#40 The Emperor’s New Groove (2000)

  1. BACKGROUND
  2. PLOT
  3. CHARACTERS & CAST
  4. PRODUCTION
  5. MUSIC
  6. RECEPTION
  7. LEGACY
  8. FINAL THOUGHTS
  9. REFERENCES

BACKGROUND

Where do I even start with The Emperor’s New Groove?

Because to some people, it is one of Disney’s most hilarious and most underrated animated features. Others just forget about it completely. But it is so much more.

The Emperor’s New Groove potentially had the worst development and production process in Disney history, or at least Disney Animation history, because it was truly an awkward and painful process to get this movie made. This movie will forever be linked to the promised, but apparently too complex, Kingdom of the Sun, as well as with a non-Disney-produced, but Disney-approved, documentary The Sweatbox, which told in great detail by those involved, the story of just how Kingdom of the Sun, an epic musical, became the buddy comedy, The Emperor’s New Groove.

Despite the fact the Disney Company has never released The Sweatbox outside of its initial week or so theatrical runs in, so many Disney fans know what this documentary contained and have divulged this information online many times.

When The Emperor’s New Groove was first released in 2000, it may have received relatively positive reviews, the majority of which being around the film’s humour and its voice cast, but it did not do well at the box-office. And by “not do well”, I mean it was a flop, by Disney standards, with even their worst performing Disney Renaissance Era movies doing much better financially than The Emperor’s New Groove.

But somehow, whether that was through home releases throughout the years, or because of its complicated history, or just due to the fact it is an absolutely hilarious, and very quotable, film, The Emperor’s New Groove has gained a strong following in recent years, gaining it that almost-an-insult, almost-a-compliment title of “cult classic”.

I watched The Emperor’s New Groove when it was first released, along with my family, and we all loved it, and we still do today. It’s one of those Disney films that appeals to everyone – including the dads, who may have rolled their eyes or fallen asleep at some of Disney’s previous Broadway musical fairy-tale films! Though not artistically special, or even particularly interesting in terms of plot, it’s still a favourite in the eyes of many, despite its continued under-representation by the Disney Company.

PLOT

The Emperor’s New Groove begins with this: “Long ago, somewhere deep in the jungle…”. In this jungle is a sad-looking llama, crying in the pouring rain. A narrator tells us that this llama was once an emperor, and that the story that will follow is his story, the llama’s and also the narrator’s. The narrator takes us back to the beginning of the story, but goes a bit too far back, and we see him as a pampered, spoilt baby, before moving ahead to see the pampered, spoilt baby is now a pampered, spoilt emperor, Emperor Kuzco. After hearing Emperor Kuzco’s theme song, which shows us just how many people serve him throughout the day, and that Kuzco is unwilling to do anything for himself, Kuzco bumps into an old man whilst dancing, who he says “threw off my groove”. A guard throws the old man out of the window and the tale continues.

Kuzco enters a large hall with a cry of “boom baby” and is told that it is time for him to choose his bride. A line of women stands before him. He quickly dismisses most of them. Just outside, a peasant named Pacha has arrived at the palace to meet with Emperor Kuzco. A shoe falls on his head from somewhere above him; it’s the old man’s shoe, the one who was thrown out of the window and ended up getting tangled in some sort of banner. Pacha quickly helps him down, and the man warns him about the emperor’s “groove”.

Back inside the palace, we meet Yzma, the emperor’s advisor, who has taken to sitting in Kuzco’s throne and meeting with the villagers herself. She is with her new right-hand man, Kronk, a dim but sweet guy. Kuzco sees Yzma pretending to be him, and quickly fires her. Once Yzma has been dealt with, Kuzco meets with Pacha. He asks Pacha about his village and which areas get the most sunlight. Pacha tells him that the point where his family home, for the last six generations, resides is probably the best location. Kuzco then tells Pacha that he is going to demolish the village so he can build his summer home, Kuzcotopia, as a birthday gift to himself. Pacha tries to convince the emperor that this is wrong, but he won’t listen and has Pacha thrown out.

Kronk gives Yzma the idea of getting rid of Kuzco once and for all so she can rule. They go to the Secret Lab to discuss further. After riding the rollercoaster entranceway into the lab, Yzma has a plan: turn Kuzco into a flea, then put that flea in a box, then put it in another box, mail the box to herself and then smash it with a hammer. But she decides it would be quicker and easier to just poison him, and she has a handy vial of poison just waiting to be used. Yzma invites Kuzco for dinner, with Kronk being the chef and waiter for the evening. Once Kuzco arrives, Kronk is told to put the poison in Kuzco’s drink so he does just that, except he has to rush out of the room to save his spinach puffs from burning. Once Kronk returns, having saved the spinach puffs, which I’ve always thought look delicious, he then forgets which cup had the poison in. He mixes all three drinks together, so each one will definitely contain some poison, and passes them out. Kronk warns Yzma not to drink it, so she throws hers on a nearby cactus and Kronk pours his down his neck; Kuzco downs his quickly and passes out. Just when they think he’s finally dead, Kuzco regains consciousness and continues talking as though nothing has happened. Strangely enough, he begins to turn into a llama. If you look closely, the cactus Yzma threw her drink on has also become a llama-shaped cactus! Kronk knocks Kuzco out, as ordered by Yzma, by hitting him over the head with a plate. Yzma then realises that the vial was actually extract of llama and that the job still needs to be finished. Kronk is sad that his dinner will go to waste, and tries to convince Yzma there’s time for dessert. In the end, they agree to a quick cup of coffee and then Kronk will take him out of town and finish the job.

Kronk, carrying Kuzco in a bag, takes him to the river and throws the bag in. His shoulder angel and shoulder devil soon appear, helping Kronk decide if he’s done the right thing. In the end, Kronk feels guilty and grabs the bag before it can fall over the waterfall. The movie then zooms out briefly to see a chimp eating a bug, which Narrator Kuzco is most annoyed about since this story is supposed to be about him! We zoom back in, to see Kronk trying to figure out what to do with Kuzco. Kronk trips on a cat as he walks down some stairs, and the bag falls onto a cart. It turns out it is Pacha’s cart. Kronk is too late to get Kuzco back, so he ends up at Pacha’s village. Once home, Pacha avoids questions from his wife about the meeting today, saying the emperor was too busy to see him, not wanting to tell her the truth about it. Outside, Pacha is putting his llama, Misty, away, when he sees an extra bag. Opening it, he finds a talking llama. The talking llama gets scared by Pacha’s cries of “demon llama”, only to find he is the demon llama. The llama tells Pacha he is Emperor Kuzco, and believes initially that Pacha did this to him as revenge, but then says Pacha probably isn’t smart enough to do that. Kuzco orders Pacha to take him back to the palace to get Yzma to turn him back, but Pacha refuses, unless Kuzco agrees to build his summer home somewhere else. Kuzco refuses to agree to that, and walks off into the jungle alone.

In the jungle, Kuzco gets lost quickly and is scared of the strange noises he hears. A squirrel tries to befriend him, but Kuzco tells him to “hit the road, Bucky”. Kuzco soon falls into a jaguar pit, and the squirrel tries to wake them up by popping a balloon. It doesn’t work, but Kuzco’s loud “HA” certainly does and he is chased to the edge of a cliff. When all looks lost, Pacha comes swinging in like Tarzan, and manages to grab Kuzco – on his second attempt. But they slam into a tree branch and end up tied to it. It then falls into the rushing river below, and they are thrown over a huge waterfall. Luckily, the impact means they are free from the branch, but Kuzco is unconscious. Reluctantly, Pacha goes to give him mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, only for Kuzco to suddenly wake up mid-kiss. Both are embarrassed. That night, Kuzco still refuses Pacha’s terms and Pacha still says he won’t take him back.

Back at the palace, Yzma leads the funeral for Emperor Kuzco, but there’s no time to grieve, because the palace needs to be redecorated for the new leader, Yzma. Soon after, Kronk admits to Yzma that Kuzco is in fact not dead. Yzma is furious and informs him that they will be going out to find him, so they can finally “finish the job”.

Kuzco wakes up the next morning to thank Pacha for giving him his poncho to keep warm overnight. Kuzco then says that maybe he will build his home somewhere else. Pacha gets him to shake hands to confirm it’s true; Kuzco does and they head back to the city. On an old, rickety bridge, Pacha falls as a step breaks. He asks Kuzco to help him back up, but Kuzco does not, and skips over him. It turns out everything Kuzco said was a lie just to get Pacha to help him. As Kuzco is about to continue on the bridge, he also falls and the two punch each other out of anger as they dangle from some vines, but this excess movement causes the whole bridge to collapse and they fall further, coming to a halt just above a lake full of alligators. Pacha tells Kuzco he has a plan; if they link arms, they can walk up the cliffs together. This works, to a point, but then they find themselves stuck. Pacha gets Kuzco to lift him up with his neck to a rope tied in a tree. With some difficulty, because Pacha’s not a small guy, the rope is caught, but as Pacha tugs the rope, scorpions fall onto Kuzco’s body. He freaks out and lets go of Pacha. Pacha grabs him before he can fall but Kuzco’s mouth gets stuck in a bat cave. Pacha then finds the scorpions down his back and as he bangs against the wall, the bats wake up, flying into Kuzco’s mouth. As he releases them, they carry both up to solid ground, somehow. Kuzco then saves Pacha as a piece of the ground crumbles beneath him. The two continue on, with it now being a four-day trek back.

Yzma and Kronk have searched many of the surrounding villages but have not found Kuzco. During a break in the jungle, Kronk talks to a squirrel. The squirrel tells Kronk that he saw a talking llama and points them in the direction to find him. Kuzco and Pacha decide to stop for food at Mudka’s Meat Hut, where Kuzco has to dress up as a woman to get in, since llamas are not allowed inside. The two pretend to be on their honeymoon. Kuzco hates the food and speaks to the chef, telling him his food is awful. Pacha then sees two people walk in. He overhears them talking about Kuzco. Pacha rushes into the kitchen to get Kuzco, saying they need to leave, but Kuzco still wants dinner. At the same time, Kronk comes in to ask about Yzma’s dinner order. The chef abruptly quits, leaving Kronk in charge, who is happy to help. Somehow, Yzma and Kuzco do not see each other, but Pacha takes Kuzco out of the restaurant anyway. Kuzco tells Pacha he saw Yzma and Kronk and that he is safe now and Pacha can leave. He ignores Pacha’s attempts to tell him that the two are trying to kill him. Kuzco finds this out for himself, though, as he overhears Yzma and Kronk just as he was about to show himself to them. Kuzco is now alone, and we go back to the start of the film, with Kuzco sad in the rainy jungle. That night, Kronk realises that he knows Pacha; he was the man whose cart Kuzco ending up on. If they can find Pacha, they’ll find Kuzco. They head to Pacha’s house to wait for him.

The next day, Kuzco tries to be a normal llama within a herd, but can’t manage it. He soon finds Pacha sitting there, telling the llamas about his strange few days with Kuzco. The two agree to team up again and get Kuzco home. They head to Pacha’s house for supplies, but sure enough, Yzma and Kronk are already there. Pacha speaks to his wife through a window, and she says her and the kids will stall Yzma and Kronk to give them a head start. Once they get out of Pacha’s family’s obstacles, Yzma and Kronk follow suit. Kuzco and Pacha are ahead, getting over a ravine with a zipwire, whereas Yzma and Kronk are hit by a random bolt of lightning and fall off the map. Pacha and Kuzco make it to Yzma’s lab.

In the lab, they search for the vial to turn Kuzco human. But Yzma is already there, and she has it. Yzma tosses a knife to Kronk, telling him to kill them both. Kronk’s shoulder angel and devil reappear to help him decide, but to the others, it looks like he’s talking to himself. Yzma then insults him, calling him a “big, stupid monkey” and declaring she never liked his spinach puffs – gasp! Kronk is devastated and cuts down the chandelier, believing it will crush Yzma, but instead, she slips right through the middle. She pulls a lever, sending Kronk through a trapdoor. Pacha and Yzma fight over the vial, which gets lost in amongst many others. Pacha grabs them all, and throws some random potions on the guards that Yzma has summoned, turning them into animals. One becomes a cow and asks to go home, but the rest continue. Pacha starts passing random vials to Kuzco, turning him into a turtle, then a bird, then a whale, then a llama again; none of which help them outrun Yzma and her guards. They end up in a pool of water, which is drained. It turns out this is the nose of the huge face that is carved into Kuzco’s palace! Kuzco and Pacha grab onto some carvings at the front of the palace, but Yzma’s guards fall. Yzma uses some curtains to make sure she does not, and slams onto a vial as she gets herself onto a ledge.

This looks to be turning her into a huge monster, but no, she’s just a cat! Cats are no joke though. I had a cat literally jump on my face and start clawing at me. It clearly had issues – kind of like Yzma! The only vial left is the human one. Yzma attacks Kuzco to get it back, and then attacks Pacha, who loses his balance and struggles to hang on to the ledge. Yzma has the vial her paws, but she cannot open it. In her frustration, she throws it, and falls trying to retrieve it. As she tumbles down, luckily, a huge trampoline has been set up outside the palace; it was incorrectly delivered there, and it bounces Yzma back up. Kuzco has located the position of but rushes back to save Pacha from falling instead. They watch the vial fall. Yzma then catches it on her way back up, but hits her head on the ascent. The vial falls to a different point on the palace. Pacha and Kuzco use their walking-up-cliffs trick to get it back but as they are about to retrieve it, Yzma takes it back. But then, Kronk suddenly opens a window, hitting Yzma in the face and loses the vial. Pacha and Kuzco retrieve it, and Kuzco drinks it.

We see Emperor Kuzco apologising to the old man he had thrown out of the palace window right at the start of the film. Kuzco then meets with Pacha and says he did not hear any “singing hills” on their journey and tells Pacha he will be building his summer home somewhere else. Pacha then says that there might be singing on the hill next to his village. Kuzco ponders this and we flash forward to see that Kuzcotopia has been built – it is a birdhouse instead of a summer home! Kuzco does have a hut next to Pacha and he now spends his time with all of them, continuing to be a better emperor and a better person. We also see that Kronk is now a leader of the Junior Chipmunks, which Pacha’s children are part of, as well as Yzma, who is still a cat and a very reluctant member of the troop!

CHARACTERS & CAST

The Emperor’s New Groove benefits from having a small main cast of characters, with there being only four of those in total. The first one is obviously Emperor Kuzco. He is a spoilt brat, who has spent years getting what he wants, whenever he wants, and therefore has no idea how to be a kind and respectful human being. He is only 18 here, but still, he should have been taught better. And if it’s true that Yzma practically raised him, as she claims, then really, it’s her fault Kuzco is the way he is! Kuzco isn’t bothered about hurting others and doesn’t care about the consequences of his actions: he tosses an old man out of the palace for ruining his dance number, he’d happily destroy a whole village just to give himself a summer home, which no doubt he’d use for two weeks of the year and would then leave sitting empty for the rest of the time, and fires Yzma without even a second thought or warning. I wonder if she could’ve sued for unfair dismissal? So Kuzco is not a character who appears to be at all redeemable, or even likeable. But that’s at the start. Gradually, he builds a friendship with Pacha, and Kuzco starts to realise that he’s actually not so great and could really benefit from gaining some empathy and humility! Kuzco’s change of heart is shown at the end of the film, when, though he doesn’t want to admit it out loud, he decides not to build Kuzcotopia on Pacha’s village because he knows it’s wrong.

Emperor Kuzco is voiced by comedian David Spade, who was nominated for a Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Award for his voice acting in this role. At the time, Spade was best known for being part of the cast of Saturday Night Live from 1990 to 1996. David Spade’s first foray into movie roles saw him appear in a couple of movies with fellow SNL cast member Chris Farley, these being Tommy Boy (1995) and Black Sheep (1996). In the years that followed The Emperor’s New Groove, Spade appeared in 8 Simple Rules from 2004 to 2005, playing C.J., Cate’s nephew, and starred in Rules of Engagement (2007-13) as Russell Dunbar, alongside Patrick Warburton, voice of Kronk. Spade is also well-known for his friendship with Adam Sandler, appearing in some of Sandler’s movies, such as Grown Ups (2010) and the Hotel Transylvania franchise (2012-22). I am a big fan of David Spade, partly because of The Emperor’s New Groove, and partly from his cameos in Adam Sandler comedies. Though many of these comedies get negative reviews, I think they are great. David Spade also continues to do stand-up comedy shows regularly, with his most recent being Dandelion, which was made available on Prime Video in May 2025.

Moving on to Pacha. He is clearly a family man, with his adoring wife Chicha, who is pregnant with their third child, and his two children, Chaca and Tipo. It’s an obviously close family, who come together in times of crisis and difficulty. Pacha is also very committed to his village, as the last six generations of his family have lived in the same house, and all the villagers know and respect him. Despite Kuzco’s plans for Pacha’s village, Pacha is still kind-hearted enough to take Kuzco back to his palace, and he has hope that Kuzco will change his mind about building Kuzcotopia in the end. It seems like wishful thinking, but Pacha was clearly right to wait, knowing that it would eventually happen.

John Goodman was chosen to voice Pacha, as they felt he could portray the dependable family man of Pacha, and liked his infectious laugh and the warmth he could bring to the character. Many have said that Pacha is the glue that holds the film together, and I think that’s because he is the person who believes in the goodness in others, which The Emperor’s New Groove needs to give the film some heart[1]. I am also a big fan of John Goodman, both for his comedy and more dramatic roles. For Disney, Goodman returned to voice acting to provide the voice for Sulley in Monsters, Inc. (2001), Monsters University (2013) and its subsequent spin-offs, and the voice for “Big Daddy” La Bouff in The Princess and the Frog (2009). From 1988 to 1997, and again from 2018, Goodman portrayed the role of Dan Conner in the television series Roseanne and now The Conners. Children of the 1990s probably also know Goodman from The Borrowers (1997), where he played Ocious P. Potter. His more serious film credits include Argo (2012) 10 Cloverfield Lane (2016), Patriots Day (2016), and Kong: Skull Island (2017).

Then we have Yzma, the villainess of the film. She starts the movie not seeming too threatening as the Emperor’s Advisor. There is a lot of talk about how old she is, and that she looks “scary beyond all reason”, with a lot of focus on her wrinkles, but she doesn’t seem scary, just because she wants to sit on Kuzco’s throne and play emperor sometimes. It’s not until Kuzco fires her that she then decides to exact revenge on him, and for all we know, maybe if he hadn’t fired her so cold-heartedly, perhaps none of that llama stuff would have happened to him! Yzma does have a Secret Lab, where she brews potions, but she is not magical. It’s not really a huge surprise that she wants to get rid of Kuzco, because he’s not very nice, though we know that Yzma won’t be a very good ruler either, judging by how she refuses to help a poor villager who comes to speak with her! Yzma isn’t a bad villain, but she’s not the best for me. I just think she’s too funny to be scary. It sounds like the original version of Yzma would’ve been a much better villainess, but more on that later. Still, I like how funny she is, especially when Yzma is talking to Kronk.

Yzma is voiced by singer and actress Eartha Kitt. Many young people may not know Kitt as an actress, but will likely know of her recording of the popular Christmas song, “Santa Baby”, but Kitt had a long career on stage and screen. She was even described by Orson Welles as “the most exciting woman in the world”. Welles then cast her as Helen of Troy in his 1951 stage production of Dr. Faustus[2]. Kitt also played the role of Catwoman in the third season of the 1966 Batman series, which is perhaps why Yzma is turned into a cat at the end of The Emperor’s New Groove[3]. In 1968, Eartha Kitt was vocal about her opposition to the Vietnam War, causing her career in the US to suffer, however, in 1978, Kitt returned to Broadway by starring in the musical Timbuktu! for which she was nominated for a Tony Award. Towards the end of her career, Kitt did voice work, both for Disney and other productions. Kitt sadly passed away on Christmas Day 2008.

Finally, of the main four, there is Kronk, Yzma’s right-hand man and henchman. Kronk is not aware for most of the film that he is on the side of the “bad guy” and just goes with whatever he is told to do. He is a big, muscular guy, so he should look threatening, but he is not aggressive or nasty, as would be expected. Kronk is the scene-stealer in The Emperor’s New Groove, which is ironic because at one point, there were discussions that Kronk was an unnecessary character and was going to be cut from the film! Thanks to the dinner scene where Yzma and Kronk poison Kuzco, and the brilliant idea to make Kronk so focused on the dinner because he likes to cook, the character was saved from the chopping block – and a good thing too, because Kronk is many people’s favourite character in the whole movie. Kronk is not the sharpest tool in the shed, but his heart is in the right place.

Patrick Warburton voices the role of Kronk here. An interesting fact about his role as Kronk is that Warburton was asked to improvise the “theme song” that Kronk sings as he carries Kuzco in that bag through the city. Disney’s legal department then made Warburton sign over all the rights to this song[4]! At the time, Warburton was known by the Disney team from his role as David Puddy in Seinfeld from 1995 to 1998. Since then, Warburton has provided many voice roles, for both Disney and non-Disney films and television series. But for Disney, Warburton voiced Buzz Lightyear in the television series Buzz Lightyear of Star Command (2000-01), Steve Barkin in Kim Possible (2002-07), Patrick in Home on the Range (2004), Alien Cop in Chicken Little (2005) and Royal Pain in Sky High (2005). For acting, Warburton starred in the sitcom Rules of Engagement (2007-13) alongside David Spade and as Lemony Snicket in the Netflix series A Series of Unfortunate Events (2017-19). Also, Patrick Warburton appeared in a film with Eartha Kitt back in the 1980s in his first movie role. He openly admitted that the film Dragonard (1987) was terrible, and that Eartha Kitt and actor Oliver Reed, who also appeared in it, were much too good to be in this film[5]!

So that’s the main characters, but there are a few other voices who may sound familiar. First is the voice of Rudy, the old man who “throws off the emperor’s groove” at the start of the film. He is voiced by John Fielder, the original voice of Piglet in the Winnie-the-Pooh franchise, from 1968 to his death in 2005. Secondly, Patti Deutsch voices the waitress, Mata, at Mudka’s Meat Hut. Her voice may sound familiar as she voices Tantor’s mother in Tarzan (1999). Finally, Wendie Malick voices Chicha, Pacha’s wife. Malick appeared as Ronee, Frasier’s father’s girlfriend, in the final season of Frasier from 2003 to 2004. More recently, she starred alongside Kimberly Williams-Paisley in a series of television mystery movies titled Darrow & Darrow (2017-19), which are actually quite good. From 2020, Malick appeared as President Hagemeyer, president of Sheldon’s university in Young Sheldon (2017-2024).

PRODUCTION

So now to the complicated part, the production story, which was all handily filmed throughout the course of the multiple years of upheaval and turmoil. This was thanks to Trudie Styler, Sting’s wife, who meticulously directed the filming of this over a number of years. The name of the documentary is The Sweatbox, after the name given to the screening room at the Disney Studios. It was so named as the room did not have air conditioning, plus the anxiety of the animators having their film critiqued meant there was a lot of sweat in the room. Nice… The Sweatbox documentary was set to be released in early 2001, however, it has never been released to the general public. The full documentary was approved by Disney and premiered worldwide at the Toronto Film Festival in September 2002, and opened at one Los Angeles theatre for one week in order to be eligible for an Academy Award. It was also shown at the Florida Film Festival where many Disney employees got to see it. Since then, it has not been released again, and is rumoured to never be released on DVD or Blu-Ray, due to some of the Disney executives finding the content embarrassing and too intrusive to the production process. From what I’ve heard, though it does get messy at times, I don’t think The Sweatbox shows anything that we haven’t already seen. Don Hahn’s Waking Sleeping Beauty (2009), which showed the turmoil at Disney Animation in the 1980s, seemed much more painful, so to me, I don’t think Disney would lose face if they allowed the public to see The Sweatbox. But anyway, as most people have not seen it, this is some of the information to have come out of it.

Kingdom of the Sun was a vision by Roger Allers, co-director of The Lion King (1994), to create a new animated movie based on South American cultures, specifically the Incas, and to include their mythology in the storyline, looking at their gods and the importance of the sun on their way of life. On a research trip to Peru, some of the Disney animators and story team went to areas like Machu Pichu to look at the architecture and geography of the area. They also, of course, studied llamas. Mark Dindal was brought in to help Allers with the story, as they needed an entertaining story, but not something too complex. Dindal and Allers looked to Mark Twain’s The Prince and the Pauper story for inspiration on Kingdom of the Sun, and found that they could have the emperor swap places with his peasant look-alike. There would be romance, magic, and a classic villain.

