Tag: Curiosities Page 1 of 2

Mea Culpa Mystery and Robin Williams’ Genie Outtakes

ROBIN WILLIAMS may have been an incorrigible exhibitionist during his lifetime but in death, through his will, he has ensured his image will be tightly controlled.

The Oscar-winning comedian, who killed himself last year aged 63 after battling with depression and a neurological illness, has forbidden fresh exploitation of his name, taped performances or voice recordings for 25 years.

As a result, Disney has abandoned plans to make a fourth instalment of the blockbuster Aladdin animation, assembled from quips and other lines left on the cutting room floor during the original 1991 recording sessions.

John Harlow for the sunday times

There is a little mystery here regarding prequels and sequels. Michial suggested this was the same as the Aladdin movie tentatively entitled “Genies” – which The Hollywood Reporter first announced in July 2015 (Williams committed suicide in August 2014). And it makes sense that a film titled Genies would want to use the voice of THE GENIE, but plans to use his outtakes isn’t mentioned in the piece.

Disney is going back to the world of Aladdin, its 1992 animated classic, with a live-action prequel.

The studio is developing Genies, a live-action comedy adventure that is being written by Damian Shannon and Mark SwiftTripp Vinson is on board to produce via his Vinson Films banner.

Borys Kit for The Hollywood Reporter

However, the reports of posthumous blocking of sequels came in November 2015 – with no mention of Genies but only of an Aladdin Sequel. (Aladdin 4?) So – are these the same movies and sequel and prequel are being conflated? I guess if Genies releases prior to 2039 we’ll make this post a mea-culpa; hopefully it remains a curiosity.

The Disney executive told The Times, “Because [Williams] insisted on a final say on such material, [the jokes] will remain in the vaults” and a planned Aladdin sequel will stay on the shelf. Until 2039, that is.

JOANNA ROBINSON for Vanity Fair

The Picasso Sent To Robin Williams in Apology

Disney didn’t help its cause by sending Williams a late Picasso said to have cost more than $1 million. The painting is from a series of Picasso self-portraits in which he imagines himself as other artists; here he’s a one-eared Van Gogh. In the Williams living room, the painting has all the charm of a fright wig, clashing with the animal cages, the children’s furniture, and the mood of the owners.

Jesse Kornbluth

Al Hirschfeld: An Elegant Man & Elegant Line

Every animated film goes through its concept stage with concept art and looking for inspiration that will set the design tone.

When Disney artists sought inspiration for their new feature “Aladdin,” they turned to a very different source: the elegantly minimal caricatures of Al Hirschfeld.

Eric Goldberg – on his first assignment – brings the idea of looking to Hirschfeld to the Disney animation team.

“I look on Hirschfeld’s work as a pinnacle of boiling a subject down to its essence, so that you get a clear, defined statement of a personality,” explains “Alladin” supervising animator Eric Goldberg, who was in charge of the madcap Genie. “There’s also an organic quality in the way one line will flow into another: It may go along the back of a neck, down the spine, across the behind and the down the leg–all in one single line that is very, very elegant. I wanted the Genie to have that kind of elegance.”

And speaking of elegant – what a humble and elegant man Al Hirschfeld must have been to rattle off this quote:

“I’m very flattered that the animators say they were influenced by my use of line,” he says. “But art isn’t a 50-yard dash–it’s more like a relay: You keep handing it on to somebody else, and there’s no beginning or end to it. I didn’t invent the line: That simplification that communicates to a viewer goes back to the cave drawings at Altamira.”

Quotes pulled from this 1992 LA Times cover story.

Eric Goldberg

Goldberg’s first assignment for Walt Disney Animation was as Supervising Animator of Genie from Aladdin (1992), followed by co-directing Pocahontas (1995), animating Phil in Hercules (1997), and work on Fantasia/2000 (1999)

In 2006, Goldberg returned to Walt Disney Animation Studios, where he served as Supervising Animator for Louis and “Tiana’s Song” in The Princess and the Frog (2009). For this, Goldberg won his third Annie Award for Best Character Animation in 2009. He also animated Rabbit and the “Backson Song” sequence in Winnie the Pooh (2011). ForWreck-It Ralph (2012), he created hand-drawn animation tests of King Candy and Sour Bill. In 2013, Goldberg was the Supervisor of Hand-Drawn Animation on Oscar®-nominated Get a Horse! (2013). More recently, Goldberg created the hand-drawn animated character Mini Maui, the tattoo conscience of the Maui character for Moana (2016).

The Walt Disney Family Museum

It’s stunning that this was Eric Goldberg’s first assignment at Disney. I am sure there are other examples of one character’s design setting the tone and style direction for the entire movie – but I can’t think of one that was as influential on the look of the overall film as Genie’s was on Aladdin. Not to mention that it was his character animation test over Robin William’s standup that helped get Robin Williams to take the role – another huge impact on the entire animation industry. No wonder they awarded Eric the Winsor-McCay for lifetime achievement. He lifetime achieved in his first assignment!

