS Surround Sound, NTSC, Color
Run time : 2 hours
Release date : November 14, 2000
Actors : Leopold Stokowski, Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra, Walt Disney, Deems Taylor, Mickey Mouse
Studio : Walt Disney Video
ASIN : B00003CX9W
Number of discs : 1
4.5
Reviewer: THE BLUEMAHLER
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: An innovate and ambitious experiment
Review: Over a thirty year period I have seen Fantasia (1940) in theaters on a few occasions. During each showing I witnessed several members of the audience walk out. That is usually a good sign. There is little doubt that this experimental film (yes, Disney once was innovative) has unmitigated moments of lurid kitsch, with equal parts cinematic magic. It’s a flawed masterpiece, which begs the questions: does an infallible masterpiece actually exist? Fantasia represents it’s creator, Walt Disney, as utterly possessed by obsessive, artistic, and innovative ambition. It may be one of the most stand apart films ever crafted, which is why, seventy plus years later, it still has the power to provoke dumbed-down audiences who still look at artmusic with suspicion. Simultaneously, it also annoys insufferable academic elitists who cannot find it in themselves to embrace the film’s tawdrier moments.Another supposed “strike” the film has against it is its choice of conductor: Leopold Stokowski. Stoki was the P.T. Barnum of transplanted Euro conductors residing in America. Mention him to any “serious” classical music lover and he’ll make a face like he’s heard fingernails scraping down a chalkboard. Stokowski was known for his Bach transcriptions, one of which–“Toccata and Fugue in D minor”–opens the film. Essentially,he romanticized Bach, making him sound more like Tchaikovsky. One wit described such tampering as “High Cholesterol Bach.” It’s a dishonest reaction, molded by unimaginative attachments to “historical correctness” and hyper-realism. Avoid such persons like the plague (they probably started life by pulling the wings off butterflies). For those of us who have no qualms admitting that we like plenty of syrup on our musical flapjacks, embracing this wizard’s transcriptions presents no problems. Seeing only Stokowski’s brazen self-promotion amounts to blindness. This former organist had one of the most prodigious gifts in drawing color out of every orchestra he worked with, which made him the quintessential choice for Fantasia. Compare his achievement in this film, awash in personality, to the comparatively monochromatic conducting of James Levine in Fantasia 2000.The meeting of Stokowski and Walt Disney, in 1937 at Chasen’s restaurant, is the stuff of legend. Disney was starstruck with the conductor’s celebrity, mysterious accent, and fierce mane. The seed of an idea for a “concert film” sprang from the meeting. At this time Disney had only produced and released one previous feature: Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs (1937). The idea of an animated feature had seemed risky and radical, with the naysayers predicting bankruptcy. The profits and critical acclaim from Snow White forever silenced those constipated doomsday prophets. Now, Disney was ready to take another risk. 1940 saw the release of Disney’s second and third feature films. Artistically, it paid off as Pinocchio (1940) and Fantasia are, to date, Disney’s two greatest films (yes, I said that), released only nine months apart. The former was a critical, box office hit. The latter did not make money for nearly twenty years. Disney had proven one can go indeed broke overestimating the American public.The Fantasia deal signed, Stokowski was excited and predictably offered numerous ideas about the use of color. A later biographer wrote that the conductor’s fascination with color was sincere, describing his various experiments with mixing alcoholic drinks for color effects. Stoki did a similar thing with “sound