The original story followed carefree, kind-hearted Pacha, the llama herder, who comes across Emperor Manco one day. Manco is bored of ruling his kingdom, so decides to swap places with Pacha, who looks exactly like him. Somehow, Yzma discovers what the two have done, and turns Manco into a non-talking llama, so that Pacha must continue to be emperor. Nina, Manco’s betrothed, is surprised to find this emperor is now kind and funny and finds herself falling in love with him, with Pacha also falling in love with her. Meanwhile, Yzma believes that if she can block out the sun, using the demon Supai, a force of darkness, then her beauty will be restored, as she is upset with how old she looks[6].

Yzma was to be designed by Andreas Deja, known for classic villain characters like Gaston, Jafar, and Scar. He was very excited to be involved with Yzma’s storyline, which would have seen her as an old, wrinkly woman wanting to be young again, and planning to use dark magic to achieve it. He’d designed male villains before, but wanted to get to work on an over-the-top female villain, someone like Cruella de Vil. Deja liked Eartha Kitt as Yzma, and her voice recordings gave him ample inspiration for the character. Yzma was to have a rock sidekick, Huaca voiced by Harvey Fierstein, who voiced Yao in Mulan (1998).

Pacha was to be a llama herder, and to be voiced by a relatively unknown Owen Wilson. This llama herder looked exactly like the emperor, and was ordered to switch places with him. Giving Pacha the leadership position would have changed everything and showed that arrogant men are not fit to rule. David Spade voiced the role of Emperor Manco, a spoilt, bratty prince, so not much different to Kuzco, and Yzma was still voiced by Eartha Kitt, with the character bitter and jealous of Manco, turning him into a llama early on in the movie.

This was the basic storyline, which then went to a screening in front of Peter Schneider, president of Walt Disney Feature Animation at the time of the screening, and Tom Schumacher, who took over from Schneider in 1999. Schumacher and Schneider were critical of the film, and felt the pacing was bad, it wasn’t fun enough and there were too many characters to follow, though they did like some of Sting’s songs. Allers was used to this kind of criticism but was still disappointed. There were good elements of the film, but the movie as a whole was not coming together at this point. After lots of discussions, new story treatments, and rumours of the film being changed and voice cast cuts, directors changing, and the strange possibility that the setting would be moved from Peru to Nebraska, with the llamas being replaced with sheep, a last-minute idea was approved. This was a completely new storyline, apart from the emperor becoming a llama. Manco’s name was changed to Kuzco, Allers left the project, Huaca was cut from the movie, as was the original Pacha character and Owen Wilson (sad times), and Mark Dindal was now the sole director. Oh yeah, and Andreas Deja left the project as Yzma was no longer an interesting character for him; he was replaced with Dale Baer.

In 1999, it was agreed that an older Pacha, a big guy to be voiced by John Goodman, and his friendship with Kuzco as a llama, were the main storyline, with Yzma and the new character of Kronk, Yzma’s sidekick, to be voiced by Patrick Warburton, being the subplot. David Spade and Eartha Kitt were kept in the voice cast. Animation of Yzma and Kronk was split between the US and Paris Disney Animation Studios. At some point, the movie’s name was changed from Kingdom of the Sun to The Emperor’s New Groove, a parody of the name of Hans Christian Andersen’s tale The Emperor’s New Clothes, though no story elements, other than a vain emperor, are seen in The Emperor’s New Groove.  They still only had until 2000 to make the movie, as marketing tie-ins had already been agreed. The release date was coming fast, and despite minor story and character changes, the movie was coming along. Sting had agreed to write new songs, despite his disappointment, and he even got the ending of the movie changed to actually give the film a message. He wrote a letter to Disney to say he was at odds with the story, as he thought having Kuzco simply build his summer home on the hill next door was against his personal views. The executives actually felt this was a good note, so took that on board and that is why Kuzcotopia is just a birdhouse at the end of the film[7].

Somehow, against all odds, The Emperor’s New Groove did get finished, and although it may not have been what the animators had expected to be making at the start of production back in the mid-1990s, they made an animated movie and got it finished on time. Many state that had Roger Allers been given more time and more support, then Kingdom of the Sun would have been an amazing movie. I would have really liked to have seen this original concept, as much as I like The Emperor’s New Groove, so it is a shame.

MUSIC

The Emperor’s New Groove only contains two songs within the movie, with one being the opening number and the other an End Credits song. But three others exist on the soundtrack. As Kingdom of the Sun was meant to be a musical, and then suddenly wasn’t, there were many songs that were written and recorded, but did not make it into The Emperor’s New Groove.

In 1997, Sting was asked to write the music for Kingdom of the Sun by Roger Allers. Sting was encouraged to work on the Disney film by Elton John and Phil Collins who had had success and enjoyed working with Disney on the music for their respective movies, The Lion King and Tarzan (1999). Sting agreed to write the music for Disney, providing his wife, filmmaker Trudie Styler, could document the whole of the production process. This became the documentary The Sweatbox, as mentioned earlier. He apparently wrote five or six songs for Kingdom of the Sun, alongside his long-time collaborator, David Hartley, none of which feature in The Emperor’s New Groove, and only three exist on the soundtrack.

For the love song of Kingdom of the Sun, because this film was going to be more similar to the typical Disney format of film, Sting wrote the song “One Day She’ll Love Me”. It was performed by Sting, singing the thoughts of Pacha, the shepherd who is impersonating the emperor, and has fallen in love with Nina, Emperor Manco’s betrothed. He is concerned that should she find out he’s not the emperor, she won’t love him in return. Shawn Colvin performs the part of Nina, who is confused that the arrogant Manco has suddenly become nice and she genuinely likes him now. Colvin is a singer-songwriter who won three Grammy Awards in the 1990s, two for her song “Sunny Came Home”. I like this song, even though it sounds different to most Disney love ballads.

Another song from Kingdom of the Sun that appears on the soundtrack is Yzma’s big villain’s song, “Snuff Out the Light”. The song was apparently written quite quickly and early on in production. It talks about how Yzma’s father, the Royal Mortician, taught her about magic and voodoo, and how she’s always tried to find a recipe for eternal youth. She also says that the sun is what is robbing her of her youth, hence why she needs to “snuff out the light”. The animation would have featured a black background with vivid streaks of colour, in a sequence similar to Pink Elephants on Parade from Dumbo (1941). Once Yzma’s storyline was cut from the film, there was no need for the song. Despite its villainous lyrics, it’s quite a fun villain’s song. It is a shame that this did not make the film, as it would have given Eartha Kitt a stand-out number, and a chance to show off her singing talents again. Sting and Hartley also worked on a number for Huaca, Yzma’s rock sidekick. It was inspired by the song “Why Can’t a Woman Be More Like a Man?” from the musical My Fair Lady, and would have been called “Why Can’t a Human Be More Like a Rock?”. This song is not in the soundtrack, so obviously was not fully finished and recorded.

The other song written by Sting and Hartley for Kingdom of the Sun that appears on the soundtrack is “Walk the Llama Llama”, which appears as a bonus feature on the DVD. On the DVD, you can watch the music video and also learn the dance sequence. It’s a silly song, but kind of fun to dance to actually, because of course I did – for research purposes… It is performed by the country music group Rascal Flatts. Later, in 2005, Rascal Flatts would perform “Life Is a Highway”, a cover of Canadian musician Tom Cochrane’s song, for Pixar’s movie, Cars. “Walk the Llama Llama” was going to be used for Kingdom of the Sun, and sung by Pacha as he led his trio of llamas down the mountainside and into the marketplace[8].

At this point, Sting had written all the songs needed for Kingdom of the Sun, and thought he was almost done with his work. But then, of course, the whole story was being reworked and he ended up back at the start of his musical journey, because nothing that had already been written would fit the new tone of the story. Bravely, Disney then asked Sting to write two new songs for the film, which was no longer going to be a musical. Reluctantly, Sting did as was asked, but, understandably, he was quite upset and disappointed, not to mention annoyed, with how the original story and his music had been cast aside.

Luckily, Sting did write the two songs, one of which is the opening number, “Perfect World”. It plays as we see Emperor Kuzco being pampered and waited on, with his own personal “theme song guy” singing this theme song. I like the song as a whole, and I particularly like the first few seconds of instrumental at the start of it. Somehow, Sir Tom Jones agreed to sing it and that just makes it even better. Tom Jones was asked to perform it as they wanted the song to have a Vegas-feel to it, and it certainly does! The song is then reprised at the end of the film, with new lyrics that talk about friendship and that “the perfect world begins and ends with us”, instead “with me” as it says at the start of the film. 

The End Credits song is called “My Funny Friend and Me”, which is a slow ballad, detailing the story of Pacha and Kuzco’s friendship, and is performed by Sting. Sadly, I don’t like it much but I understand the sentiment behind it. It doesn’t matter what I think anyway, because this song of Sting’s was nominated for Best Song at multiple award ceremonies, including at the Academy Awards and at the Golden Globes, losing to “Things Have Changed” by Bob Dylan from the film Wonder Boys (2000). “My Funny Friend and Me” did win Best Song at the Critics’ Choice Movie Awards, though. “Perfect World” won at the Annie Awards for Outstanding Individual Achievement for a Song in an Animated Production.

The score was composed by John Debney, who has composed music for numerous films, including many for the Walt Disney Company, including Hocus Pocus (1993) and its 2022 sequel, The Princess Diaries (2001), and its 2004 sequel, Snow Dogs (2002), and Chicken Little (2005), which Mark Dindal would direct. From the score, I particularly like the piece “Run, Llama, Run”, which features during the final chase scene to the palace with Kuzco, Pacha, Yzma, and Kronk, and “A New Hope”, when Kuzco tries, briefly, to be like a normal llama when he is separated from Pacha. But generally, the whole score is good.

Originally, Marc Shaiman, who went on to compose the score for the likes of Hairspray (2007) and Disney’s Mary Poppins Returns (2018), was asked to compose the score. However, it was deemed to be “too busy”. After some attempts at correcting this, Shaiman was asked to move on, and John Debney came in instead[9].

RECEPTION

Due to the upheaval in changing the entire tone and plot of the movie, the release dates for Dinosaur (2000) and The Emperor’s New Groove were swapped, meaning Dinosaur was released in May 2000. The Emperor’s New Groove was finally released on 15th December 2000 in the US. Despite some marketing in the way of cross-promotional campaigns, such as toys for McDonald’s Happy Meals, The Emperor’s New Groove was not as well marketed as another Disney release of 2000, 102 Dalmatians, which was released on 22nd November, just a few weeks earlier. It also struggled up against Jim Carrey’s How the Grinch Stole Christmas, released 17th November 2000. The Emperor’s New Groove did not do well at the box-office, earning just $169 million worldwide.

It did, however, receive some decent reviews[10]. Many felt that the movie was hilarious, with Spade and Warburton’s voice work as Kuzco and Kronk respectively being a major contributing factor to this opinion. It was also seen to be appealing to both children and adults, with a quick pace to its storyline. A few were more critical though. They said that the film was forgettable and that it did not show much greatness of animation, not matching the likes of Tarzan (1999) for example. This is a fair enough statement, except that some reviewers seemed to be continuing to compare any new Disney animated movie to that of Beauty and the Beast (1991) or even Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937). Disney knew it was not sustainable to continue churning out the same musical fairy-tale and needed to change up their style and do something different. Obviously if the people expect something and get another thing, they will be disappointed.

The Emperor’s New Groove was nominated at several awards ceremonies, such as the Satellite Awards and Annie Awards. For the animation and voice work, Disney won awards for Character Animation by Dale Baer for Yzma and Voice Acting for Eartha Kitt as Yzma, with Patrick Warburton also nominated for Kronk. Storyboarding, Directing, Writing, and Production Design were also categories that Disney was nominated in.

The timing of The Emperor’s New Groove release was not the best, as 2000 was a big year for animated films and family movies in general, with the likes of Rugrats in Paris: The Movie (Paramount/Nickelodeon), The Road to El Dorado (DreamWorks), and Chicken Run (Aardman) all being released earlier in the same year. There were also comparisons drawn between The Road to El Dorado, as both were set in South America around the same time period of the 1500s, and were buddy comedies, with the friendship of the two leading male characters being a focal point of the story. Some like to say that this was down to the skilled espionage of Jeffrey Katzenberg, who left the Disney Company in 1994 and would have seen production on Kingdom of the Sun, before moving over to DreamWorks. It could be seen as a similar situation to that in 1998, when DreamWorks quickly made Antz, a similar movie to Pixar’s A Bug’s Life, and released it in October 1998, a month both Pixar released theirs in November 1998. Though Katzenberg may have been inspired by the location of Kingdom of the Sun, I believe the two films are quite different and therefore, on this occasion, I don’t think Katzenberg was a spy. Either way, all four films have their fans, though The Road to El Dorado suffered at the box-office and received mixed reviews from critics, so this could be a small win for The Emperor’s New Groove.

LEGACY

When the film was released on VHS and DVD, The Emperor’s New Groove managed to increase its following and popularity. In 2001, it became the top-selling home video release of that year. In 2013, the film was digitally remastered and sold as a two-movie Blu-Ray collection, alongside its sequel.

As was quite standard in the 2000s, The Emperor’s New Groove received a direct-to-video sequel, titled Kronk’s New Groove, released in 2005. It follows Kronk, who is now chef at Mudka’s Meat Hut, who is preparing for his father to visit him. He is anxious as his father has always disapproved of his choices in life and thinks he should have settled down with a family by now. The original voice cast all returned to reprise their roles for Kronk’s New Groove, with even John Fielder as Rudy, and Patti Deutsch as Mata, returning here. For some strange reason, Kronk’s New Groove currently holds a critical rating of 0% on Rotten Tomatoes – as does Mulan II (2004) – which seems grossly unfair. It’s not a great film, but it’s not awful and no worse or better than any other Disney direct-to-video sequels, many of which were judged harshly, but aren’t actually all that bad.

In 2006, a spin-off television series aired on the Disney Channel for two seasons between January 2006 and November 2008, titled The Emperor’s New School. It is set after the events of The Emperor’s New Groove and follows Kuzco as he must graduate from Kuzco Academy to formally become emperor of the Inca Empire. I have watched a few episodes of this series and thought it was funny at the time, but I can’t remember any of the plot points now. I actually thought it was set before the first film, and wondered how he knew Pacha; shows how much I was paying attention! J.P. Manoux, who had already voiced Kuzco in other Disney media, except for Kronk’s New Groove, replaced David Spade here through the program’s entirety, and Fred Tatasciore replaced John Goodman as Pacha for Season 1, with John Goodman returning for Season 2. Eartha Kitt and Patrick Warburton did return to reprise their roles, as did Wendie Malick as Chicha, and Patti Deutsch, as Mata the lunch lady.  Eartha Kitt won two Annie Awards for Voice Acting in an Animated Television Production and two Daytime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Performer in an Animated Program for her voice work here.

Two games based on the film were also developed, including a PC game, which I believe was the first computer game I ever actually managed to finish! I loved it.

At the Disney Parks, Kuzco, Yzma, and Kronk seem to be the only characters who were designed to be walkaround characters. I cannot find categoric evidence that the three appeared at the Disney Parks around the time of The Emperor’s New Groove release date, but this was probably the case. However, in recent years, these three characters are incredibly difficult characters to meet. At Disneyland, Yzma appeared most recently at the Disneyland After Dark: Villains Nite event in 2022, and at Walt Disney World, Kronk and Yzma apparently appeared during the Wine and Dine Half Marathon in 2021. Surprisingly, Kronk, Yzma and Kuzco have appeared quite frequently at Disneyland Paris, for example at the Disney FanDaze event in 2018, at the Annual Passholder Event in September 2019, again in 2021, and sometimes Yzma appears at the Halloween event. I am unsure if any of the three ever appeared at Hong Kong, Tokyo, or Shanghai. The rarity of these character meet-and-greets and the increased popularity of the film in recent years will mean that they will likely appear again at special events at the US and Paris Disney Parks at the least.

There was actually a special event held at Disney’s Typhoon Lagoon at Walt Disney World Resort in Florida in August 2025. This was a one-night only after-hours event as part of the Destination D23 Expo, which ran from 29th August to 31st August 2025, and exclusive only to expo-goers. On 30th August 2025, Yzma, Kronk, and Kuzco all appeared at the waterpark, dancing with a DJ, however, they were not available for traditional meet-and-greets. Other characters created for this night who wandered the park, including Yzma’s makeup artist and a squirrel cadet. Food and drink themed to the movie were served, and other Disney characters, like Mickey and Minnie, were on hand to meet guests.

There were some brief references to the film and the characters in other areas though. At the Magic Kingdom in Walt Disney World, Kuzco and Yzma used to appear in a storyline for the interactive game Sorcerers of the Magic Kingdom, where guests would fight against villains alongside Merlin. Their storyline took place in Adventureland. I really liked that game, and it was something different to do if lines were too long or everywhere was a bit crowded, so it’s a shame they closed it in January 2021, just about nine years after it opened. At Disney Springs at Walt Disney World, specifically at the Marketplace Co-op store, a boutique called Disney TAG (Travel-Accessories-Gear) used to exist within that building. It opened in March 2016; I am unsure when it closed and was replaced with another boutique, but it is no longer listed as one of Marketplace Co-op’s retail outlets. As Disney TAG was travel themed, there was an Arrivals and Departures Flight Board on the wall. On it were listed a variety of real and fantasy destinations, one of which was Kuzcotopia.

Finally, at the Disney Parks, this time at Tokyo DisneySea, some claim that the Lost River Delta area of the park is visually influenced by Kuzco’s Incan empire. I have not been to that park, but looking at videos of this area online, I would have to disagree that this area looks like anything from The Emperor’s New Groove. There are stone temples that represent areas of Peru, specifically one named Cusco, and the entrance to the Raging Spirits ride does vaguely resemble Kuzco’s palace, but for it to be classed as themed to The Emperor’s New Groove, it would have to have been all in gold, in my opinion.

In recent years, more merchandise based on The Emperor’s New Groove and its characters have been released, both exclusive items for members of specific associations and general items for the public. These have included ornaments, pins, Funko models, and MagicBands for the general public, and for the 2022 D23 Expo, a Devil Kronk Loungefly backpack and an Angel Kronk wallet were released for D23 members. 2025 also saw The Emperor’s New Groove celebrate its 25th anniversary, so more merchandise was released then, such as figurines and plush toys.

FINAL THOUGHTS

Thanks to its cult following, The Emperor’s New Groove is beginning to be remembered and referenced again. It has been hard-going for many years for fans of the movie who wanted to see the film mentioned, and even though there are no permanent, concrete references to the movie at the Disney Parks currently, it is likely that merchandise lines will keep being developed to capitalise on the love for this film.

The Emperor’s New Groove was the film that Disney Animation never meant to make. It was never the plan to release a buddy comedy, but audience expectations and viewers’ tastes were changing around the early 2000s and Disney wanted to make sure they were on trend. Unfortunately, it didn’t work out for them financially with The Emperor’s New Groove, but critically, it was received well. In the years that followed, comedy movies from animation studios, such as Shrek (2001) and Madagascar (2005) would do incredibly well at the box-office, so Disney Animation were perhaps just a bit too early here.

Sadly, Disney Animation continued to have a difficult ride for the rest of the 2000s, but it wasn’t for lack of trying. Even though the 2000s was not the decade for The Emperor’s New Groove, perhaps the 2020s is.


REFERENCES

[1] Credit: Disney, “Behind-the-Scenes Featurette”, from The Emperor’s New Groove (2000), DVD (2001).

[2] Credit: Sean Wilson, ‘The Emperor’s New Groove 20th anniversary: 5 reasons why it’s an underrated Disney gem’, Cineworld.ie, 15th December 2020.

[3] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘The Emperor’s New Groove (2000), pp. 118-120.

[4] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘The Emperor’s New Groove (2000), pp. 118-120.

[5] Credit: Bilge Ebiri, ‘’We’ll Never Make That Kind of Movie Again’ An oral history of The Emperor’s New Groove, a raucous Disney animated film that almost never happened’, Vulture.com, 27th January 2021.

[6] Credit: Wade Sampson, ‘The Greatest Disney Documentary You May Never See’, MousePlanet.com, 12th September 2007.

[7] Credit: Trudie Styler and John-Paul Davidson, The Sweatbox (2002).

[8] Credit: Wade Sampson, ‘The Greatest Disney Documentary You May Never See’, MousePlanet.com, 12th September 2007.

[9] Credit: Trudie Styler and John-Paul Davidson, The Sweatbox (2002).

[10] Credit: Wade Sampson, ‘The Greatest Disney Documentary You May Never See’, MousePlanet.com, 12th September 2007.

#9 Fun and Fancy Free (1947)

  1. BACKGROUND
  2. STORY #1: BONGO
  3. STORY #2: MICKEY AND THE BEANSTALK
  4. PRODUCTION
  5. RECEPTION
  6. LEGACY
  7. FINAL THOUGHTS
  8. REFERENCES

BACKGROUND

Due to the difficulties the Disney Studios faced in the 1940s, with the 1941 Animator’s Strike, and the impact of World War II on both the European markets and the animation workforce, the Studios released a series of “package features”. Fun and Fancy Free was released in this era of the “package feature”, being a more cost-effective film to release because of the financial pressure the Studios was under at the time.

Unlike the three previous “package features” to have come before Fun and Fancy Free, which contained four separate segments, then seven, then ten, for Saludos Amigos (1942), The Three Caballeros (1944), and Make Mine Music (1946) respectively, Fun and Fancy Free consists of only two sections that tell two different stories: “Bongo” and “Mickey and the Beanstalk”. These two stories were combined together, both being roughly thirty minutes in length, with linking material to make Fun and Fancy Free.

Of all the Disney Wartime Era “package features”, Fun and Fancy Free is the one I dislike the most, but not for its lack of detailed plot, not for the fact it simply joins two unrelated stories together, not for Disney’s loss of vision, but for ventriloquist dummies….

For some reason, ventriloquism seemed to be a more popular form of entertainment back in the day than it seems to be now, but as I have a strange fear of dolls, ventriloquist dummies, puppets – anything with a human face, especially if they move as well – I have only watched Fun and Fancy Free once, well, twice now, because midway through the film, as the second of the two stories is being introduced, Edgar Bergen appears with his two dummies, Charlie and Mortimer, for probably ten minutes in total – and I am not here for that.

Yet if I ignore the ventriloquism, which is difficult to do as the dummies pop up throughout the narration of “Mickey and the Beanstalk”, Fun and Fancy Free as a whole isn’t terrible; it’s just not as enjoyable for me as the other five of this era. I didn’t find the stories as interesting, probably because “Bongo” is quite a dragged-out simple story and “Mickey and the Beanstalk” is just another retelling of Jack and the Beanstalk. The music wasn’t very catchy either. But like I said, it’s not awful, just not the best.

STORY #1: BONGO

The movie begins with the typical, for this time, Opening Credits and the title song “Fun and Fancy Free”. It’s quite a jazzy, Big Band-type number, like it belongs in the Golden Age of Hollywood Musicals. It reminds me specifically of Top Hat (1935) and Fred’s song “No Strings (I’m Fancy Free)”. But that could just be because both songs use the phrase “Fancy Free”. Regardless, as I like musicals, I was not surprised at how much I enjoyed the song. This song was written by Bennie Benjamin and George David Weiss, who worked together frequently, including on the title song for Disney’s Melody Time (1948), however, for me, I have heard of songs written by both of them but with different collaborators. Benjamin, for example, wrote the song “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood”, with Sol Marcus, for Nina Simone, and Weiss co-wrote “What a Wonderful World”, which was first recorded by Louis Armstrong, and “Can’t Help Falling in Love”, recorded by Elvis Presley.

Straight from this opening number, we then see Jiminy Cricket, who appears to be paddling on a stream, only to find he is actually paddling through some sort of indoor planter! He makes his way out of the planter and into a house, where he tells us “I’m a Happy-Go-Lucky Fellow” in song. This song melds well with the title song, and again, I quite like it. It was written by Ned Washington and Eliot Daniel. Eliot Daniel went on to co-write “Blue Shadows on the Trail” for Melody Time (1948), as well as write the song “Lavender Blue” for So Dear to My Hear (1948), which was Oscar-nominated, and then compose the theme from I Love Lucy (1951-1957). Ned Washington wrote the lyrics for some of the music from Dumbo (1941), including “Baby Mine”, nominated for an Oscar for Best Original Song, and “When You Wish Upon a Star” from Pinocchio (1940), which did win the Oscar for Best Original Song. “I’m a Happy-Go-Lucky Fellow” was originally written for Pinocchio but for some reason, it was not used[1]. Cliff Edwards, original voice and singing voice of Jiminy Cricket in Pinocchio (1940), reprises his character again for Fun and Fancy Free.

