Stream Walt Disney Treasures - Disney Rarities - Celebrated Shorts, 1920s - 1960s Movie Online
septembre 29th, 2010 by georgia6405626It’s not exactly a dwelling secret that the “Disney Treasures” DVDs have been grand money-makers for the company. So how do you squeeze a dinky extra cash out of a cash cow? Why, originate throwing tantalizing shorts onto DVD without remastering them, that’s how!
Yep, the bulk of these cartoons are presented in vintage 20-year-old transfers. The images are soft and low-res, colors are frequently washed-out (I defy you to catch the color tan anywhere in “Paul Bunyan”), and Cinemascope films such as “Toot, Whistle, Plunk and Deliver” are presented in non-anamorphic widescreen. If you have a 16X9 TV, prepare yourself for a joyless experience.
The shorts themselves are largely second-tier Disney, with a few bona fide masterpieces such as “Ferdinand the Bull.” Others indicate that when the Disney artists tackled a recent field (such as UPA-style runt animation in “A Cowboy Needs a Horse,” or dimensional animation in “Noah’s Ark,” with its fanciful found-object animals) they could do it better than objective about anybody else. Kids may become a tad restless at times, but animation fans and Disney completists will be in heaven.
Bottom line: If Disney’s going to call these shorts “Treasures” they should treat them as such.
Among the four Disney Treasures DVD sets that came out this year for Wave 5 of the current collection, Disney Rarities, Chronological Donald Volume Two, Legendary Heroes, and Scurry and Marty, I do contain this is the plot I was most anticipating. “Disney Rarities: Eminent Shorts” collects some of the most loved one-shot Disney shorts suitable alongside some of the most unseen! Starting all the plot benefit with Walt’s early Alice films and carrying all the device through to 1962’s “A Symposium On Celebrated Songs,” the mixed bag that is this 2-disc collection provides treat after treat of aesthetic animation, charming stories and songs, and fond childhood memories! Here’s what you acquire in this aesthetic DVD area!
Disc 1:
Alice’s Wonderland (1923) : The first of Walt’s tranquil Alice Comedies that combined live-action and animation, this charming short stars the adorable minute Virginia Davis and costars a young Mr. Disney himself! In it, Walt gives Alice a tour of a magical animation studio which leads to an involving dream sequence for Alice that night.
Alice’s Wild West Present (1924) : Probably the best of the Alice comedies I’ve seen, and Virginia’s current, the live-action sequences of this are very reminiscent of the early “Small Rascals” films, and, of course, there are piquant sequences as well. Alice and her friends are putting on a wild west reveal, but when bullies rush her costars away, Alice resorts to telling tales of her adventures with Indians and baddies.
Alice Gets In Dutch (1924) : Tiny Alice gets the dunce cap in school one day for playing with a balloon, and when she falls asleep on her stool, she has to deal with a cartoon teacher and her living schoolbooks!
Alice’s Egg Plant (1925) : Sadly, Virginia Davis is replaced by Anne Shirley in this short. Also, the charming live-action sequences give intention to total animation, aside from the inclusion of live-action Alice, of course. In this memoir, there’s difficulty on Alice’s egg farm when a fowl Russian bird incites a strike. Luckily, Alice and her cat Julius concoct a conception!
Alice In the Jungle (1925) : Virginia is encourage one more time for this anecdote of animal hi-jinks and lion fighting adventure.
Alice’s Mysterious Mystery (1926) : Margie Satisfied plays Alice in this short where she and Julius go up against an early version of Pete who is an snide dogcatcher turning his captive mutts into sausage! Yes, this is a disturbing cartoon!
Alice the Whaler (1927) : Lois Hardwick plays a slightly older Alice, who sails the seas with her animal friends in a cartoon that features a potato peeling mouse in sequences seemingly identical to those in the following year’s “Steamboat Willie!”
Ferdinand the Bull (1938) : This cartoon is our sudden jump to color and sound (not including the music that accompanied the preceding Alice shorts) . This is the Oscar winning account of Ferdinand, a pacifist bull that unprejudiced loves to sit and smell flowers, mistakenly chosen to fight in a bull ring when a bee sting makes him appear ferocious and wild! This is one of those classics you’ll likely remember from your youth, and it also features caricatures of Walt and his animators.