color” by incessantly changing the orchestra seating layout. Even visually, “Toccata and Fugue” is pure Stokowski. The opening piece is introduced via the superb narration of American composer Deems Taylor (to the public he was primarily known as a commentator for the NY Philharmonic Radio Broadcasts). This “absolute music” is total abstraction. Entirely hand painted, at times the watercolors almost appear to still be wet. Vibrant with texture, this is far removed from contemporary slick and soulless computer animation. Stokowski used no baton, so his beautifully powerful long hands are highlighted, jabbing through the splashing backdrop. The french horns are hauntingly lit in diaphanous color before the violin bows transform into silvery beams of light reaching for infinity. Sound and vision collide, producing crashing tides, ending in a literal fireworks display.For those, like myself, who have overdosed on Tchaikovsky’s “Nutcracker Suite,” Fantasia serves up a refreshing alternate vision, the most incandescent and sensual vignette of the entire program. Naturally, it is abridged and rearranged like one of Stoki’s infamous “Symphonic Syntheses.” Unwittingly, Disney tailored this Nutcracker Suite for the upcoming hippie acidhead generation (who eventually elevated Fantasia to masterpiece status). Darting fairies, spectral spider webs, and psychedelic mushrooms are followed by larger, dew-shaking `shrooms engaged in a Chinese tango. Being a ballet, naturally there is plenty of dancing, but the Disney team imaginatively improve on the yawn-inducing holiday imagery that we have come to associate with Tchaikovsky’s most famous music (which, as Taylor reminds us, the composer himself detested). Guaranteed, you will not find blue fairies, Russian Cossacks, pink fairies, waltzing flowers, orange fairies, or rhythmic goldfish mating with fairies (?) and swimming through an erotic Busby Berkeleyesque aquatic Arabic dance sequence at your local ballet company anytime soon.Paul Dukas’ The Sorcerer’s Apprentice is justifiably Fantasia`s most famous segment. Having a narrative (albeit a wordless one) to work with inspired the team to great heights. It is possibly the last time we will see Mickey Mouse before he succumbs to total blandness.With its narrative of white magic and sorcery, it is remarkable that the evangelical zealots of the day did not hone in on this segment (the way they did more recently with the Harry Potter series). It’s either that such types are somehow even more de-evolved than they were seventy years ago (possible, but not likely) or they stayed away from anything with the tag of “classical music” attached anyway. Since they didn’t see it, they didn’t know to get their feathers riled. Regardless, Stokowski had no such qualms. This being a tone poem, it is tailored for his bag of tricks. Even the most art-constipated among us can enjoy our once favorite mouse in the expert choreography composed by the Disney team.Igor Stravinsky’s ballet “Le Sacre du printemps” (“The Rite of Spring”) is served up here for the eternal dinosaur-loving eight-year-old boy. Actually, the ballet is about pagan sacrifice and is so dissonant and barbaric that it caused one of the biggest scandals of music history in the form of a violent riot during the 1913 premiere at the Theatre des Champs-Elysees. Regardless of the ballet’s narrative change (and the necessary abridgment), the composer (the only living composer chosen for the film) at first loved the Disney/Stokowski version. Years later, he did an about face (as he was apt to do), vilifying it. Still, given the time, the Darwinism included here was a damned provocative decision. This was only fifteen years after the Scopes trial, yet Disney and team are showing us the beginning of life on earth as science has revealed. Fish mutating into amphibious lifeforms show the artists clearly siding with Scopes and Clarance Darrow. Naturally, the