After his song, Jiminy tells the viewers that everyone worries too much; we read too many serious things in books and newspapers, and we should all relax more. He then finds himself in a bedroom, with a sad-looking doll and teddy bear, and says he’ll put some music on to cheer them up. He finds a record called “Bongo”, a musical story by Dinah Shore. She sang “Two Silhouttes” for Disney’s Make Mine Music (1946), and was one of the most popular female vocalists of the 1940s, having 80 charted records by 1957. Shore later hosted talk shows in the 1970s[2].

Then we move into the animated world of “Bongo”. It begins by saying this is a story of three bears, but not the three bears story we know that involves Goldilocks; this is a love story instead. Bongo is a big circus star, being able to juggle, lift weights, and walk tightropes amongst many things, however, outside of his onstage performances, he is treated badly by the circus owners and moved constantly from place to place, never getting to experience the outside world. One day, Bongo breaks free from his train carriage and cycles away on his unicycle into the woods. Once he gets there, he realises that he doesn’t know how to be a real bear, as he can’t climb trees, hunt food, or even growl correctly. Some of the forest creatures make fun of him, including two chipmunks who appear to be Chip ‘n’ Dale, but Bongo doesn’t care: it’s a bright, sunny day, and he’s free, to just relax in the countryside and experience all of nature for the first time.

That night, though, as he settles down to sleep, everything seems so loud to him, like insects, bats, thunder, lightning and rain. He stumbles around the woods, trying to find somewhere calmer, eventually falling asleep. Bongo wakes up by a cliff, and is cranky and hungry. He tries to catch a fish but falls through a waterfall, where he sees a girl bear. Bongo thinks he’s dreaming, but she’s right there. Bongo follows the bear into the woods and it’s love at first sight for both of them. All the others bears in the woods surround them and stare at them, as Bongo and the girl, Lulubelle, stare into each other’s eyes – creepy. But they scatter, as a big bear comes stomping into the woods. It’s Lumpjaw, a huge bully of a bear, who likes Lulubelle, and doesn’t want Bongo anywhere near her. He picks Bongo up and throws him around a bit, before Lulubelle tells Lumpjaw to stop. She then proceeds to slap Bongo around the face, not once, but twice! Bongo is heartbroken, not understanding why the girl he loves would be slapping him. Lulubelle goes to slap him one last time, but Bongo ducks so Lulubelle ends up slapping Lumpjaw, who instantly claims her as his girl. It turns out bears slap each other when they like each other – who knew?

Bongo leaves the others bears and goes back to the cliff he woke up on. He watches as the others bear randomly square dance and sing about the strange custom of how their love is shown with a slap. Bongo finally twigs that Lulubelle was slapping him because she likes him. Of course! Because that’s what a normal person would think! Bongo tries to get close to Lulubelle, who is clearly unhappy with Lumpjaw, so he can slap her, and show he likes her too, but Lumpjaw isn’t about to give her up so easily. He tries to beat up Bongo, but Bongo, with his circus skills and unicycle, manages to avoid and outsmart him every time. But then, they both fall into the fast-flowing river, balancing on a log initially, but the log goes over a waterfall and takes them both with it, with the current being too quick to swim out of. It seems that both Lumpjaw and Bongo have been lost forever – except Bongo’s circus hat has saved him from falling over the waterfall, as it became caught on a branch. Bongo goes back to the other bears to win his girl with – you guessed it – a slap round the face! They then live happily ever after up a tree, as wild bears do.

Aside from Dinah Shore’s narration, both singing and spoken, and Cliff Edwards as Jiminy Cricket, there is no other real dialogue, mostly just sound effects. There are three other songs in this half of Fun and Fancy Free though, all performed primarily by Dinah Shore. Written by Bobby Worth, who also contributed the songs “Blue Bayou” in Make Mine Music (1946) and “Once Upon a Wintertime” in Melody Time (1948), the song “Lazy Countryside” is performed as Bongo enjoys being in nature for the first time. It’s a calm, relaxing song, if not particularly memorable. The next song is the love ballad “Too Good to Be True” as Bongo and Lulubelle dance in pink candy floss clouds and fall in love. Again, this song is nice enough to listen to, but I didn’t find myself remembering it afterwards. It was written by Eliot Daniel, who co-wrote the title number, and Buddy Kaye. Buddy Kaye wrote numerous songs throughout his career, which were recorded by singers such as Frank Sinatra, Perry Como, Barry Manilow, and Cliff Richard. Daniel and Kaye also wrote the remaining number, “Say It with a Slap”. This is a strange song, not only for its lyrics, but also for its country feel, as it is performed when the bears start to square dance. But because of this, it was catchier than the other songs in this section of Fun and Fancy Free! This song, and “Too Good to Be True”, are reprised together at the very end of the segment, rounding it off nicely.

STORY #2: MICKEY AND THE BEANSTALK

And then, we are back in the room as the record ends with Jiminy Cricket, the doll and the teddy bear, who are both now smiling. Jiminy Cricket sees an invite for a birthday party on a table. It is addressed to Miss Luana Patten, a child actress for the Disney Studios at the time, who starred in Song of the South (1946) with Bobby Driscoll, the voice and model of Peter Pan, in the year before Fun and Fancy Free, and then reappeared alongside Driscoll again in both the “Pecos Bill” segment of Melody Time (1948), and in So Dear to My Heart (1948). The invite says the party is at “the house across the way”, so even though Jiminy is not invited to it, thanks to a reprise of the song “Fun and Fancy Free” titled “The House Across the Way”, he is motivated to break into the house across the street and see what’s going on at this party!

The word “party” is a bit of an over-exaggeration, it’s more of a “get-together”, because there are only Luana Patten, Edgar Bergen, Charlie McCarthy, and Mortimer Snerd over at this house, but who are these other three “people”? Well, this is the part I don’t like. Though ventriloquist Edgar Bergen, father of actress Candice Bergen, himself is not scary to look at, though he is doing some weird talking act with his hand at first, it’s his two friends Charlie and Mortimer who are the ventriloquist dummies who haunt my soul… I actually think the two of them are quite funny if I don’t look at them, because some of the things, particularly Charlie, come out with are amusing during this section of Fun and Fancy Free. Alas, even though I don’t like them, these are Bergen’s two most famous characters, with the trio being particularly famous on radio at the time. They would also appear on Walt Disney’s first television production, a Christmas Day special, in 1950, titled One Hour in Wonderland.

Anyway, back to this “party”. Edgar offers to tell them all a story, with Jiminy Cricket settling down on a plate to listen to it. After some delay where Edgar tries to get Mortimer to imagine the land of Happy Valley, only to find he can’t do it and asking Luana to imagine it instead, we find ourselves in a prosperous land, where everyone and everything is happy. In a castle on top of a hill at the top of the lush valley, the singing Golden Harp resides, whose singing and general presence seems to boost the area and all who live there. One day, a shadow comes over Happy Valley and the Harp is stolen. Now the valley is miserable and desolate. Many residents have left the area, but three poor farmers remain. Those farmers are Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and Goofy. They have no money, very little food, and just an old cow who no longer produces milk. Donald is fed up with this way of life and goes a bit crazy, threatening to kill the cow just so they can finally eat. Mickey and Goofy manage to restrain him. We then end up back at the party, where Edgar has used Charlie to re-enact this scene. Charlie and Luana debate over whether eating the cow would make sense – which it would, but this film is meant for children, so naturally, Luana says it should survive.

Back in the story, Mickey goes to sell the cow, giving Donald and Goofy hope that they will be able to eat well again, picturing all the foods they’ll be able to eat now. Except Mickey comes back, and the cow has gone, but he sold it for magic beans to plant in the light of a full moon. Donald and Goofy believe he’s been scammed, with Donald throwing them into a hole on the floor and they think no more of it. Overnight, a beanstalk grows all through their house, taking them up and out of their beds as they sleep, high into the sky. They wake up to see a giant castle straight ahead of them and decide to investigate. They walk through a huge garden, row over an enormous moat, and eventually make their way into the castle, after scaling the large steps. They knock on the door, but there is no answer, so they crawl under the door to get inside. They’ve clearly taken some advice from Jiminy Cricket on how to break in to other people’s homes when you haven’t been invited to go inside!

On a table above them, they see a huge feast laid out. Once they’ve climbed up onto the table, they have at it, eating whatever they can, as fast as they can. But then, they hear a voice, which leads them to a locked box, also on the table. Inside is the lost Golden Harp of Happy Valley! She tells the three that she was kidnapped by a giant and that he keeps her locked up in this box most of the time. We then go back to the live-action party, where Edgar shows the others what the Giant looks like by making a shadow puppet with his hands. Back into the animation, we meet Willie the Giant, as he makes his way down the hall and to his table. It turns out Willie the Giant has magic, and can even shapeshift into different things. The three hide as the Giant sits down to dinner, but Mickey chooses to hide in the Giant’s sandwich – that seems like the last place he should be hiding, shouldn’t it? The Giant goes to eat the sandwich, but Mickey sneezes from the pepper and gives himself away. Mickey then reads the Giant’s palms, to gain his trust, which seems to work as the Giant offers to show off his powers. Seeing a fly swatter nearby, Mickey asks the Giant to turn himself into a fly. The Giant would rather become a Giant pink rabbit instead, and as he does so, he spots Mickey, Donald, and Goofy grabbing at the fly swatter. He catches all three of them and locks them in the box with the Harp.

Unbeknownst to Willie, Mickey is actually free, and as the Harp is taken out of the box to sing the Giant to sleep, Mickey uses a length of thread to abseil down to the Giant and get the key that unlocks the box. In the Giant’s pocket, along with the key, is his snuff box, which Mickey disturbs, sending up a plume of dust, which makes Mickey and the Giant sneeze. But Mickey gets the key, and frees Donald and Goofy. They make a break for it with the Harp, but the Giant wakes up and starts to chase them. Mickey stalls the Giant so that Donald and Goofy can get to the bottom of the beanstalk and cut it down. Mickey gets down just in time. TIMBER! The beanstalk falls with the Giant still on it. Presumably, the fall has killed him. But the Golden Harp has returned to the valley so everything is great again.

Back at the party, as the story has now finished, Edgar consoles a crying Mortimer, who is upset that the Giant is dead. This scene is seen briefly in Disney’s Enchanted (2007), when Prince Edward is flipping through the channels on the TV in his dingy hotel room. Edgar tells him that the Giant wasn’t real anyway, but then, in a shock twist, Willie the Giant rips off the roof of Edgar’s house and asks them where Mickey Mouse might be, quite politely, I might add. Edgar is so shocked by this turn of events that he faints on the spot. Mortimer bids Willie goodnight and tells him to quietly put the roof back on so as not to wake Mr. Bergen. Willie then walks over to Hollywood, lifting up random buildings to find Mickey, even picking up the Brown Derby Restaurant hat sign to take with him, as Jiminy watches him go.

Voice actor Billy Gilbert supplies the voice of Willie the Giant. Gilbert was known for his comedic sneezing routines, so when Walt Disney first saw this routine, he cast Gilbert in the role of Sneezy in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937). Naturally, since Gilbert is so good at sneezing, Willie the Giant had to have a big sneeze in “Mickey and the Beanstalk”, so one was given to him; when Mickey spills the Giant’s snuff box.

Speaking of Mickey, Walt Disney actually provided some of Mickey’s lines for this segment around 1940 or 1941, but he was too busy to do any further recording when production resumed after World War II, so Jimmy MacDonald, the original head of the Disney sound effects department, was asked to finish recording the lines. This was MacDonald’s first voice appearance as Mickey, but he would continue to voice the character from that point until 1977[3].

Clarence Nash and Pinto Colvig return to voice Donald Duck and Goofy in “Mickey and the Beanstalk”. This segment of Fun and Fancy Free was the first time that Donald, Goofy, and Mickey had appeared together in a feature-length animated film. They had appeared together as a trio prior to this, but only in short cartoons. The debut of the three characters as a trio came in 1935 with Mickey and the Service Station[4]. For Mickey Mouse, Fun and Fancy Free was his second feature film appearance, with his first being Fantasia (1940), in “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice” section of the film[5].

In March 1953, a short cartoon titled The Simple Things was released, which featured Mickey Mouse and Pluto. This was then the final theatrical appearance of Mickey until Mickey’s Christmas Carol in 1983. Mickey’s Christmas Carol also saw Donald and Goofy in a return to the screen, with Willie the Giant even reappearing, this time as the Ghost of Christmas Present. Mickey played a version of Bob Cratchit; Donald, a version of Scrooge’s nephew; and Goofy, a version of Jacob Marley’s ghost.

Anita Gordon, singer who performed for radio, television and film productions, including dubbing the singing part of Margy in the film remake of State Fair (1962), provides the voice, singing and spoken, for the Golden Harp. She sings two songs in “Mickey and the Beanstalk”: “My, What a Happy Day” and “My Favorite Dream”, both written by Bill Walsh and Ray Noble. Bill Walsh had worked on various Disney television productions, including Davy Crockett (1954-55) and The Mickey Mouse Club (1955-59), and wrote movies for the Studios, such as Blackbeard’s Ghost (1968) and, most famously, Mary Poppins (1964), alongside Don DaGradi. Ray Noble was a bandleader and composer, who worked with Edgar Bergen during his career, and appeared in the 1937 Fred Astaire film A Damsel in Distress. Of the two songs, I like the upbeat, opening tune of “My, What a Happy Day”, whereas “My Favorite Dream” is a lullaby for the Giant and isn’t as fun as the first song. 

Willie the Giant also gets a song here, “Fee-Fi-Fo-Fum”, where he talks about his magical powers. It’s good for showing us what the Giant can do, but it’s not the best song here; it’s also less than a minute long so isn’t much of a song! It was written by Paul Smith, who worked on numerous Disney movie scores from the 1930s to the 1960s, including Cinderella (1950) with Oliver Wallace, and Pinocchio (1940), alongside Ned Washington and Leigh Harline, which won Best Original Score at the Academy Awards in 1941.

Apart from a brief reprise of “Fun and Fancy Free” at the very end of the film, the only other song in Fun and Fancy Free to mention is “Eat Until I Die”, which is performed by Donald and Goofy as they dream about what food they’ll be able to eat when Mickey comes back from selling their cow. This song uses the same tune, but different lyrics, as the Neapolitan song “Funiculì, Funiculà”, composed in 1880 by Luigi Denza and Peppino Turco. It has been performed by many artists including Pavarotti and Andrea Bocelli.

The film score for Fun and Fancy Free was primarily composed by Oliver Wallace and Paul Smith, with Charles Wolcott as the General Musical Director. Wolcott had this role from 1944 at the Disney Studios, working on many of the Disney “package features” during this era, before transferring to MGM Studios in 1950. Wallace and Smith animated many of Disney’s cartoon short and film scores from the 1930s to the 1960s. 

Jiminy Cricket is the only character to appear all through Fun and Fancy Free. This was his first appearance since Pinocchio (1940), but he would later be used to narrate educational shorts for children, many of which first aired on The Mickey Mouse Club television series in the 1950s. Jiminy even narrated the “Bongo” story, instead of Dinah Shore, for an episode of Disneyland in 1955. He also hosted five of the Disney Sing-Along Songs videos in the 1980s and 1990s[6].

PRODUCTION

Fun and Fancy Free combined two separate stories and packaged them into a full-length feature film. This was not the intention from the start as both “Bongo” and “Mickey and the Beanstalk” were meant to be full-length feature films, released on their own. The Disney Studios wanted to make a full-length adaptation of Jack and the Beanstalk, the English fairy tale popularised in 1890 by Joseph Jacobs, since Disney had already used this story as a basis in 1922 for a Laugh-O-Gram short, then the Giantland short in 1933 with Mickey, and once again with Mickey in Brave Little Tailor (1938), which was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film.

In the initial planning, it was decided that this Jack and the Beanstalk story should involve Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and Goofy, who were well-known as a comedic trio in short cartoons, but needed an opportunity to carry their own feature-length film. Development properly began on this story in 1940, with many ideas such as how the beanstalk would grow, the Giant’s dinner table, and the Golden Harp all being decided at this time. There was also a plan for Gideon and Honest John from Pinocchio (1940) to be the ones to trade Mickey the cow for the “magic beans”. But instead, it was decided that Minnie Mouse, as Queen Minnie, would be the one to do this trade, with her saying that she couldn’t just take his cow for nothing, so would give Mickey her family heirloom of a box of magic beans, which held a legend of fame and fortune should they be planted. This scene was storyboarded and voice tracked, but was not animated, and ultimately not used.

“Bongo” was based on a children’s story written by Sinclair Lewis for Cosmopolitan magazine in 1930 under the name “Little Bear Bongo”. There are a few differences between Disney’s version of the story and the original. One of these is that Bongo does not purposefully escape the circus train in the original story, but there is an accident on the train which throws Bongo out of his cage and into the woods. Another is that Lulubelle’s character does not exist in the original story. Instead, a female bear called Silver Ear catches Bongo’s eye, however, she does not return his affections, choosing to be with the violent bear Lump Jaw. The bears don’t like Bongo in the original story and Silver Ear and the others drive him away, as they do not like how “un-bearlike” he is. Lewis’ story then has Bongo leave the woods and find a new circus to join, where the Ringmaster sees how well-trained he is and takes him in, so that he can live in his accustomed environment again, this time with the circus’ other trained bear – a female – for company. Walt Disney acquired the story rights to “Little Bear Bongo” in 1941. Bongo later became a headliner for Disney comic books and was the title character in one of the very first Disney Little Golden Books in 1948.

For Disney’s “Bongo”, early story notes suggested that this would be a follow up to the story of Dumbo (1941) and would have used the same circus and some of the elephants. The early designs of Bongo and Lulubelle, whose original name was Suzie, were very different, and Lumpjaw was designed wearing street clothes. Some additional characters who did not make it into the segment included a chimpanzee valet for Bongo. A rough script for the movie was agreed in 1941, around the same time as the attack on Pearl Harbor on 7th December 1941. This set off a series of events, like the United States formally entered World War II, Disney artists being drafted into the military, and the Disney Studios being used to make military and propaganda films for the war effort. Because of this, the two planned films were paused.

Once the war was over, it was difficult for the Disney Studios to build themselves back up financially, and this took a number of years, with the “package features” of the 1940s being some help with this. This is because they were cheaper and quicker to make. The Disney Studios also looked at making live-action movies with some animated sequences mixed in, like Song of the South (1946), because live-action filming is cheaper than animation. They could not solely release live-action movies because of their contract with RKO, which stipulated that they could only distribute films from Disney that featured animation. In 1946, Make Mine Music became the first Disney animated movie to be released after World War II, and was similar in concept to Fantasia (1940), using short segments of animation set to music. Because of this new format, the ideas of “Bongo” and “Mickey and the Beanstalk” were revived and paired together, with both of the original story concepts being trimmed and live-action sequences being filmed to cut costs[7]. Many of Walt’s animators worked on these two stories, such as Ward Kimball, Fred Moore and Les Clark on “Bongo”, and Woolie Reitherman and John Lounsbery on “Mickey and the Beanstalk”.

RECEPTION

Fun and Fancy Free was theatrically released on 27th September 1947, one week before a new Mickey Mouse short, Mickey’s Delayed Date, was released on 3rd October 1947[8]. The movie received mixed reviews from critics, with some saying, though it was uninspiring and not on par with Disney Animation’s best work, it was a happy film that was cheerful enough to keep most viewers entertained; whilst others said it was mediocre and couldn’t be saved even with the names they had in the cast, like Edgar Bergen.  

Financially, Fun and Fancy Free had modest success at the box-office, gaining around $3 million, which was fine for this format of movie. Unfortunately, unlike some of the previous “package features”, there were not even successes from the movie’s songs. Even The Three Caballeros (1944) and Saludos Amigos (1942) had managed to popularise songs such as “You Belong to My Heart” and “Aquarela do Brasil”, but nothing from Fun and Fancy Free really stuck in the minds of audiences, though the title song was covered by some artists, such as The Dinning Sisters[9].

“Bongo” and “Mickey and the Beanstalk” were later released separately. Aside from one episode of the Disneyland television series in 1955 where Jiminy Cricket narrated “Bongo”; “Bongo” was released as a standalone featurette in January 1971. The arguably more favoured section of Fun and Fancy Free, “Mickey and the Beanstalk”, has been aired on television in different edits. For example, in 1955, it was edited and narrated by Sterling Holloway, original voice of Winnie the Pooh; this version was re-aired in 1980. Another edit first appeared in 1963 with Ludwig von Drake narrating the story, and this version has been used for most home video releases of the story.

Following on from the release of Fun and Fancy Free, a similar format of two animated stories being “packaged” together would be released in 1949 under the name The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad, which adapted the tales of The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame, and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving. It was originally planned for Jiminy Cricket to introduce the two stories, as he did in Fun and Fancy Free, but this never happened. Instead, Basil Rathbone narrates the first story, and Bing Crosby the second. This film was also originally developed under the name Two Fabulous Characters, but this was obviously later changed[10].

LEGACY

An animated feature-length film was in development at the Disney Studios in the 2010s; it was going to be titled Gigantic. This movie would have adapted the Jack and the Beanstalk fairy tale, and set it in Spain. It was meant to include songs by Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez, now known for their songs from Frozen (2013) and its sequel, and be directed by Nathan Greno, who directed Tangled (2010), and Meg LeFauve, who wrote the screenplay for Pixar’s Inside Out (2015), amongst others. Its original release date was November 2016, but this date continued to be pushed further and further out, even as far as November 2020. In October 2017, it was announced that Gigantic had been shelved and that Raya and the Last Dragon (2021) would be released in this 2020 slot instead. The mystery of why this film never came to be remains unknown.

Another random addition to the “legacy” of Fun and Fancy Free is that in July 2021, Funko Games released a board game inspired by “Mickey and the Beanstalk”. The aim is to collect food from the Giant’s table and rescue the Golden Harp, and then get back to Happy Valley without getting caught by the Giant. It’s for ages four and up, so is likely a simple enough game to play, but how strange that this was made 74 years after the film came out!

At the Disney theme parks, obviously you can meet Donald Duck, Goofy, and Mickey Mouse at all of them, though they will not be attired in their “Mickey and the Beanstalk” outfits. You will also likely be able to find Jiminy Cricket at most of the parks, if not all. For a time, Bongo and Lulubelle were even walkaround characters, at least at Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World, until sometime in the 1990s. They are both visible briefly during The Muppets at Walt Disney World 1990 TV special, in a segment in Frontierland with Fozzie Bear, though they both looked quite different to how they appear in “Bongo”!

There is also a shop in Fantasyland at both Magic Kingdom and Disneyland Paris, which features a beanstalk. Disneyland Paris’ Sir Mickey’s Boutique does seem to feature the costumed Mickey as seen during “Mickey and the Beanstalk” balancing on the beanstalk as it grows through the shop, though you will also see Knight Goofy jousting at another end of the shop, which is not relevant to “Mickey and the Beanstalk”. Magic Kingdom’s Sir Mickey’s is actually meant to be based on Brave Little Tailor (1938) and not “Mickey and the Beanstalk”, which is why the Mickey statue seen here is not wearing his costume from “Mickey and the Beanstalk”. But if you look towards the ceiling in the shop, you should be able to see Willie the Giant starting to open up the roof of the shop, as he does in the final part of Fun and Fancy Free.

During the Wonderful World of Animation nighttime show at Disney’s Hollywood Studios at Walt Disney World Resort, in the central screen, almost at the very end of the show, within the compilation of scenes from various movies that follows the Encanto scene, you should be able to see a brief clip from Fun and Fancy Free. It shows Mickey trying to steal the key from Willie the Giant in “Mickey and the Beanstalk”.

Finally, since 2022 saw Fun and Fancy Free have its 75th anniversary, though this was overshadowed by the much bigger celebrations of Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary and Disney100, a couple of pieces of merchandise were released to celebrate it. There were two pins released to the general public; one featuring Bongo, with Lulubelle hidden behind a moving piece on the pin, and a second of the Golden Harp, with Mickey and Donald beside her once this moving piece is moved. There was also a pin of Mickey, Donald and Goofy standing on the beanstalk, made to a limited edition of 1,000 and was exclusively released to D23 Gold Members for purchase.

FINAL THOUGHTS

Fun and Fancy Free was the fourth of the “package features” to be released during Disney’s Wartime Era, and, though I prefer the more musical ones which have lots of short sections instead of two longer stories, actually, Fun and Fancy Free isn’t that bad – even with my fear of ventriloquist dummies!

This movie may not be Disney Animation at its best, but it is no different to the other “package features” that the Disney Studios released during the 1940s, which were something cheap and quick to make that would be just enough for audiences who were still recovering from the horrors and hardships of war. They served a purpose, and allowed the Disney Studios to recover financially before making great hits like Cinderella (1950) in the years that followed.