Definitive Guide to Aladdin’s Genie Impressions

If you’re as baffled as Aladdin, or – let’s be honest – me, with Genie’s many impressions, then the fine folks over at Lazertime have got you covered with a breakdown of not only who is being impersonated, but also a brief synopsis of what makes them pop-culture notables.

Jafar Katzenberg

This was drawn by Nik Ranieri and I found it on Andres Deja’s blog. We mention Andres Deja pretty regularly on the show because he’s so well spoken about animation, and because his blog is an incredible resource for animation fans.

Robin Williams: The Trope Codifier of Star Power

Via: TVtropes.org

Trope Codifier – does not claim originality, but is the template that all later uses of this trope follow.

In other words, if in tracing the history of a trope, one example stands out as the template that many, many other examples follow, that’s the Trope Codifier.

Aladdin is the Trope Codifier in Western Animation for the value of star power in casting voice actors.

And, as expected, TV tropes as a whole lexicon of these terms beyond Trope Codifier and Ur-Example including Trope Maker and The Most Triumphant Example.

Literacy in 18th Century France

Here is a fun little map and visualization tool from Our World In Data.

Around The Network: Christian Humanist Podcast, Episode #225: The Idea of a Christian Society

One of a handful of times that Michial Farmer, David Grubbs, and Nathan Gilmour graced the same physical space and time.

Michial Farmer talks with David Grubbs and Nathan Gilmour about T.S. Eliot’s essay “The Idea of a Christian Society.” This episode comes to you live from the Culture, Criticism, and the Christian Mind conference at Dordt College in Sioux Center, Iowa.

Show Notes

Sioux Center Arts Facebook Page

Michial met our special guest Kate Henreckson at the Culture, Criticism, and the Christian Mind conference at Dordt College in Sioux Center, Iowa. Michial discovered Kate played Belle in the stage production of Beauty and the Beast, and she is the biggest fan of the movie Michial has ever met. A perfect guest for our show.

Kate is the arts director at Sioux Center Arts, and you can keep up with her on the Facebook page.

The Unbearable Critiques of Fairie as Demonstrated by The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt

From a Vulture recap of Season 4, Episode 5: Kimmy and the Beest!

Hudson tells Kimmy not to worry, because the Beast is a good guy in the end, but she disagrees: “What’s the message here? Take a girl prisoner, tell her what clothes to wear, then she’ll fall in love with you because you didn’t straight-up eat her?… Kiss girls while they’re sleeping? Climb their hair whenever you want? Bust into ladies’ houses and steal a shoe? I always knew this fairy-tale stuff was lousy for girls, but it stinks on ice for boys, too.”
Kimmy’s right, of course, and Titus, who grew up where theater was considered gay by the state Board of Education, is the perfect example of how patriarchy hurts men as much or more than women.

I’ve never seen the show, and so this is not a specific critique. However, the framing in the recap is a perfect example of how our modern imaginations about fairy tales, and indeed anything not of “the moment,” have been so corrupted as to miss the point completely followed by a celebration of the bungle as a form of virtue signaling. I can only hope that our show pushes back against this tendency in some small way.

Camp Candy

Fair warning: I didn’t watch that whole clip, so I have no idea what you might see. Then again, it’s not really my nostalgia as I’d never heard of the television show Camp Candy until Michial mentioned it on the show.

Frank Welker

From IMDB, Frank Welker’s Disney Animated Canon roles:

Brother Bear (additional animal vocal effects – uncredited) 

Mulan 
Khan / Cri-Kee (voice)

The Hunchback of Notre Dame 
Baby Bird / Djali (voice)

Pocahontas 
Flit (voice)

The Lion King 
Lion Roars (voice)

Aladdin 
Abu / Cave of Wonders / Rajah (voice)

Beauty and the Beast (special vocal effects) 

The Rescuers Down Under 
Joanna (voice)

The Rescuers Down Under (performer: “Home On The Range (McLeach Version)” – uncredited) 

The Little Mermaid 
Max (voice, uncredited)

Oliver & Company 
Carlo / Louie the Sausage Vendor / Animal Sounds (voice)

The Great Mouse Detective 
Toby the Dog / Felicia the Cat (voice, uncredited)

The Eagle (read: Red-Tailed Hawk) Screech

From a soundsnap.com article: 5 Most Identifiable (and Overused) Sound Effects in Cinema

The gorgeous eagle that has awed us on-screen is an imposter. Let me explain: that sound that everyone associates with an eagle as it soars into view in a movie? Yeah, it’s actually not an eagle at all. That screech that the sly eagle has been passing off as his legendary call is actually the screech of a red-tailed hawk.
 
The sound that the eagle actually makes is…well, let’s just say it’s far more adorable and not nearly as impressive as that of the hawk. Which is why it’s been traded for an eagle call in movie scenes; filmmakers have all agreed that it just sounds cooler and goes with the impressive beauty of the soaring eagle. Poor hawk though.

Disney Villain Death

From TVtropes.org Please click the link to see the caption they have on the picture above. It is *kisses fingers* perfection.