Chicken Diminutive (1943) : No, this isn’t Disney’s original, computer-animated feature, this is a classic short about not believing everything you hear and read, with a bent but very amusing ending! I enjoy this is one of the several Academy Award nominees in this collection!
The Pelican and the Snipe (1944) : And, here’s another, I occupy. One of the many shorts Disney did with Superb Holloway (the new bellow of Winnie the Pooh) as narrator, this is the cute wartime myth of a sleep-flying Pelican and his real and protective, sleep-deprived friend living together on a lighthouse in Uruguay. This was originally planned as allotment of “The Three Amigos” but was instead released on its enjoy.
The Gallant Engineer (1950) : Here’s one of my many favorites, the rousing, musical sage of Casey Jones, the bold engineer! The singing narration from Jerry Colonna and crew fabricate this a fun-filled American adventure!
Morris, the Midget Moose (1950) : Disney’s Bootle Beetle characters kick-off this classic short as an elder tells two younger bugs the yarn of two misfit moose…meese…mooses…. whatever. One is very miniature, despite having rotund size antlers. The other is mountainous, but his antlers are slight. Together, they are a grand force!
Lambert the Sheepish Lion (1952) : A common for Disney fans all over, this is the classic fable of a lion cub mistakenly delivered to an expectant mother sheep. He is mocked and shunned by his peers, not unlike Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, but when he’s all grown up, he’s the only one who can withhold the mean ol’ wolf away!
The Exiguous House (1952) : This heartwarming classic, based on the children’s book, is very similar to the oddly absent from this station “Susie, the Shrimp Blue Coupe.” It’s the sage of a dinky house who grows ancient, lonely, and gloomy while the world around her changes, but in the ruin gets cheered up by unique owners, a novel locale, and a unusual coat of paint.
Adventures In Music: Melody (1953) : Originally released in 3-D (a first for an American engaging film), but fair as savory in 2-D, this is the first of the Professor Owl shorts where he teaches his class bulky of young birds all about the world of music. Very delectable animation.
Football Now and Then (1953) : Here’s a fun titillating short, even if you are like me and not really keen in football! Grandpa and grandson scrutinize a televised football match pitting a new football time with one from yesteryear!
Adventures In Music: Toot, Whistle, Plunk and Deliver (1953) : The other Oscar Winner in the bunch, here we learn the history of musical instruments in Professor Owl’s class! A proper classic!
Ben and Me (1953) : A personal fave that is more of a featurette than a short, positive to be a hit with American history buffs that don’t remove it TOO seriously. This is the account of Amos, a mouse voiced by Reliable Holloway, who is the right brains late the legacy of Founding Father Benjamin Franklin!
Disc 2:
Pigs Is Pigs (1954) : Disc 2 kicks off with an extremely delicious, highly fun musical romp about Flannery, a railroad location clerk whose strict adherence to the rules lands him in deep peril when a shipment of lovestruck guinea pigs arrives.
Social Lion (1954) : A lion captured on safari in Africa gets loose in the gigantic city, but hardly anyone notices him! Very cute and droll, light social commentary short!
Hooked Contain (1956) : One of the two widescreen cartoons in this site, this Humphrey the Own short is as laughable as anything the Looney Tunes ever did! In it, Humphrey does his best to outwit the fish, the tourists, and Ranger Woodlore in his attempts to load up some fish of his believe!
Jack and Archaic Mac (1956) : This imaginatively engaging musical offering creatively illustrates jazzy renditions of “The House That Jack Built” and “Broken-down MacDonald.” Nicely challenging.
In the Bag (1956) : The other Humphrey the Beget widescreen cartoon in this position, this hilarious short has Ranger Woodlore scheming to exhaust the park bears to super up after the tourists. When the reward becomes a delightful dinner, Humphrey tries and tries but can’t seem to sustain his allotment spruce! This butt-bumping extravaganza even features a cameo by Smokey the Possess!
A Cowboy Needs a Horse (1956) : This enthralling, musical dream shows a slight boy’s sleeping fantasy of being a loyal cowboy, battling bandits and Indians, and saving the damsel in wound. Always wanted this one in my collection!