dinosaurs come, and no Creation Museum is going to stop them. While the Le Sacre du Printemps (2004) film by the tragically short-lived Oliver Herrmann might be aesthetically truer to the avant-garde nature of Stravinsky’s masterpiece, Fantasia`s interpretation is rousing (and exhausting). After carnivorous lizards and the extinction of much life on earth, we deserve an amusing intermission with the soundtrack and, again Taylor is the host for the job.Fantasia`s treatment of Beethoven’s “Pastorale” symphony has always been a point of debate. Skinny dipping centaurettes are lured (by mooning cherubs) to square jawed, beefcake centaurs. Fortunately, the centaurettes do manage to squeeze into their garland bras because their male counterparts don’t seem to know what to do next. Confused libidos and a bacchanal (where the wine is pouring) is rudely interrupted by none other than Zeus himself (wielding a lightening bolt forged by Vulcan). This is the famous “storm” movement of the Pastorale. Helios’ chariot brings forth a much-needed sunset, and Selene tucks the Earth in with the night of her cape. Stokowski’s reading, like Disney’s animation, is anything but subtle.Ponichelli’s ballet “Dance of the Hours” (from the opera “La Gioconda”) becomes what may be the most eccentric burlesque in the history of cinema. This is also a highly debated segment, which is to be expected with an amorous alligator cavorting with a hippo, alligators riding ostriches, and elephants riding alligators. Perhaps the Fantaisa-loving acid heads of the 1960s had a point.Mussorgsky’s “Night on Bald Mountain” was part of Stokowski’s standard repertoire. He has his own arrangement, as opposed to the Rimsky-Korsakov edition used in most concert programs. The Witches’ Sabbath brings out the Satanic Chernobog (modeled, in part, on Bela Lugosi and Wilford Jackson), descending on the town below like the Angel of Death terrorizing Egypt in the Moses narrative. Chernobog’s demons join their master in this violent, surreal nightmare, which, unfortunately for the victims, features a fiery pit to rival the worst of the gnostic apocalypses. The sadistic, phantasmagoric mayhem retreats with the chiming of the church bells that herald the segue into Schubert’s “Ave Maria.” Some have held these last two conjoined segments as the film’s best.Walt Disney had planned more editions of Fantasia (which included a collaboration with Salvador Dali), but its initial failure laid such plans to rest until sixty year later when Walt Disney Productions released Fantasia 2000. Fantasia 2000 had fleeting moments of brilliance, but was mostly a disappointing sequel; too clean, too crisp, lacking the risk-taking intensity and provocativeness of the original. Pinocchio may have had boys turning into jackasses, and Dumbo (1941) had it’s mind boggling “pink elephants on parade,” but Walt Disney’s Fantasia is chock-full of progressive weirdness and an ardent embrace of art for the sake of art.*Review originally published at 366 weird movies
Reviewer: Radda Zaldivar
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Wonderful Classic!
Review: If you love classical music and Disney classical cartoons, then this the best marriage of the two! I remember being introduced to this timeless classic by my mother. Disney incorporated classical music with their animation to create several short stories within itself create a masterpiece! This movie is great for the whole family! It is not boring and the flow of the film is just right! Believe me, the entire family can and will enjoy it!
Reviewer: Amazon Customer
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: A True Disney Classic
Review: Fantasia was Walt Disney’s attempt to highlight the importance of music. Though it wasn’t a hit at first, this movie has become a classic and has achieved Walt’s hope.
Reviewer: Nancy Morse
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: FANTASIA