The varied list of things to fall from includes cliffs, over waterfalls, out of trees, and off the tops of buildings. There is at least one case of a Disney villain meeting his end by falling up(off a spaceship and into space), and once sideways (off the Chinese Imperial Palace by the aid of a rocket). A surprising number of Disney villains have also been dragged to their doom by demons (up to three depending on how you’re counting).

The White Stripes and the value of creative constraints

From a New York Times Magazine interview in 2003. Emphasis added.

JACK: It’s not counter to us. It’s what our band is about. We’re white people who play the blues, and our problem was how do we do that and not be fake? Our idea was to strip away everything unnecessary, to put ourselves in a box, to make rules for ourselves.

What sort of rules?

JACK: In live shows, we never play from a set list. The last record, we said, no guitar solos, no slide guitar, no covers.
And no bass?

MEG: The last record had no bass. This one has some bass. We’re not against the bass.

Why hem yourself in with restrictions?

JACK: It makes the band what it is. I’m disgusted by artists or songwriters who pretend there are no rules. There’s nothing guiding them in their creativity. We could’ve spent six months making our last album. We could have recorded 600 tracks. Instead, we went and made the whole album, 18 songs, in 10 days.

And, from an editorial written in 2011, Why Meg Matters, after the band broke up. Again, emphasis added.

But just because Jack was the primary creative force in The White Stripes doesn’t mean Meg was inessential. I’ll quote Jack himself, from an interview I did with him just before Icky Thump was released:

AVC: Does a White Stripes song have certain parameters?

JW: Oh yeah, lots of them do. There’s an overall structure of simplicity, and it revolves around Meg’s drumming style. And it can’t be beat. We can’t do those structures in The Raconteurs. We couldn’t do them if we wanted to, and that’s the beauty of Meg. In The Raconteurs, there’s so many more components, so many more personalities involved. If you get another person in the room, you’re dealing with something else. It’s a different kind of collaboration, you know? The parameters of The White Stripes… you know, 70 to 80 percent of what we do is constriction, and the other 20 to 30 percent is us breaking that constriction to see what happens.

Percival C. McLeach probably has nothing to do with Archibald MacLeish

A poet, playwright, lawyer, and statesman, Archibald MacLeish’s roots were firmly planted in both the new and the old worlds.

McLeach is an evil and eccentric poacher who captures rare animals and sells them, usually for their hides.

Elaborate Train Sets, Sadness, And The Compulsion To Create

All of his zest for invention, for creating fantasies, seemed to be going into this plaything. I came away feeling sad

— Bosley Crowther

I hope I don’t offend any of our listeners. The men who have the elaborate miniature train sets always seem…like they are sad.

— Michial Farmer

I’m not sure what to make of this sadness, and again no offense to the man himself, bu the first person I though of was Bruce Zaccagnino.

[vimeo 166403522 w=640 h=360]

Now, this could be our own cultural reacting. When I was in Germany I visited many elaborate model villages and experienced a sense of joy and whimsy. Likewise, I have fond memories of visiting model train installations with my dad as a kid. It was a shared interest and there is something magical about the amount of effort that goes into those things.

My dad had a model train that has stayed mostly in a box. There was a short time when he had it out and started working on it. I asked for one for Christmas and loved going to the model train shop in town to look at all the possibilities. Nothing much ever came of it, which is why I floundered around in my response during the podcast. Again, I have fond memories: bonding with my dad, looking at plans and engines, day dreaming. That’s obviously not what Michial was talking about.

Those with elaborate sets have neccesarily taken things to a whole new level. I suppose they could be bonding experiences as well, but I wonder if more often they aren’t more akin to the way “Lord Business” from The Lego Movie acts. Using the toy not as a way to see his son, but as a way to not see him. Compelled to fill some sort of emptiness. I suppose you could say that about any creative endeavor. Which is probably why I feel uncomfortable casting any judgement. It’s like Ian Morgan Cron says (I’m paraphrasing): People make the most beautiful and destructive things out of their wounds. Sometimes both.

Jason Kottke asks in relation to Bruce:

What compels people to do things? Especially things that don’t make sense to other people?

Somehow I think the compulsion must have a bit of the divine in it. No matter if it’s twisted or redeemed we all have the spark of the Creator in us and reflect His image. Therefore we create. It makes me think of Flannery O’Connor.

“Whether the work itself is completely successful, or whether you ever get any worldly success out of it, is a matter of no concern to you. It is like the Japanese swordsmen who are indifferent to getting slain in the duel… You do not write the best you can for the sake of art but for the sake of returning your talent increased to the invisible God to use or not use as he sees fit. Resignation to the will of God does not mean that you stop resisting evil or obstacles, it means that you leave the outcome out of your personal considerations. It is the most concern coupled with the least concern.”

— Flannery O’Connor

May we all find joy in resigning ourselves to the will of God.

