Showing posts with label Kenneth Mars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kenneth Mars. Show all posts

Monday, January 7, 2013

Thumbelina (1994) - This Animated Movie Soars through Paris

"Thumbelina" Courtesy of Don Bluth via Broadway

DVD box Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Don Bluth's "Thumbelina" (1994), from his studio Don Bluth Entertainment, is a terrific treat for children. The "Thumbelina" animation is top-notch, matching anything from Disney at the time, but the real draw is the score by Barry Manilow, who also sings over the end credits. Remaining fairly true to the original fairy tale, "Thumbelina" is a wonderful treat full of dazzling colors, expressive characters who move in very life-like fashion, and a romantic lead who should captivate most children. "Thumbelina" is not an animated film for adults, like so many later Disney/Pixar efforts, which gives it a charming focus that make many adults keep it as a treasured childhood memory and which, no doubt, understandably clouds their present-day judgment about "Thumbelina." Whether you like it or not, though, will depend on how you feel about all the modern showbiz elements, which for some will elevate this to classic status, while others might get turned off in a hurry at this exercise in showbiz introspection.
Emerging from the rose Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
The way the petals unfold is magical
Thumbelina is the child of a lonely woman in medieval Paris who only wanted a child to love. A good and sympathetic witch gave her a barley corn to plant, revealing Thumbelina in its petals (it sure looks like a rose, though). There is only one catch: Thumbelina arrives no bigger than a person's thumb. Thumbelina grows up - well, she arrives fully grown, so there's really no growing to be done - to be a lovely girls with flowing red/blonde hair on her mother's farm, and wants a man of her own, but there is nobody around her size. Or is there? Her mother comforts her with stories of tiny fairies who treasure girls like Thumbelina.
In her mama's hand Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Hi, mama!
Thumbelina goes to bed and dreams of having someone to love, singing and dancing to show her feelings. Prince Cornelius of the Fairies notices her as he is flying by and pops in to visit. They spend the evening together, flying about on Cornelius' bumblebee, and both fall in love. At night's end, Cornelius returns Thumbelina to her bedroom and promises to return after clearing things with his parents.
Cornelius Thumbelina Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Cornelius and his steed
Unfortunately, thuggish Grundel the Toad also notices Thumbelina that night and falls for her, telling his mother, Mrs. Toad, of his feelings. She kidnaps Thumbelina despite the best efforts of Thumbelina's dog, Hero. Cornelius returns, looking for his love, but Hero lets him know what happened. Mrs. Toad, meanwhile, who is a Spanish performer reminiscent of Carmen Miranda or, well, Charo (Charo actually voices the character), has taken Thumbellina to her lily pad and intends to have Thumbelina join the family singing group, "Singers de Espana," after Thumbelina, of course, marries her son.
Thumbelina toads Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
I just want to sing and dance!
Thumbelina, naturally, is not too happy with this generous plan (although she joins in a nice Spanish song and dance with the Toads and does quite a nice job of it), and, after Mrs. Toad leaves, Thumbelina cries out for help. Jacquimo, a swallow (sort of a Maurice Chevalier type) who also serves as the story's narrator, hears Thumbelina and rescues her, telling Thumbelina to follow her heart home. Cornelius, meanwhile, asks his parents to delay the imminent winter frost to help his search, but they can only do that temporarily. Cornelius and Grundel then both set out separately to find Thumbelina.
Beetle talking to Thumbelina Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
They put him next to "sleazy" in the Dictionary
Thumbelina is captured on her way home by Berkeley Beetle (sort of a crazed Jiminy Cricket), who also loves Thumbelina and makes her perform at the Beetle Ball. Unfortunately, she does not fit in with the beetles and is kicked out for being "too ugly." This discourages her, but Jacquimo tells her that all she needs is Cornelius' love. Jacquimo, meanwhile, is injured by a fox who he asks for help, but Grundel has better luck, getting advice from Beetle to use Cornelius to help him track Thumbelina down. Grundel, though, has a better idea and simply strong-arms Beetle himself to help find Thumbelina.
Beetle dancing with Thumbelina Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Is that a cane you're holding, or are you just glad to see me?
It starts to snow, and Jacquimo falls into a honey pot after asking a bear for help, making him unable to fly. Cornelius also has trouble with the frost, falling from his bumble bee into a pond, where he is frozen solid. Beetle finds Cornelius in the ice and takes him to Grundel. Thumbelina has to find shelter from the storm in a shoe, where she is welcomed by Miss Fieldmouse, who tells her incorrectly that Cornelius died in the ice, but that she has a nice suitor in mind. Heartbroken, Thumbelina agrees to go and sing for Mr. Mole, who immediately falls in love with her and seeks her hand in marriage.
Mrs. Toad and Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Mrs. Toad actually is kind of cool ¡ Ay Caramba!
Thumbelina finds Jacquimo and tells him she might as well marry Mr. Mole, even though Thumbelina does not love him, because she is alone in a hostile world. Jacquimo flies off to see what he can do, and a marriage ceremony is set up for Mr. Mole and Thumbelina. Both Cornelius, thawed by three young jitterbugs befriended earlier by Thumbelina, and Grundel show up, and there is a mad chase through the underground mole tunnels.
Thumbelina making friends Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Like Snow White, Thumbelina is friends with all the little creatures like these jitterbugs