REFERENCES

[1] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘Fun and Fancy Free (1947), pp. 25-27.

[2] Credit: Jim Fanning, ‘Did You Know? 10 Fascinating Facts about Fun and Fancy Free’, D23.com, 27th September 2017.

[3] Credit: Jim Fanning, ‘Did You Know? 10 Fascinating Facts about Fun and Fancy Free’, D23.com, 27th September 2017.

[4] Credit: Stacia Martin, ‘Goofy: 9 Decades of Showing Us ‘How’ It’s Done!’, Disney Parks Blog, 26th September 2022.

[5] Credit: Jim Fanning, The Disney Book: A Celebration of the World of Disney (2016), ‘The Mouse who Started it all’, pp. 24-25.

[6] Credit: Jim Fanning, ‘Did You Know? 10 Fascinating Facts about Fun and Fancy Free’, D23.com, 27th September 2017.

[7] Credit: Disney, “The Story Behind Fun and Fancy Free (1997)”, from Fun and Fancy Free (1947) DVD (2002).

[8] Credit: Jim Fanning, ‘Did You Know? 10 Fascinating Facts about Fun and Fancy Free’, D23.com, 27th September 2017.

[9] Credit: James Parten, ‘Covering “Fun And Fancy Free”, CartoonResearch.com, 5th August 2018.

[10] Credit: Jim Korkis, The Vault of Walt Vol. 5 (2016), ‘The Disney Package Features’, pp. 65-73.

#51 Winnie the Pooh (2011)

  1. BACKGROUND
  2. PLOT
  3. CHARACTERS & CAST
  4. PRODUCTION
  5. MUSIC
  6. RECEPTION
  7. LEGACY
  8. FINAL THOUGHTS
  9. REFERENCES

BACKGROUND

To be clear, I love Winnie the Pooh – but I do not like this film.

The Winnie the Pooh 2011 reboot or revival is not the Winnie the Pooh that I watched in my childhood. Though Jim Cummings returns as the voice of Pooh Bear and Tigger, which is very comforting for me, there are a few voices in this film that put me off instantly, namely Rabbit’s and Owl’s, with the characters of these two also being very different from what I’ve known, almost like their personalities were swapped. I don’t care for the music either, with even the reinterpretation of the Sherman Brothers’ original theme annoying me.

The issue here is just my age. It’s not that Disney made a bad film: they didn’t commit a cardinal sin by deviating too far from either the source material or the previous Disneyfication of the stories, nor did they simply rehash the plot of The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1977), the Disney Studios’ original adaptation of A.A. Milne’s stories. But for me, who went through my childhood with numerous Winnie the Pooh attractions, television series, and movies, some theatrical, others direct-to-video throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, the 2011 Winnie the Pooh just doesn’t feel right.

During the 2000s, Winnie the Pooh as a franchise was making the Walt Disney Company plenty of money and remained popular. This wasn’t a situation like the Muppets, where its reboot in 2011 signalled a return to fame, because Winnie the Pooh and his friends hadn’t gone anywhere. They had been prevalent on our screens and in the Disney theme parks for years by this point, so why make this movie at all?

It’s important to remember who the Disney Studios were making this movie for. Not for me and my age group, but for a new generation. I’m sure many children of the 2010s love this version of Winnie the Pooh. It may even have been their first introduction to the characters, Disney or Milne. The parents of these children probably enjoyed it enough too, to sit through it with them. I, however, do not fit either of these descriptions, so I just found myself bored and irritated in equal measure. Winnie the Pooh is only about an hour in runtime, so how I found the time to feel this way, I don’t know, but I know I felt every minute of that hour. It was a struggle to remember exactly what happened either, but don’t worry, I painstakingly wrote notes so I could recount the plot for anyone who now won’t watch the film because I’ve made it seem so off-putting.

PLOT

Winnie the Pooh begins in a child’s bedroom, where we see all the toys sitting about the room, which resemble the well-known characters of the Milne stories. An invisible narrator tells us that this is Christopher Robin’s room and that it is full of items he likes to collect, including stuffed animal toys, like Winnie the Pooh, his best friend. We then see the Winnie-the-Pooh book open and an animated map of the Hundred Acre Wood comes to life. There, some of the animals are introduced to us, including Eeyore, Tigger, and Kanga.

We then move into the story. Pooh Bear is woken up by the Narrator, and literally tipped out of bed by the book turning upside down. Poor Pooh Bear, he looked so sleepy as well. But of course, once Winnie the Pooh is awake, he soon gets hungry, but all the honey pots in his house are completely empty, so he sets off in search of some, whether that be a new pot of honey or just a beehive. He then stumbles upon Eeyore. Eeyore is feeling gloomier than usual, but he isn’t sure why. Pooh notices that his tail is missing. Owl soon swoops in, talking about how he is writing his memoirs, when Pooh Bear asks for his help in finding Eeyore’s tail. Owl says they should issue a reward for finding a new tail for Eeyore, and posters are put up around the Hundred Acre Wood about this contest, with Christopher Robin running the meeting to discuss further and to announce the prize for the best tail: a pot of honey, something Winnie the Pooh would love to win.

Multiple items are tested on Eeyore, such as Pooh Bear’s own cuckoo clock, the red balloon that makes several appearances in the film, becoming a character all of its own, a yo-yo, a dartboard and a moose head, but ultimately, Kanga’s hand-knitted scarf is declared the winner, leaving Pooh Bear still without any honey and searching for some elsewhere. He spots Eeyore on the next page of the book, where the scarf has begun to unravel, so he still doesn’t have a tail. Pooh Bear goes to Christopher Robin for help again, but finds a note. Since he cannot read it, he takes it over to Owl. At Owl’s house, everyone else is over there, as Owl has decided that a chalkboard would be a good tail for Eeyore and he wins the honey. Pooh Bear asks Owl to read this note from Christopher Robin. Owl announces that Christopher Robin has been captured by a creature called a “Backson”, misreading the note which says “Back Soon”. Owl then proceeds to draw what a Backson looks like on Eeyore’s chalkboard tail and recounts the dangers of meeting one.

The group make a plan to lead the Backson into a hole and trap it there, leading it to the pit using a variety of their own items. Piglet digs the hole, and Pooh covers it with a blanket. An empty honey pot is left on top to further entice the creature to the area. The others have laid a trail of random things, leading to the hole. Tigger pounces on Eeyore whilst the others are working, believing him to be a Backson. Realising that it is just Eeyore, Tigger decides to make Eeyore a tigger so that they can fight the Backson together, with Tigger getting Eeyore a spring for a tail and painting stripes on him. Eeyore does not want to be a tigger and hides underwater, waiting for Tigger to pass by. As Tigger searches for Eeyore, he sees tracks in the dirt and gets scared that the Backson is nearby.

Meanwhile, Pooh and Piglet catch up to the others who are finishing up the trail of items. Pooh Bear is still hungry but is told there will be no stopping for lunch. He begins to see honey pots and a whole world of honey around him. He spots a honey pot ahead of him and rushes towards it – only to find it was their trick pot for the Backson, causing Pooh Bear to fall into the pit. The others walk by the hole and hear noises, believing they have caught the Backson. But then they realise it is just Winnie the Pooh. They start to discuss how to get him out when Eeyore walks by, now sporting an anchor for a tail, the anchor he found underwater when he was avoiding Tigger. Rabbit believes that they can use the anchor to retrieve Pooh Bear, but the anchor is too heavy and everyone falls in, except for Piglet – and Tigger who is nowhere to be seen. Piglet is told to find something long enough to pull them all out. He can’t find anything, except for a rope, which Rabbit tells him will be perfect. As there are six people to retrieve, Piglet cuts the rope into six individual pieces, now making them too short to pull anyone out… Rabbit asks him to knot the ropes together, but after some confusion, they realise Piglet cannot knot. Rabbit sends Piglet to go and get Christopher Robin’s skipping rope instead.

Whilst trying to find the rope, Piglet sees the red balloon, and also Tigger, who is dressed up as a Backson from his battle training session with Eeyore. Piglet rides the balloon to get away from Tigger, as Tigger also runs scared, thinking there is a Backson actually behind him that is scaring Piglet, not just himself. As Piglet flies across the book, he knocks some of the storybook’s letters into the pit, and then Piglet and Tigger also fall in. Eeyore uses the opportunity of being trapped to tell Tigger that he should be the only tigger, and that Eeyore is not meant to be one. Pooh Bear figures out how to use the storybook letters to build a ladder so they can all get out. Outside of the pit, Christopher Robin arrives with the red balloon, who tells his friends that he was away at school and that his note said he would be “back soon”. The group decide that as the red balloon “found” Christopher Robin, it should win the pot of honey – Winnie the Pooh just can’t win today!

Since Pooh Bear still doesn’t have any honey, he goes over to Owl’s house later and sees that Owl has been using Eeyore’s tail as a bell pull for his front door. Owl tells Pooh Bear that he found it whilst out and about one day, not realising that it belonged to Eeyore. Pooh rushes to return the tail to Eeyore, with Christopher Robin pinning Eeyore’s tail back on for him. This means that Pooh Bear finally wins a pot of honey, this time a huge one! He climbs in to it to finally eat. Christopher Robin tells Pooh that he did something good for a friend and is proud of him. And that’s the end of the story, apart from a short post-credits scene, which sees a Backson, as described by Owl but nicer, coming to the Hundred Acre Wood and deciding that he should return all the items to the “scary looking fella” in the picture, not realising that the fella is actually him. He ends up falling into the trap.

CHARACTERS & CAST

Pretty much everyone in the entire world knows what Winnie the Pooh is like: he’s a little less intellectual than his other friends; he’s childlike and giggly; and he loves honey. We see a lot of Winnie the Pooh wanting to eat honey throughout Winnie the Pooh, as that is what he spends much of his time doing in the film, trying to figure out where he can get some honey to eat because he is just so hungry. His tummy rumbles every few minutes, with a noise that sounds very similar to Tigger’s growl which is a bit odd – and loud. I would have preferred it if his tummy rumble was slightly quieter like in the 1977 film The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh! Pooh Bear is still just as likeable and cute in this film as in the original movie and throughout the many spin-offs and series that have come since, though. This is partly down to the animators, who continued to use the original design of the character, because the characters never lost the people’s interest so their animated designs have not been changed significantly since they first came to be in the 1960s. Mark Henn was the Supervising Animator for Winnie the Pooh. Henn was also the Supervising Animator for other well-known Disney characters, such as Belle, Pocahontas, and Jasmine.

The other reason Winnie the Pooh feels very much like the bear we have all known and loved since the 1960s is because of his current voice actor, Jim Cummings, who has voiced the role since 1988, after the death of Sterling Holloway, Winnie the Pooh’s original voice actor. Jim Cummings has successfully mimicked Holloway’s voice just enough so that it has never seemed like two different voice actors have voiced the role. It’s perfect.

Also voiced by Jim Cummings is Tigger, whose original voice actor, Paul Winchell, stopped voicing the character in 1999, with one of Winchell’s final performances of Tigger being for The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh attraction at Walt Disney World[1]. Once again, Jim Cummings has been able to perfectly imitate Winchell’s voice acting and give us continuity to the voice of Tigger for so many years, as well as for Pooh Bear. Jim Cummings has been a frequent contributor to not only Disney voices, voicing numerous characters for the Studios since the mid-1980s, but also for other studios such as Warner Bros. Tigger the character is still carefree and fun, frequently pouncing on his friends and loving to bounce. Instead of irritating Rabbit as he usually does, this time it is Eeyore who gets most of Tigger’s attention in this film! Andreas Deja was the Supervising Animator for Tigger, with Deja being most known for animating characters like Jafar, Gaston, Scar and Hercules.

Then, there is Piglet, who still continues to be scared easily and struggles to calm himself sometimes. In this film, that is seen mostly around the new terrifying monster they have to face, the Backson. And again, Piglet mistakes Tigger for being that monster and runs away from him. So that’s Piglet’s “normal”, however, I think they made Piglet too dim in this film, especially when Piglet is trying to find things long enough to get the others out of the pit they are stuck in. It sets up one of the more amusing moments in the film, where they all get confused over whether Piglet can knot the six pieces of rope together, or whether he cannot knot – see what they did there? But I don’t think Piglet should’ve been made to be this stupid because I don’t remember him being like that. Scared easily? Yes, but stupid? No.

Piglet also got a new voice actor after 2005 when John Fiedler passed away, so his voice actor here in the 2011 film is Travis Oates. Oates does a decent enough job as Piglet; his voice doesn’t sound dramatically different, unlike the voice Piglet would get for the 2018 film Christopher Robin, which is not good at all. Bruce W. Smith is the Supervising Animator for Piglet, as well as Kanga and Roo. Smith animated characters such as Pacha, Dr. Facilier, and Kerchak, The Proud Family (2001-05) and its reboot The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder (2022-present) animated television series.

We still have Eeyore being as gloomy as ever in Winnie the Pooh, with his tail going missing and everyone trying to find an alternative being one of the primary story elements of the film. It makes Eeyore feel good that everyone around him is trying to help find a new tail though, and when he gets his actual one back, he even smiles a little bit and thanks Pooh Bear for finding it. Eeyore has had many voice actors over the years, but for the 2011 film, Bud Luckey was chosen to voice the character, and Eeyore sounds more or less as I’d expect him to. Luckey was most known for being a character designer for Pixar, working on many of their earlier movies. He also voiced characters for Pixar, such as Chuckles the Clown in Toy Story 3 (2010) and Rick Dicker in The Incredibles (2004). Luckey directed, wrote, sang, narrated and voiced all of the characters in the Pixar short Boundin’ (2004), which won the Annie Award for Best Animated Short Film and was nominated for the Academy Award in the same category. Luckey passed away in 2018. Randy Haycock was the Supervising Animator for Eeyore, where he said that they added eyelids to the character for the first time here, giving him more expression in his face.

Now for some of the characters I do not like in Winnie the Pooh, due to either their voice, animation, or personality! Firstly: Rabbit and Owl. I feel like they have had some of their personality switched for some reason. To me, Rabbit was the serious, practical leader of the group, who mostly knew what he was doing and took control over the difficult situations the group found themselves in, with differing levels of success. Owl was the one the group went to for specific information, thinking he is the most knowledgeable of them all, but not entirely trusting what he had to say. Instead, in Winnie the Pooh, it seems like Owl is very much the leader here, giving them all motivational speeches, and having all the ideas, like issuing a reward for finding Eeyore’s tail. The scene of Owl reading the note, misreading “back soon” as “Backson” is right to me though, as Owl does a similar thing in the direct-to-video sequel Pooh’s Grand Adventure (1997) with “school” and “Skull”, but now Owl has suddenly become smarter in some areas, only to make a critical mistake here. He also gets annoyed really easily, like Rabbit would normally have done, yet in this film, Rabbit doesn’t get all that annoyed, even when Piglet cuts that rope. It doesn’t make much sense to me, and I just don’t like how these two characters have been written for this film.

The other problem I have with both of them is their voice actors. Ken Sansom did not return to voice Rabbit in this film, despite apparently still being under contract, and as he passed away in October 2012, this would have been his last opportunity to voice the character. Instead, Tom Kenny, most known for voicing SpongeBob SquarePants, came in to voice Rabbit. Kenny tries to make Rabbit sound similar to the other screen adaptations that Disney has made, but he doesn’t quite manage it. But Owl is the worst for me, voiced by former late night talk show host, Craig Ferguson. Though I can see that Ferguson is trying to make Owl sound posh and very English, the problem I think we have is that Ferguson has a strong Scottish accent, so by making himself sound English, he has gone too far and over-exaggerated the voice. I don’t have anything against Craig Ferguson – I thought he was great as Lord Macintosh in Brave (2012) where he could be his naturally Scottish self – but I don’t think he is right for the voice of Owl here. Dale Baer was the Supervising Animator for Owl, who was the animator for characters such as Yzma, Wilbur Robinson and Alameda Slim. Baer said that Ferguson ad-libbed most of his lines[2]. Eric Goldberg was the Supervising Animator for Rabbit; Golberg co-directed Pocahontas (1995) and animated characters like Genie and Philoctetes. Though the character designs of Rabbit and Owl are mostly the same, at times, they do end up with very large, wide eyes, which is unusual.  

Finally, I have a problem with how Christopher Robin looks and sounds. For his design, Christopher Robin was given human eyes, instead of black dots like he had in previous adaptations from Disney. Mark Henn, the Supervising Animator for Christopher Robin, said this was to update the character to make him look more like a real human boy[3]. He was also given a smart school uniform to wear, clearly showing his family’s social class, or the time period of the film, as this is not what most children in the UK wear to school these days! I just don’t like how he looks, probably because I’m used to Christopher Robin with his black dot eyes and his yellow shirt and blue shorts; he just looks strange to me here. Jack Boulter was brought in to voice Christopher Robin. Although more authentic to the real person behind the character, as Christopher Robin in Winnie the Pooh now sounds like a young British boy, I just can’t get used to it. It’s not the voice of Christopher Robin that I’ve known for years, which has been a vaguely American accent.

English actor and comedian John Cleese voices the Narrator, since Winnie the Pooh adaptations always need an English narrator! John Cleese does a good job here as the Narrator, as he doesn’t have to sound like anybody else but himself. Cleese is best known for his work as part of the Monty Python comedy troupe, as well as starring in sitcoms such as Fawlty Towers (1975-79), and various movies, including A Fish Called Wanda (1988), and as Nearly Headless Nick in the first two Harry Potter films, and has done voice work, as King Harold in the Shrek franchise, for example.

The final characters to mention are Kanga and Roo, who do not have much of a role in this film, at least not in terms of dialogue; they appear in the movie, helping the others, but they aren’t hugely important in my opinion. This time, Kanga is voiced by Kristen Anderson-Lopez, who also wrote the music for the film alongside her husband, Robert Lopez. Roo is voiced by Wyatt Dean Hall. Oh, and there is also the Backson, who appears right at the end of the movie, voiced by Huell Howser. Strangely enough, we find that the Backson has a very Southern accent, which surprised me after all that Britishness!

PRODUCTION

To properly talk about how Disney Animation made this 2011 film, it is important to go back to where the creations began. In 1924, the character Winnie-the-Pooh first appeared in a collection of poems by A.A. Milne titled When We Were Very Young. In 1926, a book of stories simply titled Winnie-the-Pooh was released, with another collection of poems, Now We Are Six, being published in 1927, which contained some illustrations of Winnie-the-Pooh. A final children’s book of stories about Pooh Bear and friends by A.A. Milne was published in 1928: The House at Pooh Corner. These were based on his son, Christopher Robin, and his teddy bear, which he named “Winnie” after Winnipeg the black bear at London Zoo and “Pooh” after a swan he saw on holiday. After 1928, Milne did not want to write any more of these stories, and came to resent the books as Milne felt they overshadowed his more serious work. Not only that, but the childhood fame that the real Christopher Robin received as a result of being mentioned in the books, took its toll on both Christopher Robin and his relationship with his parents. He was bullied at boarding school, and blamed his childhood fame for struggling to find work later in life[4]. This difficult past was depicted in the movie Goodbye Christopher Robin (2017), which was not made by Disney.

In July 1961, the Walt Disney Studios obtained the rights to make an animated film about Winnie the Pooh and the rest of Milne’s characters and stories, however, Disney Animation did not announce anything until a few years later. During production, Walt Disney was unsure about how American audiences would respond to these very British stories. This is something that Walt felt had been the problem with Alice in Wonderland’s (1951) audience response, as the film received mixed reviews at the time of its release. With this in mind, Walt Disney decided they should make the first story a featurette, in case it fell flat, though there was some creative license used to give the British stories more of an appeal with American viewers.

Woolie Reitherman, who directed the first featurette, Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree (1966), said that the British press were incredibly critical of Piglet being left out of the story, with an American gopher, a new invention by Disney and not be A.A. Milne, somehow making the final cut. Midwestern accents were also used for the characters, instead of British ones – something that the 2011 film seems to go some way in correcting, specifically with the voice of Christopher Robin. Milne’s niece, Angela, would later say that Milne had wanted his stories to be more American, however, his publishers had told him to retain the Britishness. Milne’s widow was also happy enough with the Disney featurette, though Shephard, who had drawn the original illustrations, hated it. But despite British criticism, American audiences loved it, and this led to a second featurette being made, Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day (1968), which went on to win the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film. Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too (1974) rounded out the three original featurettes, which were then combined to make The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1977) feature-length film.

After many years of attempts, the Walt Disney Company finally obtained exclusive rights in 2009, meaning that they retain the copyright and trademarks to the Disney versions of the characters, though Milne’s book, along with others such as Felix Salten’s Bambi, a Life in the Woods, fell into the public domain in 2023[5]. Due to this, a horror film, titled Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey (2023), directed by Rhys Frake-Waterfield, was released in early 2023. It was subsequently panned, but that hasn’t stopped the director from planning a sequel to it, or planning to do the same with the likes of Bambi.

But back to the 2011 film. There hadn’t been a theatrical movie release from Disney of a Winnie the Pooh story since Pooh’s Heffalump Movie in 2005, a film that I still very much like. When Pixar was acquired by Disney in 2006, John Lasseter was named the Chief Creative Officer of both Pixar and Walt Disney Feature Animation. Lasseter expressed interest in producing a new Winnie the Pooh movie. He approached Stephen J. Anderson and Don Hall, who had both worked on Meet the Robinsons (2007), to direct this new film. Legendary Disney artist Burny Mattinson was also brought on to the project, working as lead storyboard artist. He was 76 at the time. Mattinson had worked on the original 1977 film so his knowledge was incredibly useful to the current crop of animators. He even pitched the five-minute sequence of Eeyore losing his tail, based on Milne’s story, which convinced the Disney executives to make a feature-length film, instead of another featurette.

Burny Mattinson was an employee of the Disney Studios from 1953 until his death in February 2023. He had worked on numerous Disney animated movies throughout his time with the company, and became a Disney Legend in 2008. Mattinson has a live-action cameo appearance in the Once Upon a Studio 2023 short, celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Disney company. That and Wish (2023) are both dedicated to him. Mattinson was the longest serving employee of The Walt Disney Company.

The team working on Winnie the Pooh went on a trip to Ashdown Forest in Sussex, to look closer at the area that had inspired A.A. Milne’s stories. Disney decided that the movie had to be traditionally animated, i.e., hand-drawn animation, as using CG would do a disservice to the characters. Therefore, the characters look more or less the same as they always have done, but, with the addition of new technology, the clean-up of the images is better and neater, giving them a fresher look.

The 2011 film does feel more like a complete story than the 1977 film, as it is quite plain to see that The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1977) was three short featurettes put together with some linking material. There are some similarities between the two as well, other than the character designs. Both movies begin in Christopher Robin’s bedroom, which is filled with cuddly toys. Sylvia Mattinson, wife of Burny, made the stuffed Winnie the Pooh that features in the 2011 movie. It was meant to be used in the 1977 film, but, for some reason, never was[6]. Also, both films begin with the opening of the Winnie-the-Pooh book, before taking us into the animated map of the Hundred Acre Wood. I was also pleased to see the characters interacting with the Narrator, as well as the pages and the words of the actual storybook, as they do in the 1977 film.

Originally, Winnie the Pooh was going to be based on five of A.A. Milne’s stories. As far back as November 2010, it was still stated that the team had used five of Milne’s stories as the basis for the film’s plot. This is also evident from the official trailer, released to the public that same month, where many scenes from the trailer did not appear in the final cut of the film[7]. The trailer curiously used the Keane song “Somewhere Only We Know”, which does not appear anywhere in the movie, unsurprisingly! In the end, the three stories that Winnie the Pooh is based on are: “In Which Eeyore Loses a Tail and Pooh Finds One” and “In Which Piglet Meets a Heffalump”, from Winnie-the-Pooh, the 1926 children’s book, and “In Which Rabbit Has a Busy Day, and We Learn What Christopher Robin Does in the Mornings”, from The House at Pooh Corner 1928 book, though some elements of these stories have been changed for the 2011 film. The books show Rabbit finding the original note from Christopher Robin that speaks of a “Backson”, and the trap hole originally being meant for a Heffalump, not a Backson. One of the unused story elements would have included a scene meeting Rabbit’s friends and relations. Pooh is looking for some honey and sees some on Rabbit’s table. He is told it is not for him, but for Rabbit’s friends and relations. Sure enough, they soon come by, eat everything on the table, and then swiftly leave[8].