The Disney Afternoon

This block of syndicated programming, which aired nationwide and in countries across the world, became the touchstone of an entire generation of kids. So entrenched are these adventures in the collective subconscious that today you could approach most people ages 20 to 30-something and—even if they’re not a huge Disney fan—find they can instantly summon up a trademark DuckTales “woo-hoo!” – Brittany Bell

That ‘91-’92 two hour block of afternoon television: Ducktails, Chip ‘n Dale Rescue Rangers, TailSpin, and Darkwing Duck, may have been the peak of civilization. History will be the judge, I guess.

*Update 4/2/2020* Chip ‘n Dale Rescue Rangers was originally meant to be a The Rescuers spin-off television show. This might be part of why The Rescuers Down Under feels closer to Rescue Rangers than The Rescuers, but it could also be that they were both developing in the same era and shared common influences.

Nostalgia junkies click here for historic details, theme songs, ring tones, tee-shirts.

How Ub Iwerks Ended Up Back At Disney

Ub Iwerks is a fascinating character in the history of animation and with Walt Disney Studios. Co-creator of Mickey and inventor of the xerox style of animation would be enough, but the personal drama with Walt makes the story more human, tragic, and interesting. Plus he built his own version of the MultiPlane camera out of car parts and scrap metal?!

The Walt Disney Family Museum has a biography and overview of Ub’s contributions to the company.

Ub Iwerks was a man of many talents. He was a prolific animator and a brilliant technical mind. He was Walt’s Swiss Army knife, a man who was to Walt whatever he needed him to be. He was as necessary to the beginning of Walt’s career as he was to the end. He left The Walt Disney Studios at a critical juncture to pursue his own career, but eventually found his way back to the company he had once animated into success to engineer it to new heights.

Kind of a lot glossed over in that “left…at a critical juncture…eventually found his way back”

Creative differences with Walt wore on Ub and when offered the chance for artistic freedom and financial backing to run his own animation studio in 1930, he took it. Unbeknownst to Ub, this deal was through Pat Powers, one of the co-founders of Universal Pictures who had a complicated relationship (to say the least) with The Walt Disney Studios. Powers distributed and provided sound equipment for Disney’s cartoons starting with the seminal Steamboat Willie, but soon after, Walt and Roy became suspicious of his business practices and hired their first company attorney, Gunther Lessing, to protect themselves and satisfy their remaining obligations to him.

Where Powers was the saving grace for Mickey Mouse and The Walt Disney Studios in 1928, by the next year he was in the middle of a legal quarrel with Walt over box office receipts, and then the following year, he had signed away Walt’s best friend and animator and ceded the right to distribute Walt’s cartoons to his company’s parent distributor, Columbia Pictures. Upon learning of his new employer, Ub went through Roy to explain to Walt that he did not mean to take a job from Powers, and had he known who he would be working for, “he would never have gone into this.”

So heartbreak for Walt who at the time was still trying to build a utopian studio. But not much on how Iwerks eventually ended up back at the studio. We get to see his name in the credits once again for Make Mine Music, which is a fun surprise if you’re following along in chronological order. Here’s what Neal Gabler has to say about the reunion:

Perhaps the most dramatic demonstration of his regard for the ghosts of his past was his treatment of the man who had committed what was, in Walt’s mind, one of the worst betrayals: his old partner, Ub Iwerks. After leaving the studio abruptly in 1930, lured by the blandishments of Pat Powers, Iwerks had fallen on hard times. His own studio had failed, forcing him to subcontract with Warner Bros. and then Columbia, but these arrangements were ultimately terminated too. “He was one of the first—if not the first—to give his characters depth and roundness,” animator Chuck Jones explained. “But he didn’t have any story capacity, and I don’t think he knew very much about humor; he wasn’t a funny man at all.” In 1940 he was teaching animation at a local vocational school and had gotten up the nerve to write Walt that July about the possibility of opening a school of his own, presumably to help train Disney animators. Walt referred the letter to Vern Caldwell in personnel, who dismissed the suggestion. Meanwhile Ben Sharpsteen, hearing about Iwerks’s plight, phoned him, said that starting a school would be “belittling,” and offered him a job checking animation, which Iwerks gratefully accepted. Sharpsteen was obviously trying to broker a rapprochement between Iwerks and Walt, and when he told Walt that he had asked Iwerks back, Walt said it was Sharpsteen’s prerogative to hire whomever he liked. But on August 9 Walt and Iwerks had lunch at the studio, over which, as Iwerks later told it, Walt asked him what he really wanted to do there. Iwerks, always more interested in technology than animation, said he answered, “Prowl around.” Overlooking their past dispute, Walt assigned him to help develop a new optical camera for special effects, illustrating both Walt’s commitment to anything that would help his studio regardless of his personal feelings and his attachment to his old colleagues now that he presided over an increasingly impersonal bureaucracy.

And “prowl around” he certainly did. Here’s a summary from Michael Ruocco at Cartoon Brew:

When Ub rejoined the Disney studio in 1940, Walt Disney gave his old partner free reign to do as he wished. With Disney’s resources, Ub developed special effects techniques for animation, live-action films and Disney’s theme parks, much of which is still in use today. He helped develop the sodium vapor process for live-action/animation combination and traveling mattes, which he won an Oscar for in 1965 after utilizing it in Mary Poppins. He adapted the Xerox process for animation, which eliminated the tedious task of hand inking every cel. For Disneyland, Ub designed and developed concepts for many of the park’s attractions, including the illusions in The Haunted Mansion and the animatronics for attractions like Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln and Pirates of the Caribbean. Disney even loaned him out to Alfred Hitchcock to help with the effects needed to create flocks of attacking birds in The Birds.