The Record of Anyburg, USA (1957) : In a droll and curved story of injustice and frivolous lawsuits, this short tells the epic of a town that places the blame for automobile accidents on the automobiles themselves!
The Truth About Mother Goose (1957) : This memorable aged fave is one of the gems of this position! Telling the grim, accurate tales tedious the nursery rhymes “Puny Jack Horner,” “Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary,” and “London Bridge Is Falling Down,” this highly enthralling short is handsome dusky for a Disney cartoon!
Paul Bunyan (1958) : The bigger-than-life fable of Paul Bunyan the giant lumberjack is told here from his infancy to his retirement in a improbable primitive Disney celebrated!
Noah’s Ark (1959) : Stop-motion animation and household items are frail for a change in this epic from the pages of Genesis in the Bible. Noah builds a gigantic Ark to carry two of every animal, along with his family, through a flood that covered the entire globe in primitive times. This reasonably exact and jazzy cartoon is grand fun, though maybe it runs a tad long when it gets into some unnecessary Hippo romance subject matter. Mild, very obedient minute short!
Goliath II (1960) : This Oscar nominated classic is the laughable epic of a microscopic elephant the size of a mouse born to the biggest elephant in the herd! Petite Goliath is nothing but concern until he wins the others’ respect by being the only one who can assume on their greatest awe!
The Saga of Windwagon Smith (1961) : Some may disagree, but I obtain this to be another of the best shorts in the residence! Windwagon Smith is the large account of a sea captain with dreams of sailing over the American plains in a covered wagon that is share sailing ship! It’s a very fun and imaginative memoir!
A Symposium On Favorite Songs (1962) : And, finally, my accepted cartoon on this dwelling, simply because who doesn’t admire Ludwig Von Drake, especially coupled with tons of Sherman Bros. music! Also beautiful grand a featurette at 19 minutes and 44 seconds in length, “A Symposium On Common Songs” is hosted by the oddball relative of Donald Duck who takes us through the history of favorite music in America, until 1962 at least. He does this for the most share by playing timely songs that he wrote himself, running with visuals of stop-motion cut-out animation same as was traditional for the opening of the recent “Parent Trap.” For Ludwig fans, this cartoon is really the highlight of the discs! Paul Frees is hilarious!
As an obsessive Disney fan, I am likely to speak you that ALL the Disney Treasures sets are a must have, and withhold `em coming! I certainly have them all! But, even for the collector who doesn’t come by every tin box that Disney puts out, “Disney Rarities: Eminent Shorts” is a must! Distinct, there are some shorts that are oddly absent. Some of them are available on other Disney releases though. Many seem likely to appear in an educational shorts location in the future, hopefully. I’m dying for “Scrooge McDuck and Money,” “Winnie the Pooh Discovers the Seasons,” the “What Should I Do” series, “Harold and His Extraordinary Green Plants,” and Jiminy Cricket’s shorts, among others. I also am desperate for a genuine, unedited release of “Slight One,” Sport Goofy in “Soccermania,” and “Fluppy Dogs,” to name a few. And, to be unprejudiced, even if they can glean a bit redundant, I’d like to come by as many of the over 50 Alice shorts (that have not been lost) as possible. Nevertheless, this site is a Accurate savor! Extras include a amazing interview with the novel Alice, Virginia Davis, keen intros by Leonard Maltin that some pick up annoying but I have no predicament with (there is only one per disc this time, and we really should regard this man as a hero, anyway), the VERY short advertisement cartoon “A Feather In His Collar,” starring Pluto, a stunning timeline featurette showing us Walt’s history up to the introduction of Mickey Mouse, a bewitching audio commentary for “A Symposium on Current Song” with Richard Sherman and Leonard Maltin, and, of course, a few selective art galleries. Yes, there is talk on the disc of an excerpt from a Disneyland episode detailing the making of the “Parent Trap” opening credits, however, it seems none of us have been able to locate that in the residence except as snippets during Maltin’s intros. The place comes in the expected snapcase within blooming tin box, though they are continuing with not printing anything on the befriend of the tin and not including the paper band, and within is the standard, handy booklet, the numbered certificate of authenticity, and a nice collectible card featuring Paul Bunyan promo art. It all makes for a beautiful package for the Disney fanatic. Can’t wait for wave 6!
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