Thumbelina finds her way to the surface, where Jacquimo finds her and flies Thumbelina to the Vale of the Fairies which he has been able to locate. It is covered in ice, but Thumbelina's singing thaws the snow, and they just have to wait and see if Cornelius was able to escape from Grundel.
Thumbelina and Cornelius Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
They fall in love after one song
Several things strike the viewer about "Thumbelina" early on: the animation is simply dazzlingly gorgeous, with the unfolding of the rose to reveal Thumblina being a stunning, iconic shot; the singing and dancing is pure Broadway, with no filter; and there is absolutely no doubt from the opening sequences how the story will end. All sorts of razzle dazzle is thrown in, with multiple plot twists and a parade of eccentric characters. In a way, it almost starts to resemble Disney's classic "Alice in Wonderland," though it has a more "real world" focus. "Thumbelina" also shows a few similarities to "Peter Pan," as Cornelius resembles nothing so much as a male Tinker Bell. Don Bluth clearly likes to borrow from the best.
Miss Fieldmouse Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Miss Fieldmouse is kind of hammy
You couldn't ask for a better voice cast. Jodi Benson, who is Ariel in "The Little Mermaid" and its two sequels, voices Thumbelina with an innocence that at times grates against her character's sudden changes of mind and knowing attitude while dancing. Gino Conforti does Jacquimo with a heavy French accent which really isn't all that necessary since, despite the fact the story supposedly is set in Paris, everyone else speaks in straight American tones, well, except for Charo and her clan, who are Spanish. Charo does an impressive job of voicing basically herself, and Carol Channing of all people really stands out as Miss Fieldmouse, showing she can still carry a tune with the best of them. Gilbert Gottfried as Berkeley Beetle, well, Gilbert is who he is, and you either like his nasally, out-there act or you don't, and there is a lot of it (too much for most people, probably) to like or dislike in this film. He certainly makes an impression.
Cornelius holding Thumbelina's hand Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Thumbelina and Cornelius chastely holding hands
The other voice actors are pleasant enough, Kenneth Mars also stops by from his role of King Triton in "The Little Mermaid" to voice Cornelius' father, while Gary Imhoff is blandly inoffensive (and his character pretty darn ineffectual) as Cornelius. Charo, Carol Channing, Barry Manilow - that list of veterans should give you a good idea where this film has its roots buried.
Cornelius in ice Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
I hate it when this happens to me
Since this clearly is aimed at children, there is no point at listing all the reasons why an adult might start to lose interest in this about halfway through, once Thumbelina's parade of adventures with different, obviously unworthy, forest creatures as suitors begins. Even for children above a certain age, it might get confusing, with a succession of show-stopping tunes that, well, stop the show and interrupt the flow. In terms of the musical style, it is a cross between Manilow's jazzy "Copacabana" and Broadway's version of "Beauty and the Beast," with a few random '80s pop song touches thrown in for good measure.
Thumbelina wedding Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Is her hair supposed to be red like Ariel? Or blonde like Cinderella? It keeps changing
Thumbelina also is at times difficult to understand. She clearly loves to sing and dance, and in fact is so good at it that one wonders where she studied advanced theater techniques. She has a fine time kicking up her feet with Mrs. Toad, Beetle and the others, pulling off elaborate cabaret numbers whenever the mood strikes. However, when she isn't hoofing it, Thumbelina suddenly reverts to being a helpless little girl, determined to find someone to marry, and fast. Naturally, everyone falls in love with her, which is every girl's fantasy, so little girls especially should like "Thumbelina." But why does Thumbelina's hair keep changing color?
Cornelius Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Now Cornelius is definitely a red head
A modern attitude on a classic fairy tale character is interesting, but it also makes Thumbelina's contrariness seem odd, as if she is wrestling with both her inner "Hans Christian Andersen" and modern flightiness. If Thumbelina really is so in love with Cornelius, why is she getting up there and loving it up with her dancing and her varied suitors and all that? There is nothing wrong with having fun, but one minute Thumbelina is pining for her true love Cornelius, the next Thumbelina is about to get married to someone else, and Thumbelina's mindset just seems awfully fluid (one might be unkind and say "trampy") for a fairy tale character.
Cornelius and Thumbelina Thumbelina 1994 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Now here they both are red-heads
"Thumbelina" is a wonderful tale if you appreciate the Broadway-style singing and the numerous wild characters. It can be a struggle to take it all in during one sitting, though, and that's coming from someone who really appreciates the music. A little judicious editing would have improved "Thumbelina" tremendously, along with a title character who did a little less singing and a little more thinking. It pains me to say anything negative about this sweet story for little children, and "Thumbelina" indeed is a wonderful, gorgeous film, so let's leave it at that. Best for very young children who will watch and listen to it while playing with their toys while not caring about the overly intricate plot twists and gaudy characterizations. They will absorb it all, and then someday rhapsodize about "Thumbelina" and how they don't make great animation like that any more when they hit their forties.