And Iwerks desert years weren’t a total bust either. His failed studio was a bit of a Forest Gump of the animation world :

Many animators got their start at Ub’s studio in the early 1930s, including UPA co-founder Steve Bosustow and Warner Bros. director Chuck Jones. Manga and anime pioneer Osama Tezuka was also greatly influenced and inspired by Ub’s work.

Walt Disney’s Alice Comedies And The First Faltering Steps To Blending Live Action And Animation

This is from the failed Laugh-O-Gram studios in Kansas City, a catalyst of sorts for what later became Walt Disney Studios. After making this movie the studio went bankrupt before ever getting it distributed, prompting Walt to leave Missouri and head to California. To borrow a cliché, the rest is history.

Perhaps Walt losing interest in the animation side of his studio shouldn’t be all that surprising; he was always practicing the art of pushing technology into the adjacent possible. He’s certainly doing that here. And, there is a joy in seeing him doing that. Even watching this nearly 100 years on (!) there’s a palpable sense of wonder and energy in those “rubber hose” animations. The Look-What-We-Can-Do playfulness still stirs the imagination, in many ways more effectively than what we see in The Three Caballeros.

The Disney Animation Strike of 1941

A very brief summary of the strike, told by Tom Sito, President-Emeritus of The Animation Guild. In other words, not Walt’s side of the story.

Walt felt personally betrayed when Art Babbitt, his highest-paid animator, resigned as president of the Disney company union to join the Guild. Three days after Disney brazenly fired Babbitt, the Disney strike began on May 29, 1941.

The strike lasted for five weeks, forever tearing the social fabric of the studio.

— Tom Sito

Read the whole thing.

Walt And El Grupo

More background than you could possibly want about the background of Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros, but only Walt’s side of the story on the labor strike.

Come for the behind the scenes of 1940s Disney, stay for the joys of 1940s Rio!

Walt and El Grupo on IMDB

From All Of Us To All Of You

Michial and I sometimes talk about package films, parts of the movies that were cut up and repackaged by Disney. This must have been one of the first, and one that Michial was familiar with, 1958’s From All Of Us To All Of You. It features Jimmy Cricket in the segue sequences, as well as the snow and ice scene from Bambi.

Around The Network: Sectarian Review, Episode #50: The Wolf Man

As part of the annual Christian Humanist Network Massive Crossover 2017 discussing the Universal Monster Movies, Michial went over and guested on The Sectarian Review.

Take a deep dive into the film’s story, background, and subtexts. Freud, Feminism, Class Struggle and more. Also, the team tackle questions about the film from listeners via Twitter. Plus, Danny makes an impassioned defense of the 2010 remake of the film.

Show Notes

Around The Network: The Christian Feminist Podcast, Episode #69: The Phantom Of The Opera

As part of the annual Christian Humanist Network Massive Crossover 2017 discussing the Universal Monster Movies, I went over and guested on The Christian Feminist Podcast. So, if you just can’t get enough of me talking about 1940’s movies, here is another opportunity for you!

Show Notes

Documenting the Recycling of Scenes in Disney Animated Films

What I love in here is the argument presented that the films were never really meant to be watched the way that we watch them now, where we can take the time to slow down and really analyze them, and create books, podcasts, youtube documentaries, essays, and more around them. I like that ecosystem of art: where once it’s in the world, it can support whole other endeavors that weren’t in the mind or even the imagination of the creator; all these Odes to Grecian Urns that we undertake. Yet the films can withstand it.

I was surprised to learn that this copying of previous work was happening prior to the use of xerography, although the xerography certainly seems to have provided an uptick in how much the technique was used; however there were several other factors involved there as well.

This video does the side by side comparisons, but also gives another overview of the history of Disney Animation Studios.

[youtube=://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JU21shbaVBo&w=854&h=480]

The Eras Of The Disney Canon

As we converse through the Disney Animated Canon in chronological order sometimes we refer to the Silver Age, or the Dark Age (in the image above more charitably called the Bronze Age). Other than the wartime/package films era being a pretty clear line between the Golden Age and the Silver age, the rest of the eras are more debatable. For example Michial said during our 101 Dalmatians episode that he thought we were entering the First Dark Age, although many people put the start of the Dark Age after Jungle Book and Walt Disney’s death. Although honestly, Walt had definitely lost interest in the animation for several years before his death, and it may be a better delineator to call this the xerography era. Those debates are all part of the fun of looking at these movies. Either way, this graphic from Network 1901 is a pretty good one, and the video I grabbed it out of ain’t bad either if you’re looking for a nice overview of the entire canon. I disagree with a few of the narratives presented in the video, but it’s an overview so there’s not a ton of room for nuance.