Review: THERE HAD NEVER BEEN A MOVIE LIKE THIS AT THE TIME. IT CAME OUT A COUPLE OF YEARS AFTER I WAS BORN,MY BROTHER WANTED TO SEE IT. I WAS TOO YOUNG, BUT REMEMBER HIS KNOWING ABOUT IT….SO I WAS MAYBE THREE OR FOUR. THIS WOULD HAVE BEEN ENTIRELY TOO YOUNG TO VIEW PARTS OF IT.LUCKILY, I DID NOT SEE IT TILL I WAS AN ADULT….WELL, I AM NEARLY 76, AND WAS TAKEN SHRIEKING FROM THE THEATRE AFTER THEY TOOK THE TWO OF US KIDS TO SEE SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARFS. I NEVER FORGOT SEEING THE QUEEN ONSCREEN, CHANGING INTO HER WITCH-PERSON.ON A BIG SCREEN, THIS WAS TERRIFYING.I MENTION THIS, BECAUSE TODAY’S CHILDREN ARE STILL CHILDREN FIRST. THEY NEED TO BE PREPARED TO KNOW THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN REALITY AND IMAGINATION UNDER SUCH CIRCUMSTANCES. WE THOUGHT THAT “LOST IN SPACE” TV SHOW…WAY BACK IN BLACK-AND-WHITE-TV DAYS….A LOW-BUDGET, LAUGHABLE THING NOW….WELL, WE THOUGHT OUR LITTLE THREE-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER WOULD ENJOY IT ALSO. ONLY YEARS LATER DID WE ASK HER WHY SHE WOULD LEAVE HER ROOM AND SLEEP BEHIND THE SOFA, ALL HUDDLED UP WITH NO BLANKET. WE WOULD FIND HER IN THE MORNING. SHE SAID THAT SHE DID NOT WANT TO BOTHER ANYBODY, BUT THAT THERE WERE “CREATURES” IN HER ROOM, SO SHE JUST LEFT!MY HEAVENS! WHAT DID WE, BOTH DEGREED EDUCATORS NOT THINK THROUGH!SO: WHILE FANTASIA – THE ORIGINAL – IS INCREDIBLE AND WONDERFUL AND FANTASTIC, IT MIGHT BE WISE TO DECIDE BY FIRST VIEWING THIS, AS TO HOW TO PREPARE ANY OF YOUR CHILDREN BEFORE THEY SEE IT.”NIGHT ON BALD MOUNTAIN,” AND “THE RITE OF SPRING,” ARE BOTH ADULT FARE. TOTALLY ADULT. AND YOU HAVE TO HAVE A SOMEWHAT SOPHISTICATED MIND TO UNDERSTAND THESE.THIS IS PROBABLY ONE OF THE MOST INCREDIBLY BEAUTIFUL FILMS EVER MADE, WITH SPLENDID MUSIC, OF COURSE. IT SHOULD BE APPRECIATED BY EVERY PERSON. THE TSCHAIKOVSKY “NUTCRACKER SUITE,” WITH LITTLE MUSHROOMS CIRCLING AROUND, THE “DANCE OF THE HOURS,” WITH A HIPPOPOTAMUS IN A TUTU AND AN ALLIGATOR AS THE ASSISTING MALE….(PLOP!) WELL, THE ENTIRE THING IS JUST TERRIFIC.A HIGH SCHOOL FRIEND JUST TOLD ME RECENTLY THAT SHE WAS TERRIFIED OF “THE SORCERER’S APPRENTICE” WITH MICKEY MOUSE. THE MUSIC FRIGHTENED HER AND THE UNENDING LINE OF BROOMS.I THOUGHT IT WORTHWHILE TO GO INTO THIS MUCH DETAIL.KIDS LOVE HARRY POTTER. BUT NO KID SHOULD BE VIEWING SWEENEY TODD. SO USE DISCRETION AND MONITOR WHAT PARTS YOUNG CHILDREN SEE AND SAVE THE REST FOR LATER……MAYBE HANG ON TO THE DVD AND NOT HAVE IT AVAILABLE IF YOU HAVE VARIOUS AGES OF CHILDREN…..YOU SHOULD, AS A PARENT, ALWAYS WANT WHAT IS BEST FOR YOUR KIDS, RIGHT?AN INVALUABLE FILM BUT FOR THE RIGHT AGES OF THE VIEWERS.NANCY MORSE
Reviewer: Fernando
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Le va a encantar, la conviene con un ratón de peluche disfrazado igual a él de la pelÃcula
Reviewer: béatrice lebris
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: cadeau pour un enfant mélomane de 4 ans ce dessin animé musical est parfait !
Reviewer: GUIDO
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: cartone animato anomalo, molto bello
Reviewer: didi leblond
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: ahhh fantasia , quel pure et réel moment de bonheur pour tous à travers cette qualité d’images exceptionnelle mais aussi cette magie et l’enchantement qui nous plongent dans ce grand classique intemporel , toujours un régal !!!
Reviewer: Druck-Freak
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Ãber den Filminhalt braucht es keine weitere Beschreibung… eben ein ECHTER Disney!Das trifft auch auf die technische Umsetzung zu. Die Bildqualität ist nach BLU-RAY – MaÃstab mustergültig. Als wäre es eine aktuelle Produktion.Der Ton wurde ebenfalls mit Sachverstand und Herzblut restauriert. Sogar die deutsche Tonspur glänzt mit 5.1-Kanal-Ton. Eine echte Rarität.Abgerundet wird das Ganze durch die Extras. Diese Veröffentlichung ist rundum gelungen!!!