Disney Night!
Dec. 1st, 2013 02:09 amFrozen was excellent, y'all. I was seriously gleeful that it was a sister movie! It's great having movies that focus on different family relationships--and it's almost up there with Brave as far as telling those stories well. (Brave does not get enough love.) I was also pleased at their expanding the traditional Disney definition of True Love.
And it was PRETTY.
But the thing that really blew my mind was the short at the beginning.
OH MY GOD.
Why is nobody TALKING about this thing? I've been getting interested in animation history recently,* and then here on the screen shows up an old-timey-looking short that almost had me fooled into thinking it was an actual old short. Okay, yes, it did give itself away a couple times--I'm not sure what did, exactly, but you got the sense it was a modern attempt at the retro look, rather than actual retro--before the, uh, the DEAD giveaway. And then when they did get to that reveal, the rest of the short just had me laughing the way a cartoon should. It was faithful to the 1928 aesthetic and to modern aesthetics, and it had wonderfully clever slapstick.
Also, OSWALD.
OSWALD, y'all.
So yeah, Frozen was brilliant, but ten thousand points to Lauren MacMullan for "Get a Horse!" That just about killed me.
*Well, even more interested.
And it was PRETTY.
But the thing that really blew my mind was the short at the beginning.
OH MY GOD.
Why is nobody TALKING about this thing? I've been getting interested in animation history recently,* and then here on the screen shows up an old-timey-looking short that almost had me fooled into thinking it was an actual old short. Okay, yes, it did give itself away a couple times--I'm not sure what did, exactly, but you got the sense it was a modern attempt at the retro look, rather than actual retro--before the, uh, the DEAD giveaway. And then when they did get to that reveal, the rest of the short just had me laughing the way a cartoon should. It was faithful to the 1928 aesthetic and to modern aesthetics, and it had wonderfully clever slapstick.
Also, OSWALD.
OSWALD, y'all.
So yeah, Frozen was brilliant, but ten thousand points to Lauren MacMullan for "Get a Horse!" That just about killed me.
*Well, even more interested.