And, if you’re just looking for a list of the films in the canon – Wikipedia is your friend : )

The Adjacent Possible and Xerography

On the show Michial and I spent a fair amount of time discussing the new technology, xerography, that both allowed animation to be cost effective at Disney, and ushered in a new aesthetic that perfectly matched the Dalmatians.

Steven Johnson is the popularizer of an idea called the adjacent possible. As he puts it:

The phrase captures both the limits and the creative potential of change and innovation.

— Steven Johnson

It’s a particularly apt idea to describe what happened with 101 Dalmatians because of the convergence of so many limits and potentials. The combinations of technologies that makes xerography as an animation tool an adjacent possible. (I’d love to know more of that story – Ub Iwerks, the guy who first animated Mickey Mouse, is a key player.) The xerography itself that makes animating 99 puppies an adjacent possible. Choosing to adapt that story makes the other modern art style decisions adjacently possible. And of course all these ideas are smashing into one another at the same time, which is another big idea in Johnson’s book: Where Good Ideas Come From. Very nicely illustrated in the trailer for the book below.

[youtube=://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NugRZGDbPFU&w=854&h=480]

Matt Draper has a nice video that further explores some of those smashing together limits and potentials. If you listened to our episode you already know them: Walt Disney’s losing interest in animation, the financial struggles after Sleeping Beauty, etc. If you’re only interested in the actual technology of Xerography, skip to about 3:40 for a nice visual explainer.

[youtube=://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CWwU8jd04-I&w=854&h=480]

Back to Johnson:

The strange and beautiful truth about the adjacent possible is that its boundaries grow as you explore them. Each new combination opens up the possibility of other new combinations. Think of it as a house that magically expands with each door you open. You begin in a room with four doors, each leading to a new room that you haven’t visited yet. Once you open one of those doors and stroll into that room, three new doors appear, each leading to a brand-new room that you couldn’t have reached from your original starting point. Keep opening new doors and eventually you’ll have built a palace.

— Steven Johnson

There’s no doubt that Disney already had a palace by the time 101 Dalmatians was released in 1961. However a whole new wing was opened through the use of the Xerography, not only to allow animation to continue at the studio, and to expand the types of stories that were told.

If you read all of Johnson’s Wall Street Journal article adapted from his book he gives one more example of the adjacent possible from the Apollo 13 movie. And as this has to be one of my favorite scenes in cinema, I couldn’t resist sticking it in here as well.

[youtube=://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1cYzkyXp0jg&w=854&h=480]

The space gear on the table defines the adjacent possible for the problem of building a working carbon scrubber on a lunar module…They are the building blocks that create—and limit—the space of possibility for a specific problem.

— Steven Johnson

Pink Is A Boys Color

For example, a June 1918 article from the trade publication Earnshaw’s Infants’ Department said, “The generally accepted rule is pink for the boys, and blue for the girls. The reason is that pink, being a more decided and stronger color, is more suitable for the boy, while blue, which is more delicate and dainty, is prettier for the girl.”

— Jeanne Maglaty

It seems gender neutral was becoming the fashion at the time of 101 Dalmatians in ‘61, and remained so until 1985!

When Did Girls Start Wearing Pink?

Around the Network: The Christian Humanist Podcast, episode 118: Metamodernism

If metamodernism or postmodernism met the caterpillar from Alice in Wonderland, and he demanded, “Who are you?” how would they answer? We may never know, but you’ll have a better imaginative guess after listening to this.

Show Notes

Around the Network: The Christian Humanist Podcast, episode 126.1: Postmodernism 101

Postmodernism is a slippery concept, but you can desplippify it with this handy audio guide. Then you can decide for yourself how postmodern, modern, protopostmodern, or otherwise 1951’s Alice In Wonderland is.  

Show Notes

Everything You Could Ever Want To Know About the Many Recordings of Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf

This is the kind of thing I love about the internet, the space for people to just go incredibly deep on a single subject. Jeremy Nicholas, himself a recorded narrator of Peter and the Wolf, thoroughly examines the catalogue for Gramphone.

And in the process he says more clearly the idea I was trying to hit upon when I sacrilegiously suggested the Make Mine Music version would be better off without Sterling Holloway (keeping the introduction to the instruments and characters).

Then there is Suzie Templeton’s Oscar-winning animated film from 2006, already a classic of its kind. There is no narrator – none is needed – for the updated story unfolds with logic and comedic balletic precision in, arguably, the only attempt to bring some psychological realism to Prokofiev’s sketchy tale.

Essentially the narrator isn’t necessary once you have the animation defining the action for you. I will definitely need to be checking out the film.

Or, if you wanted to, you could attempt to play the narratorless version while watching Make Mine Music with the sound muted. I might try that too, although I imagine there will be some synching issues.

[T]he Czecho-Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra under Ondrej Lenárd…was issued initially without narration, an oddity you can still track down (the only other CD recording I’ve found without narration is Tatiana Nikolaieva playing her piano transcription). 

Do you have a favorite recording of Peter and the Wolf? Join the conversation and let me know.