MUSIC

As I was watching Winnie the Pooh, I quickly decided I was not a fan of its music, but luckily many of the songs are less than two minutes long. Though the film begins with the original title song, “Winnie the Pooh”, written by longtime Disney collaborators Richard and Robert Sherman, known as the Sherman Brothers, it is performed by Zooey Deschanel, known for her starring role in the sitcom New Girl (2011-18) as well as for her role in the Christmas film Elf (2003), in which she also sings. I do not like her singing voice much, but I’m not saying she isn’t a good singer; it’s just personal preference. I am at least glad that this original number did make it in the new film in some form.  

Aside from the End Credits song, “So Long”, the other seven songs in the film were written by Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez, who would later become known as the creators of those catchy numbers from Frozen (2013) and Frozen II (2019). The two had also composed the music for Finding Nemo – The Musical at Disney’s Animal Kingdom Park at Walt Disney World, which officially opened in 2007.

The first song of the film is called “The Tummy Song”, performed by Winnie the Pooh, as he’s searching for honey after he wakes up. It’s not a terrible song, but it’s not as good as “Rumbly in my Tumbly”, which appears in the 1977 film. Zooey Deschanel then returns to perform the song “A Very Important Thing to Do”, as the group start searching for Eeyore’s tail. I didn’t like this song at all. A feeling I also encountered with the next song “Winner Song”; as different members of the group are named the winner of the contest for Eeyore’s tail. It’s just annoying. “The Backson Song” is sung primarily by Craig Ferguson as Owl, as he details exactly what a Backson is to the rest of the group. It’s an interesting scene, animation-wise, as it uses animated chalk drawings to show us what a Backson is. The song itself, though inspired by “Heffalumps and Woozles” from the 1977 film, is not nearly as good as the original. I did like the end of the song though, as Owl almost realises that “Backson” sounds like “Back Soon” and he perhaps could’ve read the note incorrectly.

“It’s Gonna Be Great” is the most energetic of the music in Winnie the Pooh, probably because it is mostly performed by Tigger, as he tries to teach Eeyore how to be a tigger, and shows how they can defeat the Backson together. Zooey Deschanel and the Lopez duo then contribute the backing vocals to Winnie the Pooh’s next solo, “Everything Is Honey”, as he envisages a whole world of honey just for him. It’s a cute song, and I quite like the visuals of islands of honey and overflowing honey pots. Both of these two songs are probably the ones I like the most in the whole soundtrack. “Pooh’s Finale”, Pooh Bear’s winner’s song after he has returned Eeyore’s tail, which is mostly a reprise of “Everything Is Honey”, is just ok.

Finally, “So Long” appears during the End Credits. This song was written and performed by Zooey Deschanel, and is the longest of all the songs at over three minutes. It’s meant to be a kind of cross between pop and country genres I think, but I didn’t enjoy it. Again, this might have something to do with me not really liking Deschanel’s singing voice. The Grammy Awards very much disagreed with me though as this song was nominated in the category of “Best Song Written for Visual Media” at the 2012 Grammys Ceremony. It lost out to “I See the Light” from Tangled (2010).

The score for Winnie the Pooh was composed by Henry Jackman, with additional music from Christopher Willis. Though I couldn’t pick out individual instrumental pieces from the score that stood out to me, I did feel like the score was more in keeping with the original score of the 1977 movie, composed by Buddy Baker, than the new songs are, compared with those of the Sherman Brothers. Jackman would return to the Disney Studios a few more times, to work on the music for Wreck-It Ralph (2012), Big Hero 6 (2014), and Ralph Breaks the Internet (2018). Willis went on to compose the score for movies such The Death of Stalin (2017), and television series such as Schmigadoon! (2021-23). For Disney, Willis has composed the music for the latest Mickey Mouse shorts (2013-23).

RECEPTION

At Disney’s Hollywood Studios Park at the Walt Disney World Resort in Florida, to promote the Winnie the Pooh movie, Winnie the Pooh replaced the Lotso meet-and-greet at the now-closed Magic of Disney Animation building in June 2011. This meet-and-greet location had guests walk past pages from the Winnie-the-Pooh book to then see Pooh Bear meeting guests in front of a background of his house[9].

D23 had a paid-for advance screening event for the film, calling it “A Wonderful Morning with Winnie the Pooh”. It was held on the weekend before the release of the movie, so either 9th or 10th July 2011, at El Capitan Theater in Hollywood. The event included a showing of the full movie, a small continental breakfast, a movie poster, and a panel with some of the animators who worked on the movie[10].

Winnie the Pooh was released in some cinemas, mostly in European countries such as Germany and the UK, in April 2011. However, the film did not get released to theatres in the US until 15th July 2011, which meant that the American people had a choice to make: watch Winnie the Pooh, or choose Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 instead, which was released on the exact same day in the US. Not a great start for Disney seeing as this was the culmination of the entire Harry Potter story, so really, they didn’t have much chance in coaxing anybody over the age of 12 to see Winnie the Pooh instead of Harry Potter – not unless they happened to be a parent of a young child. Not even if Disney had somehow managed to get, let’s say, Daniel Radcliffe to voice Winnie the Pooh, Ralph Fiennes to be Owl, Alan Rickman to be Eeyore, and Rupert Grint to voice Piglet, would they have managed to get that older demographic to tear themselves away from Harry Potter.

Still, those who went to watch Winnie the Pooh did seem to like it. Some enjoyed the fact that this was a return to traditional animation once more, after Disney’s The Princess and the Frog was released in 2009, though Winnie the Pooh was the final outing of 2D animation by the Disney Studios, at least for now anyway. The songs received a mixed response; however, it was generally agreed that this movie would appeal most to young children and the nostalgia factor was a reason for older people to watch. Some felt the movie was a bit too short, with a runtime of just over an hour.  

Winnie the Pooh was released alongside the short The Ballad of Nessie (2011), narrated by Billy Connolly and obviously based on the legend of the Loch Ness Monster, sometimes nicknamed “Nessie”. It was said that Nessie cried so much at having her first home destroyed and replaced with a miniature golf course that she made a whole loch of her own tears and made that her home. It was a pleasant enough short cartoon and I liked Billy Connolly’s narration, but it wasn’t exceptional, unlike previous Pixar or Disney shorts.

Unfortunately, Winnie the Pooh just didn’t get enough of an audience, and only made just over $50 million worldwide. This is more than its supposed $30 million budget, but it would have lost money due to its marketing costs, however, this was likely recouped from the subsequent DVD and Blu-Ray releases. But, as I said, the movie did get quite positive reviews, which led to Winnie the Pooh being nominated for Annie Awards, in areas such as Music, Directing, Writing, and Character Animation for Andreas Deja and Mark Henn. It won the Annie Award for Storyboarding in a Feature Production, which is better than nothing!

LEGACY

Though the original 1977 film The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh spanned multiple films, television series, and specials, as well as video games and a theme park attraction, from 1977 right up until the release of the 2011 Winnie the Pooh movie, nothing much has come out of the franchise since then.

In 2018, Disney released a live-action/animated film starring Ewan McGregor as an adult Christopher Robin. The film sees Christopher Robin reunite with Winnie the Pooh to take him back to the Hundred Acre Wood. Whilst there, all of his other childhood friends appear and try to get him to rediscover his inner child. At the same time, Christopher Robin realises that his high-pressure job has caused him to neglect his wife and daughter and that he must make amends for that. It’s actually a very good film, with the scenes between Winnie the Pooh and Christopher Robin in “the real world” being particularly funny. It’s worth a watch, but having said that, though I mentioned that the voices in the 2011 Winnie the Pooh film are bad, some of the ones in Christopher Robin (2018) are even worse!

In 2021, a musical titled Winnie the Pooh: The New Musical Adaptation debuted Off-Broadway. It featured music by the Sherman Brothers and Carly Simon, and was produced by Disney Theatrical Productions. The music here does not appear to include any of the songs from the 2011 Winnie the Pooh film, but does include music from other Winnie the Pooh films, including The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1977), The Tigger Movie (2000) and Piglet’s Big Movie (2003). It uses puppets of each of the Hundred Acre Wood residents to tell the story, alongside a child actor as Christopher Robin. The musical has toured both the US and the UK in 2022 and 2023, with a tour in the Netherlands and Belgium currently ongoing until 2024. Another stage adaptation, titled Disney’s Winnie the Pooh KIDS, is specifically based on the 2011 Winnie the Pooh film, following its same story and music, with additional music and lyrics from Will Van Dyke and Cheryl Davis. This show is around 30-minutes long and is available to license for use in local children’s productions.

In August 2023, a new animated television series called Playdate with Winnie the Pooh aired on Disney Junior. It follows a young Winnie the Pooh going on playdates with the other characters of the Hundred Acre Wood. I’m sure it’s entertaining enough for today’s children, but the animation looks weird to me and the characters are voiced by child actors.

Within the Disney Parks, the original 1977 film inspired a dark ride that still operates today. It first opened at Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom as The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh in 1999, taking over the former Fantasyland home of Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride. As Winnie the Pooh had become so popular at the time, it was an obvious decision to make a theme park ride based on him. Buddy Baker returned to arrange the attraction music from the 1977 film score. The ride goes through many of the same scenes as the 1977 film, and they follow the story order of the film[11].

The ride exists in every Disney Park around the world – except for Disneyland Paris, who must just be miserable for not having any ride based on Winnie the Pooh! It appears the best you’ll get in Paris is a new Winnie the Pooh scene within Le Pays des Contes de Fées, their version of the Storybook Land Canal Boats, sometime around 2024. They do apparently have a meet-and-greet location for Winnie the Pooh on Main Street though. At Disneyland, the ride replaced Country Bear Jamboree, opening in 2003, with the order of some scenes being rearranged compared with the Magic Kingdom version. At Hong Kong Disneyland and Shanghai Disneyland, a very similar ride to the Magic Kingdom version opened on the official opening date of those parks in 2005 and 2016, respectively. Shanghai’s “tea cups” ride is also themed to Winnie the Pooh, being called Hunny Pot Spin. Only Shanghai’s Winnie the Pooh attractions opened after the release of the 2011 Winnie the Pooh, though they are not specifically based on that film. At Tokyo Disneyland, they went one step further and created a trackless version of the original ride called Pooh’s Hunny Hunt. This opened in 2000, with many calling it the best Pooh Bear attraction at any Disney Park, with similar scenes to the original ride, but somehow better.

For meet-and-greets, some of these specific locations are listed on the Disney Parks’ respective websites. At Tokyo Disneyland, you could meet Pooh Bear at Pooh Corner; at Shanghai Disneyland, you can meet Pooh Bear at the Hundred Acre Wood area of Fantasyland. At Hong Kong Disneyland, Winnie the Pooh may be available to meet at Fantasy Gardens. At Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom, you can have a character meal with the four characters of Pooh Bear, Tigger, Piglet, and Eeyore, for either breakfast, lunch, or dinner, buffet-style at the Crystal Palace, as well as meeting Pooh Bear and Tigger at the Thotful Spot in Fantasyland. Plus, Pooh Bear has a meet-and-greet location at the back of the UK pavilion in Epcot, inside a room themed to be Christopher Robin’s bedroom. Winnie the Pooh and some of his other friends, such as Piglet, Eeyore, and Tigger, may also be found greeting guests in undesignated times and places at all the Disney Parks. They are also likely to feature within various parades.

FINAL THOUGHTS

Due to unlucky timing with the US release of the film, it is unclear just how well Winnie the Pooh could have done financially; however, most reviews were positive. I personally did not enjoy watching this 2011 film, but I see the attempt by Disney to revitalise the stories for the younger generation. It probably worked for them but I know for me, if I want to watch something with Pooh Bear and friends, I will always choose to watch either the original film or any of the 1990s or early 2000s spin-offs. 

Winnie the Pooh was the “reboot” that was never needed. Disney’s franchise was, and still is, as popular as ever, so this film was an unnecessary addition to the numerous screen adaptations of Milne’s stories in my opinion. And yet viewers just can’t help themselves. You can’t help but love Winnie the Pooh, that “tubby little cubby all stuffed with fluff”, no matter what he shows up in! 


REFERENCES

[1] Credit: Jim Korkis, ‘The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh in Magic Kingdom’, YourFirstVisit.net, date unknown.

[2] Credit: Author Unknown, ‘D23’s Winnie the Pooh Advance Screening Event’, DisneyTravelBabble.com, 14th July 2011.

[3] Credit: Adam Donald, ‘How ‘Winnie the Pooh’ Updated the 1977 Animated Classic ‘The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh’, Collider.com, 18th January 2023.

[4] Credit: Mike Miller, ‘Inside the True Story Behind Winnie the Pooh’, People.com, 13th October 2017.

[5] Credit: Jim Korkis, ‘The Problem with Pooh’, CartoonResearch.com, 19th August 2022.

[6] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘Winnie the Pooh (2011)’, pp. 151-153. 

[7] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘Winnie the Pooh (2011)’, pp. 151-153. 

[8] Credit: Disney, “Deleted Scenes”, from Winnie the Pooh (2011) Blu-Ray (2011).

[9] Credit: Todd Perlmutter, ‘New Winnie The Pooh Meet & Greet’, TouringPlans.com, 19th June 2011.

[10] Credit: Author Unknown, ‘D23’s Winnie the Pooh Advance Screening Event’, DisneyTravelBabble.com, 14th July 2011.

[11] Credit: Jim Korkis, ‘The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh in Magic Kingdom’, YourFirstVisit.net, date unknown.

#28 The Little Mermaid (1989)

  1. BACKGROUND
  2. PLOT
  3. CHARACTERS & CAST
  4. PRODUCTION
  5. MUSIC
  6. RECEPTION
  7. LEGACY
  8. FINAL THOUGHTS
  9. REFERENCES

BACKGROUND

Finally, after a decade of turmoil, and years of underachievement, Disney Animation actually produced a movie that was both financially and critically successful. Not only that, but the artform was beautiful, the characters were believable, and the music was amazing.

It might not sound true, but after the disappointment of Sleeping Beauty in 1959, the Disney Animation department had shied away from adapting fairy tales. The Little Mermaid was the first fairy tale to be adapted into a Disney animated film for 30 years and it signalled the start of a series of Broadway-style musical films.

This was it. After all the effort the animators had put in, being moved away from the main Burbank studio, trying to find their feet without the direction of artists from Walt Disney’s era, and the more aggressive move to change from the new management, The Little Mermaid began something new. 1989 meant the start of the Disney Renaissance, where the movies produced were released to critical acclaim and big box office numbers for a whole decade, for the most part, with some hitting higher heights than others.

To find someone who doesn’t like or can’t appreciate the importance of The Little Mermaid is difficult. It really was a major blockbuster, both at the time and in present day, as can be seen from the push to make the live-action version, released in May 2023. It’s a movie from one of Disney’s arguably most popular eras, so continues to be referenced and remembered by audiences and the Disney company.

I’ve always liked The Little Mermaid, but for some reason, I don’t choose to watch it very often and would rather watch other films from the Disney Renaissance Era instead. I’m not sure why that is, although it’s probably got something to do with the fact none of the characters are favourites of mine. I’d never wanted to be a mermaid, so Ariel doesn’t resonate with me; I find Eric a bit of a pointless prince, not having to do anything particularly brave until right at the end, but I think Ariel could’ve taken Ursula on her own; and Ursula isn’t my favourite villain, though I do like how flamboyant she is.

But I still like the story and the music, with the ending always able to make a couple of tears spring to my eyes.

PLOT

Disney’s story begins with a ship sailing the open sea. Its sailors are telling their captain about the myth and legend of King Triton, ruler of the sea and the merpeople. Some on board do not believe these stories, but others believe them wholeheartedly to be true. As one of the sailor’s is making this point, a fish that they had just caught leaps out of his hands and dives back into the ocean. We then follow this fish deeper under the water, seeing lots of marine animals, and then finally, some merpeople who we follow into a royal castle. At the castle, an audience is assembling for a concert – eagled-eyed viewers might even be able to spot Mickey, Donald, and Goofy in the crowd here, though what they are doing under the sea at this point, we don’t know. King Triton and his court composer, Sebastian, are very excited for this concert which will feature all seven of Triton’s daughters, with his youngest, Ariel, being named the most talented singer of all. Sebastian does say quietly, though, that Ariel does not always show up to rehearsal, so clearly is not as bothered by her musical gift as her father is. The concert begins, and everything seems to be going swimmingly – until we find that Ariel, the soloist, is not there!

Ariel is in fact looking at shipwrecks with her fish friend, Flounder. The two are searching for treasures from the “human world” that Ariel can add to her collection. Their fun day out is rudely interrupted by a shark at one point, but Ariel outwits him and goes up to the surface to see their friend, Scuttle the seagull. He is supposedly an expert on all things humans, but the audience soon finds that Scuttle has no idea what he’s talking about, as he thinks that a fork is called a Dinglehopper, used for combing hair, and that a pipe is called a Snarfblatt and is actually a musical instrument! Speaking of music, Ariel then realises that she has missed her father’s very important concert and rushes home. King Triton is not happy, especially when Flounder lets slip that they actually went to the surface. He warns Ariel not to go to the surface again, reiterating that humans are barbarians. Ariel is upset since she is sixteen and capable of independent thought and swims away to be alone. Sebastian is told by Triton to keep an eye on her. Sebastian follows Ariel to her grotto, which is full of things from the human world. He overhears her talking about how she wants to live above the sea with those humans, and is furious. As Sebastian proceeds to give Ariel the same spiel about humans as her father just gave her, Ariel is distracted by a shadow passing over the surface of the water. She swims up there; Flounder and Sebastian follow.

On the surface, she sees a boat, with fireworks flashing high into the sky. She swims closer and sits by the side of the boat, watching as music plays, men dance, and a dog even comes up to lick her face. Ariel is fascinated by this world, but then she sees a man – Prince Eric – and she is instantly smitten with him. It is a celebration for Eric’s birthday, with his butler, Grimsby, presenting him with a statue of himself as a present. Eric hates it! It was meant to be a wedding present, however, Eric did not like his would-be bride and wants to wait for his true love. Suddenly, a hurricane starts bubbling up nearby. It soon impacts the crew with wind, rain, thunder and lightning. The ship struggles against the high winds, tossing some of the crew overboard, who then swim towards their life boats. Things take a real turn when a lightning bolt sets alight one of their sails, spreading fire to the rest of the ship. Everyone is safely on board a boat, apart from Max, Eric’s dog, who is stuck in the middle of the flames. Eric gets back on to the ship to save him, tossing him to the lifeboat below as his leg gets caught in a hole in the floor. The fire reaches the explosives onboard before Eric can free himself, and the ship explodes. Ariel sees Eric unconscious and about to drown in the ocean. She pulls him to shore, and waits for him to wake up. As she does, Flounder, Sebastian, and Scuttle discuss whether the man is dead or not. Scuttle believes he is, but Ariel can see that he’s breathing. Eric begins to wake up and just catches a glimpse of Ariel’s face and hears her singing briefly, before she is spooked by Grimsby and the others looking for him and rushes back into the water.

Ariel is now falling in love with Eric and very much wants to be human. Her sisters see that Ariel is hopelessly in love, not realising who with, and tell their father, King Triton. Sebastian tries to tell Ariel to stay under the sea, where it’s best for her, but she doesn’t listen, and Flounder takes her off to her grotto, to find that Eric’s statue just so happens to have floated down into it. King Triton summons Sebastian, wanting to know who Ariel is in love, expecting it to be one of the kingdom’s mermen. Sebastian thinks Triton already knows about the human and tells Triton he tried to stop her. Triton is furious and goes to Ariel’s grotto. She tells her father she is in love with Eric, to which Triton responds by destroying pretty much every artifact in her collection, including the statue of Eric. She tells Sebastian and Flounder to leave her alone, and sobs her heart out.

At the same time as all of this has been playing out, Ursula, the sea witch, and her two eel henchmen, Flotsam and Jetsam, have been watching Ariel. Very creepy. Ursula thinks she can use Ariel to bring down King Triton once and for all, after he banished Ursula from the kingdom so many years ago. Now that Ariel is in love with a human, it’ll make things all the easier for her plan to succeed. The eels tell Ariel that Ursula can help make all her dreams come true. After some persuasion, she eventually follows them to Ursula’s lair. Sebastian and Flounder follow, knowing this will be trouble. Ursula tells Ariel that she can make her human and that she’ll be able to live on land with her man forever. Ariel is not sure, but eventually, Ursula manages to convince her, telling her about all the other “good work” she’s done for other people, and the reason she has a garden full of shrunken merpeople – or emaciated shrimp as Olaf likes to call them in his comedic retelling of the movie – is because they never paid her for her spells. Ariel agrees to Ursula’s deal, which has these conditions: to make her human permanently, she has to get true love’s kiss from Eric within three days; and the price she must pay is to give up her voice. Despite Flounder and Sebastian’s protestations, Ariel signs the contract and the deal is enacted; Ariel is given legs, in what seems to be quite a painful procedure, and is left to drown in the sea, as humans cannot breathe underwater! Luckily, Sebastian and Flounder swim her up to the surface.

At the surface, Ariel learns to walk on her legs, and is dressed up in a tatty sail, as advised by Scuttle and his all-knowing expertise. Max the dog is drawn to the smell of Ariel, leading Eric straight to her. She looks familiar to him, and Eric believes she is his dream girl, the one who saved him that day, but as she can’t talk, it can’t have been her. Err, Eric, have you never heard of laryngitis? Maybe she’s just lost her voice through illness, it doesn’t mean she’s been mute all her life! Anyway, Eric takes her inside the palace. There, she is cleaned up and dressed to have dinner with Eric and Grimsby. Despite Ariel blowing tobacco smoke all over Grimsby through his pipe, and combing her hair with a fork and looking a bit crazy, Grimsby thinks Ariel would be a great match for Eric, but Eric is still holding out for this “mystery girl”, though he does invite Ariel to go sightseeing the next day. In the palace, Sebastian has his own problems – the French chef, Louis. After going through the laundry, Sebastian finds himself in the kitchen, where stuffed crab is being prepared. Louis sees little Sebastian and thinks he’s missed one and tries to cook him! But Sebastian is too smart for that and grabs Louis’ nose, starting a whole war between them. Louis destroys the entire kitchen looking for him but cannot find him. Carlotta, Eric’s housekeeper, shouts at Louis for all the noise and mess, and takes the plates in for dinner. It turns out Sebastian hid on Grimsby’s plate and Ariel signals for him to crawl over to hers. Ariel clearly doesn’t eat anything, and must sneak Sebastian into her pocket or something, as he’s fine in the next scene, where Ariel is watching Eric as he plays her song on the flute. She goes to bed, as Sebastian tries to coach her about how to get this kiss from Eric the next day.

On this day out, Eric and Ariel look at the sights, dance, shop, even encounter a near-death experience when Ariel gets their horse and carriage to jump a massive ravine! They end the day on a moonlit boat ride, where Eric tries to guess Ariel’s name, going through random girls’ names, like Rachel, Diana, even Mildred, which Ariel really dislikes – sorry to all the Mildreds out there. During a song meant to encourage Eric to kiss Ariel, conducted by Sebastian, of course, Sebastian whispers her actual name to Eric. He thinks it’s “kind of pretty”. As the two are about to kiss, their boat is tipped over by none other than Flotsam and Jetsam; that was too close for Ursula, and she must be mad because she even goes so far as to call Ariel “a tramp”. Harsh. Ursula realises she needs a new plan now…

That night, again, Grimsby tells Eric that Ariel would be a good match for him and this time, he actually listens. He tosses the flute into the ocean, but just as he is about to talk to Ariel, a woman singing that song walks along the beach in front of him. It’s her, the dream girl. Except it’s actually Ursula, disguised as a woman called Vanessa, and using Ariel’s voice which she kept in a shell locket. This locket also just so happens to be able to entrance Eric so he is under her spell. The next morning, Scuttle wakes Ariel up as he hears wedding preparations are going on and assumes it must be for her. Ariel runs downstairs to Eric, but stops dead as she sees him cuddled up to someone else. Those two are actually going to be married by sunset that day, the same time that Ariel’s spell runs out. She watches as the wedding ship departs, feeling completely hopeless. Scuttle flies by the ship and sees that Vanessa is actually Ursula, as her real reflection is revealed in a mirror. He races back to the others, and they devise a plan: Flounder will swim Ariel over to the ship, while Scuttle gets all the animals to stall the wedding. Seals, birds, lobsters, and even Max, all get in on the action. Though this distracts Vanessa, the officiant for some reason doesn’t seem to notice and continues with the ceremony, which is really strange! Ariel arrives just as Scuttle and Max manage to break the locket, returning Ariel’s voice and breaking the spell on Eric. He realises she was the one all along and goes to kiss her, but it’s too late; it’s sunset.