Below is the full movie.





2013

Monday, November 5, 2012

The Little Mermaid (1989) - Disney Returns to Form

The Little Mermaid: Ariel The Little Mermaid Headlines a Top Disney Movie

Film Poster The Little Mermaid 1989 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Walt Disney invented feature film animation, and one of his pet projects in the 1930s was an animated feature film featuring Ariel the little mermaid. Just before and then more-so after Walt died, the company turned more in the direction of cute live-action Disney movies for kids such as "The Apple Dumpling Gang (1975)."  This strategy worked brilliantly for the studio at times ("Mary Poppins" (1964) and "The Love Bug" (1968)), and didn't at other times ("The Black Hole" (1979)). The inescapable bottom line was that live-action comedies and dramas weren't setting the studio apart from the pack. Disney movies suffered as a result.  Even shifting Disney movies with more mature themes, such as "Dragonslayer" (1981), didn't help. Only Disney movie animation, done the Disney way, could turn things around.  This Disney movie, "The Little Mermaid" (1989), directed by Ron Clements and John Musker, features fan favorite Ariel the little mermaid, who flaps her flipper hard to help set Disney movies back onto the right track.
DVD box The Little Mermaid 1989 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
This edition was only available December 2008-January 2009
Disney went back to its roots with "The Little Mermaid" It really was Disney's first pure classic fairy tale since 1959's near-disastrous "Sleeping Beauty." The studio almost made a version of this in the 1930s, but the studio had too many projects going on in the "Snow White" days and "The Little Mermaid" never happened. This Disney movie only happened when the studio refocused on the classic fairy tale by Danish author fifty years after the first plans for it were laid, when classic, Disney-style animation was experiencing the first, faint stirrings of a revival with "The Land Before Time" and "The Secret of NIMH" and a few other new titles in the '80s. Original treatments that had been made back in the 1930s - the studio's true glory days - inspired and in some cases guided the animators doing "The Little Mermaid," so it really was a continuation of the true Disney legacy.
Triton arms folded The Little Mermaid 1989 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Ariel's father, King Triton
"The Little Mermaid" doesn't follow the original fairy tale too closely. Hans Christian Anderson wasn't all sweetness and joy, so certain things had to be changed to appeal to a modern audience. Having a heroine like Ariel the little mermaid die at the end may have worked when the fairy tale was written, but it sure wouldn't work today in this "The Little Mermaid."
Ariel with hair blowing back The Little Mermaid 1989 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
She must need to get her hair done a lot down there
In this "The Little Mermaid," Ariel the little mermaid (Jodi Benson, who since has gone on to roles in the "Toy Story" franchise besides the two sequels to this film), is the youngest daughter of King Triton (Kenneth Mars). She is dissatisfied with her life in the sea. In a classic case of "the grass is always greener," she longs to live with the humans who walk on land.
Ariel smiling The Little Mermaid 1989 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Reminds me of a tuna can
As a result, Ariel the little mermaid often argues with her father King Triton over her desires to be with humans.  He calls them "barbaric fish-eaters," which actually isn't too far from the truth. One day, Ariel the little mermaid goes to meet Ursula, the Sea Witch (Pat Carroll). They strike a deal, but her part of the bargain may not be what Ariel the little mermaid thought it was. Animation characters always have to be careful about the terms of bargains they strike with their pals, because the results often don't turn out the way they thought. Just ask Shrek in "Shrek Forever After."
Ursula in The Little Mermaid 1989 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Ursula