The 1986 Disney DTV Valentine

[youtube=://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kjCT2jj1DpE&w=854&h=480]

Michial and I sometimes talk about parts of the movies that were cut up and repackaged. This was one such package that I watched regularly.

So far the memories from this special that we mentioned in the show have included:

  • The twitterpated scene from Bambi cut to Stevie Wonder’s I Just Called To Say I Love You. (Although I think I was conflating it in my mind with the Lionel Richie’s Hello which is a little later in the program)

  • The animation from All The Cats Join In with the music replaced by Stray Cats’ Rock This Town.

  • Ludwig Von Drake hosts

Hat tip to my mom for finding this on YouTube.

 

 

Flâneur and Fancy Free

If like me, you became interested in the flâneur after Michial mentioned it here is a rambling post titled Baudelaire, Benjamin and the Birth of the Flâneur from The Psychogeographic Review. I didn’t know anything about Flâneur, and so this seemed as good an introduction as any. As Michial pointed out in the episode, there is something more than just being cheerful and lazy in the hobo, or the flâneur- there is a spiritual quality they are pursuing. 

The concept of the flâneur, the casual wanderer, observer and reporter of street-life in the modern city, was first explored, at length, in the writings of Baudelaire. Baudelaire’s flâneur, an aesthete and dandy, wandered the streets and arcades of nineteenth-century Paris looking at and listening to the kaleidoscopic manifestations of the life of a modern city. The flâneur’s method and the meaning of his activities were bound together, one with the other. Indeed…the flâneur is trying to achieve a form of transcendence

— Bobby Seal

And, in our own way Michial and I are picking up the baton of the flâneurs, although instead of wandering through Paris, we’re wandering through the Disney Canon. I particularly like this idea:

Benjamin believed that one of the main tasks of his writing was to rescue the cultural heritage of the past in order to understand the present; not just the cultural treasures of the past, but the detritus and other discarded objects…Thus, we create a history which is not just that of the victor.

— Bobby Seal

Certainly we are wandering the cultural treasures (Bambi, Pinnochio) and the detritus (The Three Caballeros). And charitably (assuming you take the heroic view of the flâneur) maybe you could argue that is what Disney Animation Studios was doing in it’s own way as well: picking through the stories of the past and repurposing them for their current moment. Making sense of the world through cultural heritage.

In fact, Benjamin also drew a parallel between the experinence of being a flâneur and theatrical entertainment, and I do not think that is coincidental. In a very real sense theater and movies are always collecting, cutting, pasting and remixing life in order to make sense of the world. This is why they possess a deeper truth; they are a distillation of truth. And the process by which we access that truth is our collective imaginations.

By describing the flâneur’s vision of the city as phantasmagoric, Benjamin seems to suggest that it is a dream-like vision akin to that provided in theatrical entertainment. He also reminds us of Marx’s metaphorical description of the commodity as having the power of a religious fetish; an item that owes its magical status to the imaginative power of the human brain which confers magical powers upon it, at the same time as venerating the fetish, as an autonomous object. Phantasmagoric experiences, therefore, are created by humans, but have the appearance of seeming to possess a life of their own.

— Bobby Seal

Not unlike Happy Valley coming to life through the combined work of both Edger Bergen as the story teller and Luana’s imagination, which of course does lead to Willy having on a life of his own beyond Edger’s conception. 

President Obama and Third Culture Kids

Bongo may be the most famous Third Culture Bear in the world, but certainly the most famous Third Culture Kid of our time is President Obama. As I mentioned in the episode, there are some fascinating articles about this. This opening line by John H. Richardson in a 2010 piece on Obama for Esquire sums it up perfectly: “America just doesn’t understand President Obama.” Richardson’s piece does an excellent job of breaking down just what a TCK is, and why it is important, but here is the pertinent passage when considering Bongo:

People laugh at you for getting important social markers like dating rituals or slang wrong, and that’s when you realize how deep culture really goes — because when people realize you don’t share all their habits, they suspect you don’t share their values either.

As Richardson says talking about President Obama, but it applies just as well here to poor Bongo: “Sound familiar?”

Another more recent piece (2017) by Ryu Spaeth, appropriately titled Barack Obama, Forever a Third-Culture Kid, sums up a part of the TCK experience in lovely terms, while also highlighting some more of the famous TCKs you may not have known:

This is the legacy of being a third-culture child, like a toll one pays for happiness. Yet the great irony of this life, one so improbable that it makes me laugh, is that of the very few public figures who share this condition—Uma Thurman, Timothy Geithner, Steve Kerr, Kobe Bryant—of the luminaries in this world who, just by existing, make me feel less alone and insubstantial, one of them is the leader of the free world.

If you are interested in the topic of third-culture kids, as I am, I’d recommend the book Richardson quotes extensively in his article: Third Culture Kids: Growing Up Among Worlds by Ruth E. Van Renken, Michael Pollock, and David Pollock.