Ursula reveals herself to be Vanessa and takes Ariel back underwater, as she has transformed back into a mermaid. Triton comes to rescue her, trying to break the contract with the trident but it’s legal and cannot be broken. Instead, Ursula offers Triton a deal: to take Ariel’s place, which he does, becoming an emaciated shrimp and leaving Ursula to take his crown and trident and become the new ruler, exactly what she’s always wanted. Meanwhile, Eric swims down to rescue Ariel, striking Ursula with a harpoon in the process. The eels try to keep Eric underwater, but Sebastian and Flounder help free him. As Ursula is about to fire a spell at Eric, Ariel grabs her head, making her shoot too high, destroying her beloved eels instead. Ursula is mad now and makes herself huge, big enough to go above the surface. She manipulates the waves and summons a storm, trapping Ariel in a funnel so she can finally kill her. Eric gets on a wrecked ship and drives it into Ursula, jabbing her with a broken piece of wood, defeating and killing her. Eric swims to shore and passes out.

Under the sea, Ursula’s spells are broken and all the emaciated shrimp come back to life, including Triton. Ariel sits on a rock by the shore and looks sadly at Eric, knowing they can’t be together. Triton and Sebastian discuss how much she clearly loves at Eric, and Triton decides to grant her wish to become human permanently. She looks over at her father, grateful, before reuniting with Eric. The two marry at the earliest opportunity, on a ship again, so that the humans and merpeople can celebrate together. Flounder is flown up by Scuttle to kiss Ariel; Ariel and Eric finally kiss; and Sebastian gets away from Chef Louis once again! Triton fashions a wave to bring him to Ariel’s level, where Ariel tells him she loves him. Triton magics a rainbow to appear in the sky, and Ariel and Eric end the film with another kiss. Aww.

CHARACTERS & CAST

It might sound surprising to hear that Ariel is actually only the fourth Disney Princess; it sounds like there should have been more by 1989, but there was only Snow White, Cinderella, and Aurora before her. This is because Sleeping Beauty (1959) did not do as well as expected, so the fairy tale adaptations were put on hold, until The Little Mermaid was greenlit thirty years later. A lot had changed societally in those three decades, so Ariel is a very different princess to her predecessors in terms of her personality. Ariel is a feisty, rebellious teenager who goes out of her way to change her life completely, to try to live it as she wants to, despite her controlling father trying to stop her. This is in complete contrast to the quiet, gentle, sweet temperaments of Snow, Cinderella, and Aurora. Ariel’s character led to different princesses being created by Disney, giving them more personality and more end goals for their life, so that they aren’t just trying to find love with a handsome prince. Glen Keane spoke to Ollie Johnston and Frank Thomas, two of Disney’s famous “Nine Old Men”, as well as Keane’s mentors, on the opening night of The Little Mermaid. Johnston and Thomas told Keane that they felt some of Ariel’s expressions were ugly at times, like when she screws her face up, and that their princesses were always pretty. Instead of being saddened by the criticism, Keane felt proud that they’d made Ariel real, and this showed that a new generation of animators with new ideas were coming in, signalling the new era.

Ariel’s hair colour was a point of discussion inside Disney at the time of her creation. Many animators felt that giving Ariel red hair would reflect her personality well, however, thanks to the live-action romantic comedy Splash (1984), one of the first Disney-produced films to be released during the time of the new management, the higher-ups felt that Ariel should have blonde hair, like Daryl Hannah did in Splash. As mermaids don’t exist, Keane said that they couldn’t just tell him that mermaids have blonde hair, so they went all in on making her a red-head[1]! The original Ariel dolls, manufactured by Tyco, later Mattel, were actually more strawberry blonde in their first production run as the company felt redheaded dolls would not sell well. Consumers later complained that the doll did not resemble Ariel sufficiently, so they were remade with her hair colour matching what is seen in the movie[2].

Ariel’s supervising animators were Glen Keane and Mark Henn. Keane said that his wife was one inspiration for Ariel’s physique but that he also looked at classical artwork like the 1901 painting A Mermaid by John William Waterhouse, as well as the statue of the Little Mermaid in Copenhagen. It has also been said that Henn and Keane used images of Alyssa Milano, who was starring in the programme Who’s the Boss? (1984-92) at the time, to get the look of an adolescent teenage girl. Milano was not aware of this fact for many years. Not only that but they took inspiration from Ariel’s voice artist, Jodi Benson.

Jodi Benson had worked with Howard Ashman on the musical Smile in 1986, which flopped on Broadway and closed after only 87 performances. Ashman invited many women from the show to audition for Ariel, with Benson being one of them and being the one who got the role. The directors needed someone who could sing as well as act, especially as Ariel’s songs in particular feel like an extension of her dialogue. Benson loved performing as Ariel, a role she has reprised for the spin-off films, television series and theme park attractions for many years. She also regularly sings “Part of Your World” during her concerts[3]. Not only that but Benson became a Disney Legend in 2011 for her role as Ariel. She has also voiced Helen of Troy in the television series spin-off Hercules (1998-99), voiced Barbie in Pixar’s Toy Story 2 (1999) and Toy Story 3 (2010), and starred in the live-action/animation hybrid Disney film Enchanted (2007), which was also a parody of Disney’s princess films, as Edward’s assistant, Sam. Benson also “went over to the dark side” and voiced the title role for Don Bluth’s 1994 film Thumbelina, which I personally really like.

The character also benefitted from live-action reference modelling, as many Disney animated movies had done before. Writer and performer Sherri Stoner, who was performing as part of an LA-based improv group called The Groundlings at the time, was brought in to model for the character of Ariel. She was asked to audition by co-directors Ron Clements and John Musker, who noticed she had a similar petite frame to how Ariel had been envisioned after Stoner came to teach improvisation to the animators with some other performers. As much of Ariel’s scenes are underwater, and her hair in particular was causing the animators some bother, Stoner spent three days performing Ariel’s underwater scenes, with two of those days taking place at Glendale’s YMCA swimming pool and the other being held in an 8-foot-deep clear tank at Walt Disney Imagineering. From this modelling, they were able to figure out how Ariel’s hair might look – the animators had also used footage of astronaut Sally Ride in space for this purpose – and added some facial expressions and personality traits from Stoner’s performances. The animators liked her big eyes and expressive hands, and she embodied the character of Ariel fully to make her believable. Her biting her lip was also included in the movie[4]!

Ariel’s prince, Eric, was supposedly named after the creator of the bronze sculpture of the Little Mermaid, Edvard Eriksen. Eric doesn’t get much character progression in this film to be honest, so I don’t care all that much about him. I’m glad Ariel finally gets her prince, and that just happens to be him, but I don’t find him very interesting, and think that Prince Phillip from Sleeping Beauty (1959) and some of the princes who come after Eric are much more engaging. Eric wants to marry his true love, fair enough, but when Ariel saves him, he is so obsessed with her that he constantly replays the song that he briefly heard her sing, yet when he sees Ariel, he is put off by the fact she can’t talk so she can’t possibly be the girl who saved him, despite the fact she looks just like her! It takes quite a lot of time to convince him that Ariel is good for him, because he’s too busy stubbornly chasing dreams to realise that, even if she isn’t his “perfect girl”. This really annoys me; I just find him frustrating! Still, he comes to Ariel’s rescue at the end, but I think she would’ve managed to defeat Ursula on her own if she’d been given the opportunity to do it. I’m sure lots of people like Prince Eric, and I guess he’s not THAT bad really. Christopher Daniel Barnes provided the voice of Prince Eric and continues to reprise his voice, as Benson does, in Disney projects. Though curiously, Barnes did not return to voice Eric in the sequel to The Little Mermaid, yet he did become the official voice of Cinderella’s Prince Charming for two spin-off films and for other Disney projects. Barnes also voiced the role of Spider-Man in the animated series from 1994 to 1998, and played Greg Brady in The Brady Bunch Movie (1995) and its 1996 sequel.

Now, back to the important female roles. Ursula is an incredibly powerful Disney villainess, yet she is also hilarious and very flamboyant. She knows what she wants, and can persuade anyone to do exactly that. Ursula is devious and clever, with her thwarting all of Ariel’s attempts at getting Eric to kiss her, until the very last moment, but then she becomes Ruler of the Ocean so who cares about that? Ursula also managed to have two henchmen, her moray eels Flotsam and Jetsam, who are actually useful and do what they are asked to do without getting it wrong, unlike many other villains who just can’t seem to get good help. She has quite a painful death, similar to Maleficent in that the princes stab them both, which can’t be nice. I didn’t think I was that big a fan of Ursula, but when I rewatched the film this week, I thought she was amazing, right up there with Maleficent as one of the best Disney villainesses, who I tend to think pale in comparison to their male counterparts. Ursula is meant to be King Triton’s sister as mentioned in deleted scenes. This fact would not be made public until the original Broadway production of The Little Mermaid, though it was included in the extended version of “Poor Unfortunate Souls”, with this verse later cut out.

Ursula went through many designs, with Ruben Aquino, the Supervising Animator, stating that they originally made her a lionfish or a scorpionfish with spines, but one of the story men said that she’d probably work well as an octopus. It is debated whether or not Ursula is a squid or octopus, as she only has six tentacles, yet an octopus should have eight – this is supposedly because drawing two less tentacles was easier for the animators – but as Ursula also has two human arms, she is classed as just being “part octopus”[5]. Aquino tried varying sizes for Ursula, bigger and skinnier but decided that bigger was better. The performances of drag queen Divine was another inspiration for Ursula’s look, movements and personality. Divine had featured in many movies by filmmaker John Waters, of which Howard Ashman was a fan and suggested Divine as a vision for the character.

Pat Carroll was very excited to have been given the role to voice Ursula as she had always wanted to work on a Disney film. Carroll discussed her character’s performance with Howard Ashman at times especially for her song “Poor Unfortunate Souls”. Carroll said that she asked Howard to sing the song for her, and instead of just singing it, Ashman performed it full out, giving Carroll lots of ideas to play with her; she even admitted that she stole “innit” and some other ad libs from him[6]! Carroll continued to reprise her role as Ursula, and voiced Morgana, Ursula’s sister for the direct-to-video sequel, for Disney projects until her death in 2022. Carroll also starred in various television and stage productions, and voiced Granny in the English dub by Disney of My Neighbor Totoro (2005).

Then, there’s King Triton, the controlling father of Ariel. It’s plain to see how much he loves all seven of his daughters, but feels he has to be stricter with Ariel because she has her head in the clouds and doesn’t tend to listen to anyone’s advice. It is particularly harsh of Triton to just go and blow up most of Ariel’s things from the human world, a moment of actual nastiness from a Disney parent, but you can tell that Triton does regret having done that as soon as he has – though he does not apologise for it. Triton is out of his mind with worry when Ariel goes missing, blaming himself for it, and makes the ultimate sacrifice for her when he finds that she has done a deal with Ursula, trading his life for his daughter’s. He also comes good at the end when he decides to make Ariel human, without her even asking and knowing that he’ll miss seeing his daughter every day. Triton probably has the most interesting character development of anyone else in the movie.

Triton was voiced by Kenneth Mars, who appeared in two of Mel Brooks’ most famous films: as Franz Liebkind in The Producers (1967) and as Police Inspector Kemp in Young Frankenstein (1974). Mars also chose to do a lot of voice acting in his later years, not only reprising his role as Triton for Disney, but also in Don Bluth’s Thumbelina (1994), as King Colbert, and as Grandpa Longneck in the series of The Land Before Time direct-to-video sequels, from 1994 to 2006. Mars passed away in 2011.

Before I move on to the animal sidekicks, there are a few other human characters to mention, specifically related to their voice artists. Firstly, Grimsby, Eric’s strait-laced butler, was voiced by Ben Wright. Wright voiced Rama, Mowgli’s wolf father in The Jungle Book (1967) as well as Roger Ratcliffe in One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961), a fact that was apparently unknown to the team working on The Little Mermaid at the time! Wright also appeared as Herr Zeller in The Sound of Music (1965). Grimsby was Ben Wright’s final role; he died four months before the movie’s release[7]. Carlotta, Eric’s maid, was voiced by Edie McClurg, who went on to voice many characters for Disney and Pixar, including Dr. Flora in A Bug’s Life (1998), Minny in Cars (2006) and Mary, a Nicelander, in Wreck-It Ralph (2012).

For Sebastian, it was Howard Ashman’s idea to give him a Caribbean accent, as I believe originally, he was going to have a stuffy English accent. However, though many say Sebastian is Jamaican, he actually has a Trinidadian accent. Ashman was looking for this specific accent as he had spent some time in Trinidad during his childhood. Samuel E. Wright auditioned for the part and Ashman was surprised to find that the accent was exactly what he had been looking for. Menken said that this choice opened up new musical styles to them, such as calypso and reggae, which are used in Sebastian’s songs[8]. Though Sebastian seems quite uptight at the start and has no desire to babysit Ariel as ordered by the King, he does realise that Ariel has her own life to lead and he wants to help her achieve it. As mentioned, Samuel E. Wright voiced Sebastian, King Triton’s court composer and advisor. Wright would also reprise his role as Sebastian in other Disney projects, and also voiced Kron the Iguanodon in Disney’s Dinosaur (2000). He played the part of Mufusa in the original Broadway cast of The Lion King in 1997. Wright passed away in May 2021.

Flounder is Ariel’s best friend, who is kind and loyal. He is named after the flat fish flounder but looks more like a tropical reef fish. He’s a sweet friend, trying to help Ariel as best he can, but you can tell he is quite young and scared of the dangers of the sea, so he isn’t overly helpful at times, but he tries! Flounder was voiced by Jason Marin. Scuttle is the dippy seagull, who thinks he knows what he’s talking about and is generally just clumsy and very in-your-face, especially with Sebastian! He’s a bit much at times and his singing is truly awful, but it’s hard to not like Scuttle, because his heart is in the right place. Scuttle was voiced Buddy Hackett, who reprised this role for The Little Mermaid sequel. Hackett also appeared in such films as The Music Man (1967), as Marcellus Washburn, and The Love Bug (1969), as Tennessee Steinmetz. He passed away in 2003.

PRODUCTION

Disney’s The Little Mermaid is based on the 1837 story by Hans Christian Andersen, which was published under the name Den Lille Hayfrue. In Andersen’s much darker story, when a mermaid turns fifteen, she is allowed to swim up to the surface to take a glimpse at the human world for the first time. On the little mermaid’s first visit, she falls in love with a human who she sees celebrating his birthday on a ship and then saves him from drowning. The mermaid waits for a human woman to find him before returning home. Back under the sea, the little mermaid asks for more information about humans from her grandmother. She tells the mermaid that humans have an eternal soul that lives on after their death, whereas mermaids turn to sea form. The little mermaid goes to the sea witch who says that she can make her human, but that her tongue will have to be cut out and that the creation of her legs will be painful and that every step she takes from then on will feel like she’s being pierced by knives. She is also warned that she can never return to the sea, and that should the prince marry someone else, the mermaid will die of a broken heart at dawn the day after his marriage. The little mermaid does the deal anyway and is found by the prince, who grows close to her, but does not fall in love with her as he believes another woman saved his life; he has no idea it was ever the mermaid who did. He finds this woman and marries her, with the little mermaid realising that she will now die. Her sisters tell her that she could break the curse if she kills prince, and that she can then become a mermaid again. The little mermaid goes to kill the prince, but cannot do it and awaits her death. Her body becomes sea form but she then becomes “a daughter of the air”, due to her selflessness. She will now complete good deeds for humans for the next 300 years in order to finally obtain an immortal soul[9].

The Disney Studios were first going to adapt Andersen’s story in the 1940s, as was evidenced by the discovery of multiple concept artwork. The 1940s version was similar to the 1989 film in some ways, as both versions decided to focus on the prince instead of the immortal soul, and wanted the prince to at least get a glimpse of the mermaid so he did not believe someone else had in fact saved him. The 1940s version would have had the mermaid rush off, not realising she’d lost her voice until she got to the surface, but the 1989 directors wanted her to know she was losing her voice, but to not make the process so graphic. They also didn’t want her to find having legs painful. The ending of both Disney versions was also different. In the 1940s version, the prince would have got married, but not to anyone specific, and the mermaid would have died and turned to sea form. The 1989 team wanted a happy ending instead, and gave Ariel everything she wanted[10].

Though I feel like the edits to the 1989 film version of Andersen’s The Little Mermaid were very much necessary to create family-friendly entertainment, with it seeming like the planned 1940s version was even going to be too dark and depressing, children’s author Maurice Sendak was quick to critique Disney for deviating from Hans Christian Andersen’s story in the ways that they did. As the story is about the risks of sacrifice and ultimately ends with the mermaid getting no reward, it was felt that Disney avoided having their mermaid learn this hard lesson, which is a fact of life sometimes[11]. The 1989 film does give a nod to Hans Christian Andersen’s story in many ways though, despite some changes to make it slightly happier and more suitable for a Disney feature film. They did also reference the original statue of the Little Mermaid which sits by Copenhagen harbour and was created by Edvard Eriksen; Ariel’s pose of her sitting on a rock watching Eric from afar at the end of the film is reminiscent of the statue’s same pose. There are thirteen replicas of the Little Mermaid bronze statue all over the world, including in Madrid, Seoul, and even California[12].

The Little Mermaid was the last Disney film to use the traditional hand-completed ink and paint method, with the movies that came after moving on to use the CAPS system in full, which used a digital ink and paint method. CAPS was used for The Little Mermaid’s final scene, specifically for the rainbow. This film also contained more effects animation than any Disney animated movie since Fantasia (1940) with nearly 80% of the film requiring effects. Over a million bubbles were drawn with two thirds of the film taking place underwater[13].

Eric’s shipwreck was another area where special effects were vital. The effects team wanted this sequence to be similar in size, scale and consequence as that of Monstro the Whale in Pinocchio (1940). The lightning flashes were important to create the mood of the scene and to light up specific areas of the ship. They also used concept art and reference material from the Animation Research Library for help. From here, they found materials from Pinocchio (1940), and also Bambi (1942), where the rain and blowing snow was useful to recreate weather. They also discovered concept art from Kay Nielsen that had been drawn in the 1940s when the Disney Studios looked to adapt Hans Christian Andersen’s tale. They found his art of a shipwreck to be useful. All the effects in The Little Mermaid had to be drawn, be they water, fire, weather, or even magic[14].

When production began on The Little Mermaid, it was in the mid-1980s, when the new management had come in and the animators were now working from that rundown warehouse in Glendale. When “The Gong Show” was brought in by Eisner, a place for animators to pitch new ideas, Ron Clements put forward the idea of adapting The Little Mermaid at their first meeting in January 1985. He had just read the story and wrote a two-page treatment of it, coming up with a happier ending. However, the idea was “gonged” i.e., rejected, because of a planned sequel to the live-action film Splash (1984), which was about a mermaid. Two weeks later, Jeffrey Katzenberg, then Chairman of Walt Disney Studios, read the full treatment and did decide to greenlight the project. Katzenberg started to look outside for screenwriters, when Ron Clements and John Musker asked if they could give it a try; Katzenberg loved their screenplay and they moved forward with the film.

In early 1988, a work-in-progress screening was assembled for Katzenberg to view, containing sketches and voice recordings. Katzenberg liked the script and the songs but didn’t love the movie as a whole, admitting that he wasn’t able to see how it would look on screen, whereas the animators did know what would and wouldn’t work. They joked that management was not patient enough, but this was the first time the team felt they were in trouble. Howard Ashman helped rewrite a few scenes when they struggled with the story. with some of those being Sebastian coaching Ariel on how to get Eric to kiss her, and the ending of Triton deciding to give Ariel legs, where it was more of a visual element originally.

Then an audience of children was invited to view the movie, with a half-animated “Part of Your World” included. Katzenberg could see that the children were restless and uninterested, so said that the song should be removed. Everyone was horrified at this idea so the directors, the songwriters and the animators all tried to convince him to keep it. Katzenberg gave them a chance to finish animating it and then decided to keep the song in the movie. It would’ve been a mistake to cut the song, as Katzenberg has admitted, as it tells the audience exactly why Ariel wants to be human and ties us to her emotionally. At an official audience preview at the AMC Theatre in Burbank, the unfinished movie was a hit, with both children and adults alike. A marketing campaign for the movie then began, with this movie being marketed in all areas of the company, including at the theme parks. Katzenberg thought that The Little Mermaid wouldn’t surpass Oliver & Company (1988), the previous animated release, as he felt Oliver was a boys’ movie and The Little Mermaid for girls, with boys’ movies doing better at the box office, though the animators felt it would appeal to all.

MUSIC

As The Little Mermaid was Disney’s first return to their fairytale format for three decades, the new generation of animators knew they needed a fresh approach to the traditional style in all aspects, including the music; The Little Mermaid began Disney’s Broadway-style of animated musical. This was thanks to the duo of Howard Ashman and Alan Menken. Ashman had written the hugely successful musical Little Shop of Horrors, the horror-comedy rock musical about a human-eating Venus fly trap, in the 1980s alongside Alan Menken. Ashman then went on to write the musical Smile which premiered in 1986 but was not well-received. Because of this disappointment, Ashman wanted a new project away from Broadway. Howard Ashman felt that musical theatre and Disney animation had always worked well together, so he was interested in working on a Disney animated feature film. Ashman had already written a song for the previous animated Disney release Oliver & Company (1988) and was invited by Jeffrey Katzenberg to work on The Little Mermaid. Naturally, Ashman asked Menken to collaborate with him on the music, with Ashman writing lyrics and Menken composing the music, despite neither of them having any experience in writing music for films.

The film has a mixture of short songs and also bigger star numbers, but I’ll start with the shorter ones. The Little Mermaid begins with the song “Fathoms Below”, sung by Prince Eric’s crew as they talk about the legends of merfolk and King Triton. It’s a good opening number for building some backstory into the characters we are about to see, and also gives the film some atmosphere, with the ship moving through a misty screen. This song was meant to be extended, and would have included information about Ursula being Triton’s sister, however, the number was cut for the movie’s pacing. The next song follows on from “Fathoms Below” quite quickly and is performed by Ariel’s sisters under the sea, in the concert that Sebastian has arranged for their father. It introduced each of Ariel’s six sisters, giving us their names, which are: Aquata, Andrina, Arista, Attina, Adella, and Alana. Even though this song is unceremoniously cut short, I actually really like it and would’ve liked to have heard more should Ariel have bothered to appear for her solo! The third shorter song is “Les Poissons” performed by René Auberjonois as Chef Louis. It’s very funny, though obviously stereotypically French! I quite like it, and it can quite easily get stuck in your head!

Moving on, we have Ariel’s big showstopping number “Part of Your World”. This was written to be the typical “I Want” song that the leading lady would sing in a Broadway musical, talking about her hopes and dreams for her life. In this case, we hear how much Ariel wants to be a human and live above the surface. It’s one of the most memorable songs from The Little Mermaid. I believe “Part of Your World” was written quite soon after Ashman and Menken received the story treatment, with the directors first hearing it in Ashman’s New York apartment. From this song, the Disney directors could tell how much the duo understood story and character. Unfortunately, I have heard too many renditions of “Part of Your World” through the years and they never match Jodi Benson’s original version. I sometimes feel like this song has been “overused” at times and I therefore don’t love it. “Part of Your World” features twice more in the film, as reprises: once when Ariel realises she is in love with Eric after saving him, where we can hear how desperate she is to be with him; and then again for the finale, sung by the chorus of guests at their wedding, which ends the film well. One other interesting fact about this song is that on the soundtrack, there is some dialogue heard before the song; this dialogue does not feature in the movie.

Sebastian the crab also gets two songs in The Little Mermaid: “Under the Sea” and “Kiss the Girl”. Thanks to the choice to use a Trinidadian accent for Sebastian, Menken and Ashman were then able to incorporate the musical styles of calypso and reggae in these two songs[15]. “Under the Sea” is all about trying to convince Ariel that being under the sea is the best place for her, via a big party number with all the marine life, and “Kiss the Girl” is building a romantic atmosphere to get Eric to finally kiss Ariel. They are both fantastic, although I didn’t always like “Under the Sea”; again, I felt like Disney used it too much in their parades and shows, so I’d just heard it too much, but in recent years, I’ve found I really like it, especially when the song builds towards its finale. I’ve always liked the romance of “Kiss the Girl” and like seeing how Sebastian and all the animals are trying to help Ariel realise her dream of being human forever, even if it is a bit forcefully done!

The final song to cover is “Poor Unfortunate Souls”, the longest of all of them at almost five minutes, but hey, Ursula needs her big moment! It really makes a show-woman of Ursula and I think Pat Carroll performs it so well. It follows Ursula trying to convince Ariel to take her deal to become a human, and then ends with the spell actually being enacted. It goes through specific examples of her magic working for others, and warns Ariel of the price she will have to pay, or else she will belong to her. The song is a perfect example of devious, pushy sales tactics, really! I particularly like Ursula’s verse on body language and how men don’t like women to talk – it was quite a contemporary attitude to put into a Disney animated film, as this is something that we still discuss today in the overarching feminist debate – and also the point where the spell is complete, with Ariel singing those few notes that recur at multiple other moments in the film. It’s beautiful singing, even if Ursula is taking her voice!