Ursula's deal with Ariel the little mermaid turns Ariel into a human for three days in return for Ariel giving Ursula her voice for that time. Ursula carefully puts the voice in a nautilus shell for safe-keeping. If Ariel receives the "kiss of true love" in that time (see Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" and "Shrek Forever After"), then she may stay on land; otherwise, she reverts to being a little mermaid and becomes Ursula's slave. Ariel the little mermaid hurries to the surface and quickly finds her man, Eric, walking on the beach.
Ariel, Scuttle, Flounder The Little Mermaid 1989 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Ariel the little mermaid, Scuttle and Flounder
Ariel the little mermaid makes terrific progress with Eric, but Ursula doesn't want to lose this bet. She gets her minions to disrupt things, and she turns herself into a beautiful young girl complete with Ariel's voice. Eric, befuddled, believes that Ursula is the little mermaid who saved him, and so he drops Ariel the true little mermaid for the imposter Ursula. Ariel the true little mermaid disrupts the wedding of Ursula and Eric and in the process recovers her voice, showing Eric that it indeed she, Ariel the little mermaid, who saved him.
Little Mermaid Statue Copenhagen The Little Mermaid 1989 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
The Little Mermaid statue in Copenhagen harbor
Unfortunately, the sun sets before Eric and Ariel the little mermaid can kiss and thus help Ariel win the bet with Ursula. Accordingly, Ariel the little mermaid turns back into her true form and becomes Ursula's slave. King Triton can't allow this, so he places himself in Ariel the little mermaid's place so that she may go free. This makes Ursula the new ruler of Atlantica, and she immediately uses her new-found power to destroy Arield the little mermaid and claim Eric for herself. A tremendous battle ensues, and everyone's fate hangs in the balance as Ursula, Eric and Ariel the little mermaid battle for control of the oceans.
Ariel with Eric The Little Mermaid 1989 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Buddy Hackett playing a seagull is just weird, but he is very funny
To give you some idea of the quality involved in "The Little Mermaid," every one of the two million bubbles was individually hand-drawn. Two million bubbles. Drawn. By hand. Individually. By someone. That's commitment!  This is a quality production, and a joy to watch.
Ariel talking to fish The Little Mermaid 1989 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
All the creatures love me - who do I remind you of?
If you've ever been to Copenhagen or seen it in pictures, you are probably familiar with the famous statue in the harbor there of The Little Mermaid.  As an homage, the illustrators for "The Little Mermaid" copied that pose for Ariel the little mermaid repeatedly in this film.
Ariel on a rock The Little Mermaid 1989 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Lovely red hair
There is talk of a "The Little Mermaid" remake which will be "dark."  I don't know how you make a sweet tale about a lovelorn mermaid dark, but then again, old Hans Christian himself managed it (don't ask). Perhaps Ariel is caught in a net and broiled for a restaurant meal?  I mean, enough is enough, this is a fairy tale for kids, nobody needs a "dark" Ariel the little mermaid love story.
Ariel with a statue undersea The Little Mermaid 1989 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Now, don't play hard to get!
This is a classic fairy tale that every little kid should see, but too few do. "The Little Mermaid" was so spectactularly good that it originated what is known as "The Disney Renaissance," which lasted for a decade and completely revived the studio. The trail of "The Little Mermaid" leads directly to 1991's "Beauty and the Beast," which some would call the top animated film of all time. If the kids liked "Finding Nemo" they certainly should enjoy "The Little Mermaid." Ariel's story is next set for its Diamond Edition DVD release in Fall 2013, complete with 3D Blu-ray which should provide awesome underwater effects. If you want more of Ariel the little mermaid before then, you can always turn to the 2008 prequel, "The Little Mermaid: Ariel's Beginnings," or the 2000 sequel, "The Little Mermaid II: Return to the Sea."

Below is the original film trailer.




2012

 
//PART 2