Third Culture Kids 3rd Edition: Growing up among worlds

By Ruth E. Van Reken, Michael V. Pollock, David C. Pollock

Around the Network: The Christian Humanist Podcast, episode 195: The Watchmen

During Fun and Fancy Free, I mentioned that I learned about Robert Louis Stevenson’s Virginibus Puerisque, through a link from Alan Jacobs. Here is a thoughtful episode on one of Alan Jacob’s essays.

Show Notes

The Annotated Jack and the Beanstalk

All the information you could possibly want about Jack and the Beanstalk, including two versions of the tale, all compiled by Heidi Anne Heiner. I have a strong feeling I will be linking to her site many times over the course of this series.

Donald Duck’s Family Tree

There are a couple very similar Donald Duck family trees floating around the interwebs, both illustrated by Don Rosa and based on the work of Carl Barks. The top image below includes Ludwig Von Drake, whereas the bottom one doesn’t. Don’t ask me which one is canon. Comicsalliance has some more interesting information on how the origins of the second image.

The Elizabethan Fool

Could Timothy Mouse also be characterized as a fool in the Elizabethan or Shakespearian sense?

“Pop quiz: what is one character archetype that appears in almost every Shakespeare play AND Disney movie?
I’ll give you a hint by listing some characters: Bottom, Puck, the Iguana in Tangled, Dori in Finding Nemo, the Clown in All’s Well That Ends Well, the Carpet in Aladdin. Got it yet?

The fool acts as the hero’s conscience. I realized this when I remembered Jiminy Cricket in Pinocchio. “Remember, Pinocchio,” says the Wish Upon A Star Lady, “be a good boy, and always let your conscience be your guide.”
Since the fool is already unfashionable, they have the freedom to always speak the truth, even when it is awkward or even dangerous to do so.
However, he also understands it’s often his humor that allows him to speak truth. As Oscar Wilde said, “If you want to tell people the truth, make them laugh, otherwise they’ll kill you.””

Joe BUnting

More about the fool as common archetype here.

Just Say “Hi” Campaign

[vimeo 167292056 w=640 h=360]

Good for them for teaching their children to be polite, and not stare and point. But, rather than sort of avoid engaging, or avoid acknowledging my existence…I would much prefer if parents would say…’go, say hello.’

As long as they did it in a respectful way. I think that’s a better way to handle it.

— Victoria Reynolds Farmer

Learn more here.

Breaking Down Media Stereotypes of Persons With A Disability

If you are interested in going deeper on the topic of media representation of persons with a disability, Colin Barnes’ report is an excellent jumping off point. He breaks down twelve commonly recurring media stereotypes. I noticed Dumbo fits a couple of the categories: Disabled Person as Object of Ridicule, Disabled Person as Pitiable and Pathetic, and Disabled Person as Super Cripple.

He also attempts to “formulate a set of principles which will enable all those who work in the media eliminate disablist imagery and so redress the balance.” For example, he nails Dumbo with this one: “Resist presenting disabled characters with extra-ordinary abilities or attributes. To do so is to suggest that a disabled individual must over compensate and become super human to be accepted by society.”

Knowing and thinking through these common representations helps us guard against the media inappropriately shaping our own imaginations about persons with a disability. And for those of us who are creators, it’s a good checklist to avoid disablist imagery in our own work.

Lots more resources in the Appendix as well.

Read the whole thing here.

Reclaiming “Crip” as a Badge of Pride

Selective use of “crip” or “crippled” by people with disabilities is a conscious act of empowerment through “reclaiming” a former slur as a badge of pride. “Selected use” means we don’t use it all the time, in every situation. We exercise judgment in when and where it’s appropriate to use.

— Disability Thinking

Thoughtful, nuanced, argument on the use of “crip.” More here.

A Breakdown of Medical vs. Social Models of Disability

The social model of disability says that disability is caused by the way society is organised, rather than by a person’s impairment or difference. It looks at ways of removing barriers that restrict life choices for disabled people. When barriers are removed, disabled people can be independent and equal in society, with choice and control over their own lives.

The medical model looks at what is ‘wrong’ with the person and not what the person needs. It creates low expectations and leads to people losing independence, choice and control in their own lives.

— Disability Nottinghamshire

More information and some practical examples here.

What is Cerebral Palsy?

[youtube=://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8XH0WPasBzQ&w=854&h=480]

A great overview of Cerebral Palsy. 

The Life and Work of Mary Blair

Join Dr. Victoria Reynolds Farmer in becoming a Mary Blair super fan. Get started.

Dr. Michial Farmer’s Primers on Christian Alternative Rock

Exactly the sort of thing I want for every genre of music – but especially classical. Also basically any other media I’m trying to get my head around. Helpful and informed opinions I can trust.

Learn more

 

Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah

[youtube=://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3_xiUYMnXA&w=640&h=480]

Crocodile Disney

I love the internet. Ask and you shall receive. Dramamasks22 has lined up all the animated crocodiles and alligators into one image. While you’re there check out Dramamasks22’s other images of every Disney bird, horse, rat, etc.

Zeus vs Zeus and Disney Paying Homage to Itself

Full image with all the Fantasia vs Hercules Olympians here. I love this stuff.

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