For the score, though I do not have any specific instrumental pieces that I really like, it is obvious to hear how Menken’s music is able to impact the mood of the viewer to match what they are seeing on screen. I do like the finale music the best of the music within the score, but Menken continued to do great scores for other Disney animated films, many of which I do prefer to The Little Mermaid’s.

Menken and Ashman had a lot to be proud of with their soundtrack as they received three Academy Award nominations: “Under the Sea” and “Kiss the Girl” for Best Original Song and then the award for Best Score. They won both Best Score and Best Original Song for “Under the Sea”. “Under the Sea” also won a Grammy and a Golden Globe. Menken’s score also won a Golden Globe for Best Score and the soundtrack as a whole won the Grammy for Best Recording for Children.

A few days after the Oscar ceremony in 1990, Ashman told Menken that he was unwell, and had been diagnosed as HIV positive. They continued to work on songs for Beauty and the Beast (1991) and for Aladdin (1992) whilst Ashman was ill. Sadly, he did not live to see either movie to completion, passing away in March 1991, eight months before the release of Beauty and the Beast[16].

RECEPTION

The Little Mermaid was released in theatres on 17th November 1989, and despite Katzenberg not foreseeing the movie doing as well as Oliver & Company (1988) had one year previously, the team were pleased to see that the movie continued to do well over the weeks that followed, earning over $84 million during its initial run in North America.

The reviews were also dazzling, with many stating that the Disney Animation department had managed to reclaim the enchantment and the charm of their medium and had restored the public’s faith in animation. Many of the characters were praised, including Ariel and Ursula, with the songs being another major factor in the movie’s popularity.

The film would ultimately gross over $200 million worldwide, thanks to theatrical re-releases, both in 2D and in 3D. The Little Mermaid has also been released on VHS, DVD and Blu-Ray multiple times over the years.

Although The Little Mermaid mostly won awards for its soundtrack, it did win a few other awards, including the Best Animation award at the Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards, and the Best Family Motion Picture – Adventure or Cartoon award at the Young Artist Awards.

LEGACY

As far as The Little Mermaid continuing outside of the original movie, on screen, the story was continued with the direct-to-video sequel The Little Mermaid II: Return to the Sea (2000), which happens to be one of my favourite Disney direct-to-video sequels. Many of the vocal cast returned with the addition of Tara Strong as Melody, Ariel’s daughter. The sequel sees Melody wanting desperately to be a mermaid, not a human, and goes to Morgana, Ursula’s sister to become one, in a complete reversal of Ariel’s story. Tara Strong has had a long history of voice acting, including as Timmy Turner in the long-running series The Fairly OddParents (2001-17), and in person appeared as Gwen in the two Sabrina the Teenage Witch movies, Sabrina Goes to Rome (1998) and Sabrina Down Under (1999). The Little Mermaid also spanned a prequel, titled The Little Mermaid: Ariel’s Beginning (2008), which details King Triton banning music in his kingdom after his wife’s death with Ariel fighting to change that in her youth. I have only seen the prequel once and I didn’t think too much of it, to be honest. An animated series based on the film, which looked at Ariel’s life before the film, called simply The Little Mermaid, aired for three seasons from 1992 to 1994.

Following on from that, in 2019 Disney aired a television special called The Little Mermaid Live! This was to celebrate the original movie’s 30th anniversary, with additional live musical performances from the film and the Broadway stage show, which first went to Broadway in 2008. Auli’I Cravalho, voice of Moana, performed as Ariel, with other big names such as Shaggy as Sebastian and Queen Latifah as Ursula, joining her. I will admit I did not watch this, and I’m not sure whether I will; I have seen other television versions of musical films in recent years, such as Hairspray Live! and just don’t think they have been worth it.

Finally, a 2023 live-action adaptation of The Little Mermaid was also released. I have not watched this live-action film either. It did very well financially, as all of these Disney live-action adaptations seem to, but received mixed reviews, though it is supposedly one of Disney’s better attempts at modernising the original. It made such changes as adding new songs, written by Alan Menken and Lin-Manuel Miranda, such as “Wild Uncharted Waters” for Prince Eric, and “For the First Time” for Ariel, which apparently added to their character development. There was also some strange song called “The Scuttlebutt”, which was not popular with many viewers…They added more backstory to Prince Eric and his family, and made it so Ariel doesn’t know she needs Eric’s kiss to remain human, causing their relationship to develop more organically. Some of these story changes do not sound too bad, but I don’t think much of the casting, with Awkwafina being a particularly odd choice for Scuttle, though Halle Bailey seems to do a good job as Ariel from the few clips I’ve seen[17].

Generally, at the Disney theme parks, Ariel and The Little Mermaid are prominently featured at all the parks across the world, be that through parades, shows, nighttime fireworks performances or meet-and-greets, with Ariel and Ursula being the two most easily spotted, though Ursula may only be available for the Halloween season in some areas. Ariel is also likely to be at any location where the Disney Princesses can be found, including character dining such as Cinderella’s Royal Table at Walt Disney World or Auberge de Cendrillon in Disneyland Paris. Sometimes Ariel meets with Eric, but this is not common. Many children also choose to be made over to look like Ariel at Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boutiques.

Some of the specific high points of The Little Mermaid references include the ride of the movie. The attraction is named The Little Mermaid: Ariel’s Undersea Adventure at its home in Disney California Adventure Park, opening in June 2011, with a copy of the ride opening at Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom, as part of the New Fantasyland area, in December 2012 under the name Under the Sea – Journey of the Little Mermaid. This is an Omnimover dark ride that takes guests through highlights of the movie, such as the “Under the Sea” scene, Ursula’s lair, her defeat, and “Kiss the Girl”. The interesting thing about this ride is that it was originally in development in the early 1990s, however, the ride was put on hold and was not built. A computer-generated ride-through of this original attraction was added as a bonus feature to the 2006 Special Edition DVD release of the movie. Whether because of feedback from this ride-through or not, an attraction was then developed by Disney in the mid-to-late 2000s and opened as the ride we have today. The original ride would have had guests going through some different scenes such as a more intense battle with Ursula and an opening scene of Eric’s ship on the ocean in the mist, with the shell-shaped vehicles also being attached to a track on the ceiling, similar to Peter Pan’s Flight[18]. I remember seeing this ride on the bonus features before the actual attraction was built and was so annoyed it wasn’t real, so when it did open in some form, I was very happy, although I do find some of the animatronics of Ariel in the actual ride kind of creepy…

Also at Walt Disney World Resort, there is a whole section of the Art of Animation Resort dedicated to The Little Mermaid, as well as the area within New Fantasyland with the ride that includes an exterior building to look like Prince Eric’s castle, something that California’s version does not have. Sebastian’s Bistro is also a vaguely The Little Mermaid-themed restaurant at the Caribbean Beach Resort. There used to be a whole stage show for The Little Mermaid titled Voyage of the Little Mermaid at Disney’s Hollywood Studios. This was a fifteen-minute re-telling of the movie which incorporated live performers, puppets, including a 12-foot-tall Ursula, water effects and a huge projection screen showing moments from the movie. It was only meant to be a temporary show however it ran from January 1992 until March 2020, when it closed with the parks for the COVID-19 pandemic, but never reopened. It was believed this show had closed for good, however, in 2023, it was announced that the stage show would be revamped into a slightly different show. The Little Mermaid – A Musical Adventure opened in the same theatre as the previous show on 27th May 2025. This new version includes more songs from the original movie than the previous iteration, and, instead of projecting clips from the movie on screen, new animation has been added, which has had a mixed reception… There is still puppetry though, including the large Ursula puppet, updated from the original stage show. The Little Mermaid – A Musical Adventure is around 20 minutes long, and runs continuously throughout the day.

At Tokyo DisneySea Park, a whole area called Mermaid Lagoon is themed to The Little Mermaid. The façade of the building looks like King Triton’s palace and takes you into an indoor area, making guests feel like they are under the sea. This is where guests can meet Ariel, shop, play in the play area, and ride some more basic fairground-type attractions, such as the Jumping Jellyfish, a child-friendly drop tower-style ride, and The Whirlpool, similar to the Tea Cups. Outside, there are also two outdoor attractions: Flounder’s Flying Fish Coaster, a child-friendly rollercoaster, and Scuttle’s Scooters, a non-spinning version of the traditional Waltzers. This area looks great and I would’ve loved an area like this at Walt Disney World when I was younger – though I’d probably still like it now!

These were the most interesting attractions themed to The Little Mermaid, however, each of the six Disney theme parks does have attractions, restaurants, hotel areas, or shops themed to The Little Mermaid or its characters, but recounting them all would take too long. There is also a stage show, supposedly a modern retelling of Disney’s The Little Mermaid, that plays on the Disney Wish Cruise Ship, and a fine-dining restaurant, Triton’s, named after Ariel’s father, on the Disney Wonder Cruise Ship.

That’s not even all of it because when the live-action The Little Mermaid was released, a whole new Ariel could be celebrated. At Disneyland Paris, an outdoor musical show, featuring performances of songs from the live-action film, took place at Walt Disney Studios Park from 26th May 2023 to 23rd June 2023. Also to promote the release of the film, new snacks, drinks and merchandise were also available to buy at the Disney Parks. You can still meet live-action Ariel at Walt Disney World, at the end of the Walt Disney Presents attraction at Disney’s Hollywood Studios, but I’m unsure if you can still meet her at Disneyland by the it’s a small world attraction; the meet-and-greet is not listed on the website.

FINAL THOUGHTS

The Little Mermaid continues to have a hold on the hearts of many, whether they were adults or children at the time of the movie’s release, or born five, ten, twenty years afterwards. It’s one of those Disney animated films that has remained popular with young and old alike, as Beauty and the Beast (1991) and The Lion King (1994) would do just a few short years later. The Little Mermaid sparked a whole new era for Disney Animation, lovingly titled the Disney Renaissance Era, and although Ariel would later be joined by multiple other Disney princesses and heroines, some more contemporary than herself, she was the one who started the new age of Disney Princess.

It is difficult to express how important The Little Mermaid was for Disney Animation, the Disney movie-goers and the Walt Disney Company as a whole but it was vital. It is thanks to The Little Mermaid that a nervous animation workforce managed to find their passion for their work again and thankfully, the viewers saw that and were happy to join them on the crazy ride that followed.  


REFERENCES

[1] Credit: Mackenzie Nichols, ‘’The Little Mermaid’ Turns 30: Inside the Disney Classic’s Rocky Journey’, Variety (online), 13th November 2019.

[2] Credit: Mackenzie Nichols, ‘’The Little Mermaid’ Turns 30: Inside the Disney Classic’s Rocky Journey’, Variety (online), 13th November 2019.

[3] Credit: Jim Korkis, ‘Ariel’s Tale’, MousePlanet.com, 28th July 2021.

[4] Credit: Jim Korkis, ‘How Sherri Stoner Became “The Little Mermaid”’, CartoonResearch.com, 19th November 2021.

[5] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘The Little Mermaid (1989)’, pp. 82-84.

[6] Credit: Disney, “Treasures Untold: The Making of The Little Mermaid”, from The Little Mermaid (1989) 2-Disc Special Edition DVD (2006).

[7] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘The Little Mermaid (1989)’, pp. 82-84.

[8] Credit: Mackenzie Nichols, ‘’The Little Mermaid’ Turns 30: Inside the Disney Classic’s Rocky Journey’, Variety (online), 13th November 2019.

[9] Credit: Charline Bouzon, ‘The Little Mermaid: The incredible true story of Andersen’s tale’, En-Vols.com, 16th February 2023.

[10] Credit: Disney, “The Little Mermaid: The Story Behind the Story”, from The Little Mermaid (1989) 2-Disc Special Edition DVD (2006).

[11] Credit: Jim Korkis, ‘Ariel’s Tale’, MousePlanet.com, 28th July 2021.

[12] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘The Little Mermaid (1989)’, pp. 82-84.

[13] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘The Little Mermaid (1989)’, pp. 82-84.

[14] Credit: Disney, “Storm Warning: The Little Mermaid Special Effects Unit”, from The Little Mermaid (1989) 2-Disc Special Edition DVD (2006).

[15] Credit: Disney, “Treasures Untold: The Making of The Little Mermaid”, from The Little Mermaid (1989) 2-Disc Special Edition DVD (2006).

[16] Credit: Don Hahn, Waking Sleeping Beauty (2009).

[17] Credit: Alex Abad-Santos, ‘What Disney changed (and didn’t) in The Little Mermaid remake’, Vox.com, 25th May 2023.

[18] Credit: Disney, “The Little Mermaid Under the Sea Adventure: The Virtual Ride”, from The Little Mermaid (1989) 2-Disc Special Edition DVD (2006).

#27 Oliver & Company (1988)

  1. BACKGROUND
  2. PLOT
  3. CHARACTERS & CAST
  4. MUSIC
  5. PRODUCTION
  6. RECEPTION
  7. LEGACY
  8. FINAL THOUGHTS
  9. REFERENCES

BACKGROUND

The 1980s were a troublesome time at Disney, particularly for the Animation Department. 

Although The Black Cauldron (1985) was the “problem child” of Disney Animation during this decade, it was not the only issue the department faced. As well as dealing with an art form that was continuing to be expensive and received little respect from audiences, there was also a major upheaval in the form of new management, namely that of new Chief Executive Officer Michael Eisner, new Chief Financial Officer Frank Wells, new Chairman of Walt Disney Studios Jeffrey Katzenberg, who all arrived in 1984, coming from different film studios, and new president of Walt Disney Feature Animation, Peter Schneider in 1985.

It was a hard time. The dismal failure of The Black Cauldron (1985) and the mediocre success of The Great Mouse Detective (1986) meant there was a lot of pressure piling on to those animators working on Oliver & Company, a strange adaptation of Charles Dickens’ novel Oliver Twist, but with dogs and a cat. It was at least a unique adaptation of the novel, which had already become a musical, its subsequent 1968 film, as well as television series and other film and stage productions. But the animators weren’t excited, instead feeling anxious about their job security, and the new management mostly just wanted to make money. Audiences weren’t expecting much, having almost given up on seeing something spectacular from Disney Animation ever again, with the releases since Walt Disney’s death rarely living up to the spectacle and enchantment of the Studios’ early years.

But despite the incredibly mixed reviews and a lack of enthusiasm, Oliver & Company did in fact do well financially, and has managed to garner a cult following. I personally like Oliver & Company. I used to watch it a lot after school while I did my homework; it had a short enough runtime at just over an hour that it fit perfectly into the time I had between getting home from school and eating dinner! I also watched other shorter Disney animated films, like The Sword in the Stone (1963) and Robin Hood (1973) at this time too, and because I used to watch them so frequently, I guess I found an appreciation for them that perhaps the average person does not have.

PLOT

Oliver & Company begins with an aerial shot of Manhattan Island, before moving to the streets of New York City, where a box of kittens has been left. The box states “Kitties Need Home 5.00”. There must be some sort of honesty box, because although, one by one, the kittens are taken away, we never see anyone pay for them! After a couple of days, just one remains – a little ginger kitty – with the box now stating that the kitten is free to a good home, however, the last kitten is not taken away, but left in the box in the middle of a rainstorm. The kitten meows at passers-by but they either ignore him, or don’t hear him. After the kitten is almost flushed down into the sewer by rushing rainwater, almost killed by feral dogs, who chase him down an alley, and almost scared to death by thunder and lightning, it eventually settles down to sleep on top of a stationary truck’s wheel.

The next morning, the kitten is woken up by the truck moving and quickly jumps off. It begins searching for people to presumably either take him away from this horrible place or feed him, but, except for one toddler who is quickly dragged away by its mother, the kitten is largely ignored again. He stumbles upon a hot dog cart, and tries to beg for food but is shooed away by the miserable seller, Louie. A dog comes over to the kitten; his name is Dodger. He tells the cat that they need to team up to steal the hot dogs. Dodger barks at Oliver, scaring him so that he will run up Louie and distract him. This does the job, with Dodger taking the sausages. He walks away, leaving the kitten to fend for itself, but the kitten follows Dodger to a construction site, and all over New York City, telling him that half of those hot dogs are his, as per their deal.

Eventually, after Dodger’s big song-and-dance number where he shows off about how cool he is, they arrive at the docks, with Dodger unaware that the cat has been following him all along. On a rundown boat, a ragtag team of dogs live: the hyperactive Chihuahua, Tito, the high-class bulldog, Francis, the no-nonsense Saluki, Rita, and the nice but dim Great Dane, Einstein. They spend their time trying to find treasures that their owner, Fagin, can pawn to pay back a debt he currently has. Unfortunately, since they are only dogs, these “treasures” mostly amount to shredded wallets and random broken items; not enough to pay back debt. As Dodger is recounting his “terrifying” tale of how he outsmarted a “psychotic” monster to bring them food for dinner, something crashes through the roof of the boot – it’s that cat. Soon, Fagin arrives home, and is greeted by his dogs. He looks at their loot from the day and is disappointed by what he finds, saying Sykes won’t be happy with that. But really, what did he expect? How can dogs know what will and won’t pay off his ridiculous debts? Give them a break, man.

Anyway, Fagin goes up to see Sykes, the loan shark he needs to pay back. He tells Fagin he has one last chance; he has three days to pay back what he owes – or else. At the same time, Sykes’ Dobermans, Roscoe and DeSoto, stay with Fagin’s dogs, to keep them in line, and flirt with Rita, who rebuffs them every time. They soon smell the cat, with the cat scratching DeSoto’s nose as a warning. Fagin’s dogs surround and protect the kitten, and Sykes’ dogs are soon called away. Fagin returns to the room, feeling down and hopeless, with no idea how to pay back the money. The dogs rally around him, and Fagin is introduced to the cat, who is dubbed an official member of the gang. After a quick bedtime story, everyone settles down to sleep. The kitten moves off Fagin’s lap at one point and snuggles up next to Dodger. Cute.

The next day, Fagin and his dogs head into the city once more, with Fagin driving his three-wheeled scooter and the dogs sitting in the shopping trolley that is attached to it – very inventive. Fagin sends the dogs out to either find some way of making money or to steal something expensive, whilst he attempts to pawn items he’s “found”. The dogs teach the cat the tricks of their trade by seeing firsthand their plan to steal a limousine. Einstein hits the car, making the driver stop, with Francis putting on a theatrical display in front of the car, pretending to have been hit. Tito and the cat are sent inside the limo to hot-wire it. Except something goes wrong, because as Tito is working with the electrics, the cat gets scared by movement in the back of the car and falls onto the keys, which are in the ignition. The car goes haywire and Tito is electrocuted, and shot out the window. The cat gets stuck in wires, and is rescued by the passenger, a little girl called Jenny. The other dogs run away and meet up in an alley, only to find the cat was left behind. Tito and Dodger follow the car to find him.

The limo pulls up to a house on Fifth Avenue. The dogs make a plan to retrieve the kitten later on. Meanwhile, Jenny convinces her driver and butler, Winston, that her parents, who are away on a conference, wouldn’t mind her keeping the cat. Sure enough, they call soon after and say she can keep it. She names him Oliver – this is the first time the kitten’s name is mentioned in the film. Winston knows this will annoy their pampered, prize-winning poodle, Georgette. Sure enough, when Georgette comes downstairs and finds the cat eating “Oeufs á la Jenny, avec Cocoa Krispies” out of her bowl, no less, she is furious and tries to get the cat thrown out of the house. Speaking of Jenny’s strange cat food concoction, I’m sure most kids thought whatever it was she made looking amazing, because it’s basically a chocolate pudding or mousse, with chocolate cereal and whipped cream on top, which sounds great to me, but little Oliver shouldn’t be eating it because chocolate is toxic to cats, and most cats are actually lactose intolerant so shouldn’t have dairy. So, if you are looking for recipes for this amazing “cat food” online, and surprisingly, there are many of them, then please only give it to humans, not to your pets! Georgette is also seen eating a box of chocolates later on; don’t feed your dogs chocolate either.

Back to the story. Jenny and Oliver spend lots of time together, where she takes him to Central Park, to eat ice cream and sit in a rowboat and carriage; Oliver even “helps” her as she practises the piano. Jenny also gets Oliver a collar and tag, with his new name and new address. Oliver is very happy in his new home. But the next day, whilst Jenny is out at school, Fagin’s dogs break into the house. They find Georgette first who is furious to have strange dogs near her, but is only too pleased to hear that they want to take Oliver. Georgette is delighted to have the house all to herself again. When Oliver is returned to Fagin’s boat, he is upset at the others for taking him back because he was happy. Dodger is annoyed and tells Oliver to just leave then. As Oliver is about to leave, Fagin comes home, with his three days almost up and picks up Oliver. He sees Oliver’s tag and, believing that Oliver belongs to some rich person, writes a letter to the owner, asking for a ransom to get their cat back. Fagin posts it through the door.

Jenny sees the letter and is devastated to find that Oliver has been stolen. Her and Georgette head off in the rain over to the docks following Fagin’s terribly drawn map. At the docks, Fagin meets with Sykes. Sykes is expecting his money and when he finds that Fagin doesn’t have it, he orders his dogs to attack Dodger. Fagin babbles out his plan to use Oliver as a ransom, at which point Sykes calls off his dogs and tells Fagin it’s not a bad plan and gives him a few more hours. As Fagin waits for the rich cat owner, he sees Jenny and her dog looking very lost and upset. He realises that Jenny is the owner of Oliver and that there is no point trying to extort money from her, since she hasn’t got much, only what’s in her piggy bank. He returns Oliver to her, but little does he know that Sykes has been watching this exchange. Sykes drives towards them and grabs Jenny, throwing her into the car. He tells Fagin his debt is repaid.

The dogs and Oliver go to Sykes’ office and see Jenny tied up there; Sykes is on the phone to her parents, telling them to pay up. Tito is told to cut the security cameras, whilst the others dress up as a pizza delivery man to trick Sykes into coming out of the room; the dogs get inside and hook Jenny up to a wire above. Tito uses his electrical skills to get it to move upwards, but Sykes sees and jams the box, sending them down a slide. They are cornered with Sykes’ dogs about to attack. Jenny and the gang are soon rescued by Fagin in his scooter, and they rush off. Sykes and his two dogs follow behind in his car. Fagin thinks he can lose Sykes by going into the subway in Times Square, and yet, Sykes drives his car down into the tunnel and follows Fagin onto the train tracks. Sykes bumps the scooter, throwing Jenny onto his car. As Sykes tries to grab her from the roof, Oliver jumps over and bites his hand; Oliver is tossed into the back of the car, with DeSoto and Roscoe ready to attack. Dodger jumps into the car to save Oliver, but is himself attacked by Sykes’ dogs and thrown out of the back window, with one dog hitting the tracks. Oliver scratches the other dog who also hits the electrified tracks. Ouch.

Jenny reaches out to Fagin to save her, but Sykes pulls her back, so now Tito is driving the scooter, and no-one is driving Sykes’ car. Oliver and Dodger jump onto Sykes, giving Jenny the chance to jump towards Fagin. At the same time, Tito is driving the scooter directly into the path of an oncoming train, leaving Georgette to completely freak out on him. At the final moment, Tito pulls the scooter on to the railings of the Brooklyn Bridge and Sykes throws Dodger and Oliver off him – but is then struck by the train…Once the train has gone, Tito gently reverses the scooter off the railings and back on to the pavement, where Dodger comes out of the shadows carrying a seemingly lifeless Oliver. Jenny rushes to him, and he suddenly comes alive again.

A day or so later, it is Jenny’s birthday. At her fancy house, Oliver, Jenny, Winston, Fagin, Dodger and the rest of the dogs are having a party to celebrate. Winston gets a phone call from Jenny’s father saying that they will be home tomorrow – finally! Fagin watches wrestling on TV with Winston, only to lose a bet and have to make a swift getaway since obviously he has no money. Jenny receives gifts from all the dogs, like a lovely fish bone, broken tennis racket, and a beaten-up shoe, and says goodbye to Fagin, and the other dogs. Georgette decides to give Tito, or Alonso as she calls him, a makeover to meet her “grooming standards”. Tito rushes out of the house, dressed as a sailor, saying that Georgette is crazy and he doesn’t want to see her again! The dogs say goodbye to Oliver, with Dodger and Oliver having a particular moment, before he catches up with Fagin and his scooter by jumping all over cars and garbage trucks, like he does. The rest of the gang sing “Why Should I Worry?” with him, and the film ends with a final aerial view of NYC.

CHARACTERS & CAST

Oliver is the little ginger kitten that seemingly nobody wants to adopt. He has a very difficult start in life, with everyone ignoring him or not noticing him. When Oliver becomes a part of Fagin’s gang of dogs, though they accept him and protect him, more or less, it’s clear that he doesn’t really fit in and isn’t sure this is where he wants to be. It’s not until Jenny takes him in that Oliver starts to be happy with his life, as she clearly adores Oliver and I bet he ended up being a very spoilt little kitty! Oliver is very tough, by scratching and biting dogs and humans much larger than himself to either protect himself or save someone else. He’s also cute so you can’t help but root for him, especially after the New York streets seem to be too much for him to handle.

Oliver is voiced by an eleven or twelve-year-old Joey Lawrence. As a child star, he appeared in series such as Gimme a Break! (1983-87) and Blossom (1990-95). He also starred alongside his two brothers in the series Brotherly Love from 1995 to 1997. Oliver & Company was the first time one of the Lawrence brothers was cast in a Disney project. Later, Matthew Lawrence would be chosen for a voice part in the Disney English dub of Kiki’s Delivery Service (1998), and Andrew Lawrence would voice T.J. Dettweiler in the series Recess and its spin-offs. Nowadays, Joey Lawrence is probably best known for starring alongside Melissa Joan Hart in the ABC sitcom Melissa & Joey (2010-15).

Dodger starts off being quite arrogant and overly confident in the film. When he meets Oliver, he clearly just wants to use him to get food for himself and has no intentions of sharing. He talks a good game, but some of his stories are very much exaggerated, and made to make him look cooler and braver than he actually is. But Dodger is a very loyal dog, protecting Fagin, the rest of the dogs, and eventually Oliver, from harm, usually from Sykes and his Dobermans. Dodger is also carefree and relaxed, letting worries wash over him, which is good for me to see because I am the complete opposite, though I’d much rather be like Dodger. But then life is easier for dogs generally, isn’t it?

Singer-songwriter and six-time Grammy Award winner Billy Joel both voices and provides the singing voice for Dodger. This was an incredibly big name to have in the cast of a Disney animated film at the time, and they certainly used his name a lot in the marketing of the film’s release to get as many people to see it as possible! At the time, Billy Joel was famous for releasing hits such as “Piano Man” in 1973 and “Uptown Girl” in 1983. Oliver & Company was Joel’s acting debut. Director George Scribner was initially sceptical about whether Joel would be right for the role, but after an audition over the phone, Scribner thought he was great[1]. After this role, Joel continued to focus on his music. In June 2023, Joel announced that his residency at Madison Square Garden will end in July 2024.

Then, there’s Fagin. Though the novel Oliver Twist shows Fagin to be an outright crook, teaching his boys to steal from others and not caring much about their welfare, the Fagin in Oliver & Company has been humanised somewhat. I don’t see him as a thief, although I know he tells his dogs to go out and steal items for him, so that in itself is morally wrong, even if he doesn’t personally steal himself. To me, he seems to be someone who is down-on-his-luck, who had to take money from Sykes and is now struggling to pay it back. Fagin is threatened with violence or even death by Sykes, so how can you not feel bad for him? I think Fagin seems like a nice guy really, who cares for his dogs, but struggles to hold down a job and make money.

Maybe it’s just his voice that makes Fagin seem so lovable, and that is the work of actor and comedian Dom DeLuise. DeLuise starred alongside his friend Burt Reynolds in various films such as The Cannonball Run (1981) and Smokey and the Bandit II (1980). He also appeared in Mel Brooks movies, like Blazing Saddles (1974). Outside of this, DeLuise had much experience in voice acting, having voiced the characters of Jeremy in The Secret of NIMH (1982) and Tiger in An American Tail (1986). Disney were pleased to get DeLuise to voice a character for one of their films, as these two previous films he had voice acted in were for Don Bluth[2]. Bluth had been an animator at the Disney Studios but left in 1979 to set up his own animation studio, taking many animators with him. Disney felt they had “poached” DeLuise, however, DeLuise reprised his roles as Jeremy and Tiger in their subsequent spin-offs throughout the 80s and 90s. But for me, I know Dom DeLuise from only Oliver & Company and just one episode of Sabrina, the Teenage Witch (1996-2003), where he played Cousin Mortimer in Season 3 Episode 4 in 1998. DeLuise passed away in 2009 at the age of 75.  

Sykes is the evil and scary loan shark who Fagin must owe a lot of money to warrant this kind of attention from an obviously very busy and successful man, judging by his shiny Cadillac. Sykes is willing to resort to violence to get what’s owed him, but he can be charming, albeit in a menacing way, when he’s trying to get someone to listen to him, like Fagin in their first encounter in the film, or when he’s talking to Jenny after kidnapping her. He’s a Disney villain that nobody really talks about, despite having quite a brutal death, which is disappointing because I think he’s a good one.

The role of Sykes was initially offered by Michael Eisner to Marlon Brando; however, Brando declined the role as he thought the film would bomb[3]. Instead, they cast Robert Loggia, who had starred in films such as three films in the Pink Panther series and Scarface (1983) by the time he was cast by Disney. The same year as Oliver & Company’s release in 1988, Loggia also starred as Mr. MacMillan, the owner of MacMillan Toy Company, in Big (1988), a massively successful movie, where Loggia won the Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor. I had no idea Mr. MacMillan was Sykes until just now, and I am surprised, in a good way! Loggia passed away in 2015 at the age of 85.

Finally, for the primary characters, we have the kind and caring seven-year-old Jenny. Though she has a nice house and rich parents, Jenny is actually very lonely before she meets Oliver as her parents seem to be very busy with their jobs and fly out of the country often for work. Jenny is even told that they won’t be home for her birthday, which upsets her a lot. They do come home the very next day, apparently, but that’s besides the point. She doesn’t have her parents around, their poodle Georgette is pretentious and not very cuddly, and Winston is their highly professional butler, so Jenny has no-one she can really talk to. She needed Oliver to give her some sort of stability and friendship in life, outside of school, where I assume she has friends, but we don’t get to find out. Her birthday party consists of just Oliver, Fagin, and his dogs, so maybe she doesn’t! Jenny is a sweet girl, and a very deserving and devoted owner to Oliver.

Former child actress Natalie Gregory provides the speaking voice for Jenny. In 1985, she starred as Alice in the 1985 made-for-television film Alice in Wonderland, which aired on CBS in two parts. After the release of Oliver & Company, Gregory then played the part of Annie in the former Epcot attraction Cranium Command, which opened at the Wonders of Life pavilion in October 1989 before closing in January 2007. I miss that attraction so much…

For the more minor characters, there are still so many impressive names in the voice cast. Firstly, actress and singer Bette Midler voices poodle Georgette. Georgette is quite vain and bossy, thinking herself better than Fagin’s dogs because she is a show dog, having won numerous awards. She hates the spotlight being taken away from her by Oliver, but when they have to set out to save Jenny, she gets on board with the dogs’ plans, though she isn’t much use! Bette Midler has released numerous albums, performed in many Broadway productions such as Fiddler on the Roof as Tzeitel in 1967 and Hello, Dolly! as Dolly from 2017 to 2018, and starred in various screen roles, like Big Business (1988) and The First Wives Club (1996). For Disney, she introduced “The Steadfast Tin Soldier” segment of Fantasia 2000 (1999) and most famously, starred as Winifred Sanderson in the Halloween movies Hocus Pocus (1993) and its sequel Hocus Pocus 2 (2022).

Cheech Marin provides the voice of the energetic and highly flirtatious Tito the Chihuahua. Tito is quite fiery and easy to anger, but because of Tito’s small stature, nobody takes him seriously when he wants to fight. Tito is tasked with biting through lots of electrical wires, which seems very unfair, but apparently being electrocuted is his top skill! He’s the funniest of all the characters, and has some great lines, “If this is torture, chain me to the wall” and “Get off my back woman, I’m driving”, being his best. Marin was well-known for his comedy act Cheech & Chong alongside Tommy Chong during the 1970s and 1980s. Since his role in Oliver & Company, Marin has returned to Disney to voice other characters such as Banzai in The Lion King (1994) and Ramone in the Cars franchise (2006-present). Other roles he may be known for are: “Uncle” Felix in the first three Spy Kids films (2001-2003) and Officer Salino in the under-appreciated movie Christmas with the Kranks (2004).

The last three names to mention are the dogs Rita, Einstein, and Francis, who are the three with the least amount of screen time. Rita is streetwise and feisty. She tries to care for Oliver by teaching him the way of the streets. Looking at the source material, I presume Rita is meant to be like Nancy in Oliver Twist, a maternal figure of some sort to Oliver before he meets his forever family. Rita’s voice is provided by Sheryl Lee Ralph. At the time, she was best known for performing as Deena Jones in the original Broadway production of Dreamgirls in 1981. She later returned to Broadway to play the role of Muzzy in Thoroughly Modern Millie in 2002. Presently, she stars as Barbara Howard in the critically acclaimed ABC comedy series Abbott Elementary (2021-present). Sheryl Lee Ralph won a Primetime Emmy Award for this role in 2022. She is amazing. But, like Dom DeLuise, I also know her from an episode of Sabrina, the Teenage Witch (1996-2003)! This time it is Cousin Zsa Zsa, who appears in Season 4 Episode 13, which aired in 1999.

Richard Mulligan is the voice of Einstein, the slow but kind Great Dane. His big skill is banging into things, and somehow not getting too injured! Mulligan won a Primetime Emmy Award in 1980 for his recurring role as Burt Campbell in the sitcom Soap (1977-81), a parody about daytime soap operas. Mulligan was also known for playing Dr. Harry Weston in the sitcom Empty Nest (1988-95), where he once again won the Primetime Emmy for Lead Actor in 1989. Mulligan died in 2000. Roscoe Lee Browne provides the voice of the highly cultured and posh bulldog Francis, who can be seen watching a production of Macbeth on television during our first introduction to Fagin’s dogs. He has some fun lines, like Tito, such as: “Isn’t it rather dangerous to use one’s entire vocabulary in a single sentence?”. Like Richard Mulligan, Roscoe Lee Browne also appeared in the sitcom Soap (1977-81) as Saunders. He also won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Performer for his role as Dr. Barnabus Foster, which he performed from 1986 to 1987 in The Cosby Show (1984-92). Throughout his career, he also performed in numerous productions of Shakespeare plays. Roscoe Lee Brown passed away in 2007.

MUSIC

That’s the voice cast, but the artists on the soundtrack are just as impressive. Huey Lewis, lead singer of the band Huey Lewis and the News, whose hit song “The Power of Love” was written for and played within the blockbuster film Back to the Future (1985), performs the opening number “Once Upon a Time in New York City”. The song says to hang on to your dreams, even when times get tough, which is fitting since New York City is named the City of Dreams. It’s a lovely song, my favourite on the soundtrack. It’s kind of melancholy to begin with and then more hopeful by the end. I also like how it references Oliver in the lyrics, despite the fact he has no name at this point in the film! The song itself was written by Barry Mann and Howard Ashman. This was the first song that Ashman wrote for a Disney animated feature, before going on to collaborate with Alan Menken on music for The Little Mermaid (1989) and Beauty and the Beast (1991)[4]. Barry Mann has had success writing both his own songs and alongside his wife Cynthia Weil. Weil and Mann wrote the song “Christmas Vacation” for the film National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation (1989).

The next song is performed by Billy Joel as Dodger and is called “Why Should I Worry?”. It’s an upbeat pop song that Dodger performs as he tries to outrun Oliver across the streets of NYC, over a construction site, on to cars, even on to a piano dangling in mid-air! He really doesn’t worry about anything. It suited Disney to give Joel a big number in the film, since singing is what he is best known for. I like the song and its sequence; it’s good fun. In this scene, you can see cameos of Peg, Trusty and Jock from Lady and the Tramp (1955), as well as Pongo from One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961), when all the dogs in the city rush to follow Dodger as he sashays down the street. The song is also reprised at the end of the film by all Fagin’s dogs. This song was written by Dan Hartman and Charlie Midnight. The two were a longtime songwriting duo. Separately, Hartman wrote and released the disco song “Relight My Fire” amongst others, and Charlie Midnight has worked with numerous artists and on movie soundtracks, including on The Lizzie McGuire Movie (2003), and songs for the Nickelodeon band Big Time Rush.

The third song, “Streets of Gold”, is performed by Rita, but not by Sheryl Lee Ralph. Instead, Ruth Pointer, of The Pointer Sisters who had hits with the songs “I’m So Excited” and “Jump (For My Love)”, sings the song. It’s not clear why the two performers are different. It’s possible that Ruth Pointer agreed to sing for the soundtrack, but did not want the full voice part, or couldn’t do it due to previous commitments. Either way, it’s a great song, with Rita telling Oliver how to survive on the streets, although it’s short, stopping just as it’s about to get going. The soundtrack version is much longer than the film version though. It was written by Dean Pitchford and Tom Snow. Pitchford wrote the lyrics for three songs for the 1980 film Fame, including the title song “Fame”, which won both the Academy Award and Golden Globe for Best Original Song. As well as writing the screenplay, Pitchford also collaborated on the music for Footloose (1984), with some of the songs, including “Let’s Hear It for the Boy”, being co-written with Tom Snow. Tom Snow wrote songs for numerous artists and movies, but most interestingly for me he co-wrote three songs for The Lion King II: Simba’s Pride (1998): “One of Us”, “We Are One”, and “Love Will Find a Way”.

“Perfect Isn’t Easy” is Georgette’s big theatrical number. It sounds Broadway, it looks Broadway, and it’s performed by a Broadway star: Bette Midler. She’s amazing from start to finish here, even having to do a huge yawn at the start of the song, and then she’s barking by the end of it! At this point in the film, Georgette does not know about Oliver so she’s basically just singing about how wonderful she is and how everyone, even birds and squirrels, not just dogs, are in love with her; it’s brilliant. This was the song I used to rewind the VHS for all the time, but as I’ve gotten older, “Once Upon a Time in New York City” became my favourite song and this is now my second. The winding staircase Georgette walks down at the end of her number was actually created using computer-animation. The song was co-written by Barry Manilow, Jack Feldman, and Bruce Sussman, who regularly worked together, for example on Don Bluth’s film Thumbelina (1994), the highlights of their career, I’m sure, and on the Grammy Award-winning song “Copacabana”.  Feldman also collaborated with Alan Menken on songs for the musical Newsies, and co-wrote with Tom Snow on those three songs from The Lion King II (1998). We all know Manilow as both a singer and songwriter, specifically for his hit songs like “Copacabana”, “I Write the Songs” and “Mandy”.

The final song, “Good Company”, was not sung by Jenny’s voice actor but by Myhanh Tran. It is likely that Natalie Gregory’s voice was not strong enough to handle the song here. “Good Company” is a sweet song, played over a sweet scene, of Oliver and Jenny going all over New York together and having the best day ever. It’s probably not the most exciting film in the soundtrack, and the only one not to have some big name attached to it, either as the performer or in the songwriting team, but it matches the sentiment of the sequence. I particularly enjoy the instrumental bit in the middle of the song. The song was written by Ron Rocha and Robert Minkoff, whose name you may recognise for his work at Disney. Minkoff co-directed The Lion King (1994) with Roger Allers, and was supervising animator for Olivia in The Great Mouse Detective (1986) and provided early designs for Ursula in The Little Mermaid (1989). He later left the Disney Studios and instead directed live-action films like Stuart Little (1999) and its 2002 sequel, and then Disney’s The Haunted Mansion (2003). He returned to animation to direct Mr. Peabody & Sherman (2014).

The last thing I will say about the soundtrack is that the score was composed by J.A.C Redford, and I really like the piece titled “Pursuit Through the Subway”; it’s pretty obvious where in the film this plays! For some reason, this always gets me. I think it’s because it’s the first real bit of peril you see in this film, which has mostly just been funny, fluffy entertainment, but to be chased by a madman through the subway and almost get hit by an upcoming train, whilst said madman is trying to kidnap a little girl is a lot to take in! The music feeds in to the feeling of threat and it is kind of stressful! And then it’s all really sad, because we think Oliver’s dead, and then it’s all happy again when it turns out he’s not. That one piece of music sends you on a total emotional rollercoaster.

PRODUCTION

The new management at The Walt Disney Company decided that to get fresh, new ideas for movies, they should organise meetings where animators were free to pitch their ideas; they called it “The Gong Show”, after the televised talent contest of the same name that ran through the 1970s and 1980s. In a similar fashion to the buzzers that the judges use on the …Got Talent series, an act would be gonged if they were particularly bad and had to leave the stage. In this case, the animators’ ideas were the acts and either they were gonged or greenlit. Pete Young was the Disney employee to suggest making Oliver & Company, simply stating it would be Oliver Twist, but with dogs; Katzenberg approved the idea.

Other than the basic premise of an orphan being found by a group of pickpockets before finding a home with a rich family, and then being pursued by a villain, and the use of some character names, Oliver & Company is clearly very different to Dickens’ novel. Instead of setting it in 19th Century London, Disney’s film takes place in 1980s New York, and feels very contemporary. I think it was best for Disney to take this approach in moving the adaptation far away from the often-depressing work of Dickens and make it more relatable to a contemporary audience. It gives you the basic idea of the novel, without having to deal with any of the difficult, grim, problematic, and sometimes quite violent, themes!

However, this was still not a simple story to adapt. The team chose to set their Oliver Twist in America and in present day, yet there were many creative discussions that went on during the film around the plot, leading to rewrites and many wasted drawings. There was a whole different plot idea about the dogs stealing a panda from the zoo that was developed, but obviously was not continued, and an initial idea for this to be some sort of sequel to The Rescuers (1977). Richard Rich, who had directed the infamous The Black Cauldron (1985), and George Scribner were named as the directors of Oliver & Company, but halfway through production, Rich was removed from the project, leaving Scribner as the sole director.

Not only were story and personnel changes causing problems for the film, but there was an overall lack of morale within the Animation Department at the time. This was partly due to audience reactions and financial results of The Black Cauldron (1985), and to some extent, The Great Mouse Detective (1986), which was considered a huge step forward for Disney Animation, but had been outperformed by Don Bluth’s An American Tail (1986), which coincidentally was also about a mouse. The animators had been moved from their dedicated animation building at the Burbank Studios, as ordered by the new management team. The artists were forced to move to Glendale, which was an uninspiring place to work to say the least. By the summer of 1985, the whole animation department had been moved there. The crew working on The Great Mouse Detective (1986) were some of the first to move to Glendale, with the team working on Oliver & Company being the last.

Roy E. Disney stated at this time that he wanted a new animated film to be released every year, putting even more pressure on the already stressed animators, though this is something that Disney have managed to do ever since, with few exceptions. The new management of Eisner, Wells, Katzenberg, and Schneider were firmly settled in their new positions by the time Oliver & Company was being created and steaming ahead with their ideas of working, but at the same time another big film, a hybrid of animation and live-action was being developed: Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), directed by Robert Zemeckis, with executive producer Steven Spielberg. The animated portion of this film was not completed in California, but in London. Peter Schneider, president of Walt Disney Feature Animation, was flying back and forth between the two studios, boasting about the success of one to the other, building up some sort of rivalry between the two, perhaps to boost both sides’ work. In the end, Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), released in June 1988, was hugely successful at the box office and with critics, boosting the morale of all the Disney animators[5].

After much discussion over the story, and with the shocking passing of screenwriter Pete Young who originally pitched the idea, the final screenplay for Oliver & Company was co-written by James Mangold, who went on to direct movies such as The Wolverine (2013), Logan (2017), and Ford v Ferrari (2019). Other big Disney names who worked on the story included Mike Gabriel, who went on to co-direct Pocahontas (1995); Gary Trousdale and Kirk Wise, who went on to co-direct Beauty and the Beast (1991), The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) and Atlantis: The Lost Empire; and Kevin Lima, who went on to direct Tarzan (1999) and Enchanted (2007). Animators Mark Henn, Glen Keane and Ruben A. Aquino also worked on Oliver & Company as Supervising Animators. They would go on to design and animate characters like Princess Jasmine, the Beast, Ariel, and Simba[6].

Despite being predominately hand-drawn, Oliver & Company was actually the first Disney animated feature to have a specific department solely for computer animation. Computer animation was used for things like buildings, trains, cars, including Sykes’ car, and Fagin’s weird scooter. This was a leap forward for Disney in using this technology, which had only been used in small sequences for previous movies The Black Cauldron (1985) and The Great Mouse Detective (1986). Pixar had only just made their fully CG-created short Tin Toy in August 1988, so it was still a technology in its infancy[7].

The location for Oliver & Company is New York City. Animators shot photos of NYC streets as reference material, shooting photos from 18 inches off the ground to represent a dog’s perspective. It is also worth mentioning that famous landmarks such as Manhattan Island, Times Square, Central Park, and Fifth Avenue all feature in the movie. The World Trade Center is another one. To represent New York City authentically, Oliver & Company is the first Disney animated feature to use product placements. Brands seen include Coca-Cola, Sony and USA Today. It’s worth noting that this advertisement was unpaid and was added purely to give a sense of reality to the setting[8].

RECEPTION

Oliver & Company was theatrically released on 18th November 1988, the exact same day as The Land Before Time (1988), another Don Bluth film, with Spielberg and George Lucas as two of the executive producers. The Land Before Time topped the box office during its opening weekend, however in the end, Oliver & Company beat out The Land Before Time, raking in $53 million compared with $46 million. This showed to the Disney animators that their effort was finally paying off[9]. Having said that, it is likely that some of this success would have been boosted by a huge marketing push from Disney, with their links to McDonald’s and the names of their all-star cast being just two elements that were helpful to them.  

However, box office figures aren’t everything, because critically Oliver & Company did not do well. Many reviews said that the movie was predictable, the animation was basic, and that it did not compare to the heights of Disney Animation. Some did like the music and characters, others did not, saying this movie was only going to be popular with children. Oliver & Company was then not seen again for eight years, when it was re-released theatrically in 1996, before finally being released on VHS. DVD and Blu-Ray editions have since been released in the years that followed and it is also available to view on Disney+.

LEGACY

So how does Oliver & Company do at the theme parks? Well, it’s probably not much of a surprise, but not well. It doesn’t look like the characters ever did traditional meet-and-greets, but they were seen on a pre-parade float at both Disneyland and Walt Disney World around the time of the movie’s initial release. These floats were more or less the same at both parks, featuring costumed Dodger, Oliver, Georgette, Tito, and Francis, with an actress playing Jenny. The song “Why Should I Worry?” played as it went past. During the broadcast of Walt Disney World’s Christmas Day Parade in 1988 there was also a featurette about the making of the movie. At Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom, there used to be a castle show called Disney Mania, which ran from 1989 until 2001. It involved a costumed Dodger “singing” “Why Should I Worry?” for a time, but only from 1989 to 1992.

After that, there is very little else to say. I have seen one photo of Francis, Tito, Dodger, and probably Georgette and Oliver, in a car together during a parade at Tokyo Disneyland sometime between 1988 and 1990. Supposedly the film was popular in France, but I cannot find anything showing Oliver & Company being represented at Disneyland Paris. Perhaps there were some characters involved in the park’s opening in 1992, but I am not sure. As Oliver & Company was not popular with audiences, and Hong Kong Disneyland and Shanghai Disneyland opened much later than these other parks, in 2005 and 2016 respectively, it is no surprise that nothing referencing Oliver & Company has appeared there.

As part of the celebrations for Disney100, collections called Disney100 Decades were being released throughout the event. The collection for the 1980s included a plush of Oliver and a plush of Dodger, which were available in 2023. Other than that, you will be lucky to find anything else celebrating the film, outside of the occasional pin or anniversary ornament. It unfortunately just didn’t do well enough with the general public to warrant a whole line of constant merchandising, unlike other prominent animated films.

FINAL THOUGHTS

It is disappointing that more people don’t enjoy Oliver & Company. It has many good points, like its amazing cast of vocal and musical talent, its lovable characters, and its moments of heart. It really isn’t a bad film, it’s just underappreciated. It launched the Disney Renaissance Era, with those involved going on to do amazing things just a year later.

The nostalgia of the 1980s continues to be referenced, through fashion and screen, with it interesting the younger generations in particular. As Oliver & Company is most definitely an 80s movie, who knows, maybe there will be a whole new appreciation for this film so that others can correct the mistake of the older viewers who have since forgotten it.  


REFERENCES

[1] Credit: Disney, “The Making of Oliver & Company”, from Oliver & Company (1988) 20th Anniversary Edition DVD (2009).

[2] Credit: Sam Scott, ‘Things Only Adults Notice In Oliver and Company’, Looper.com, 16th October 2022.

[3] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘Oliver & Company (1988)’, pp. 79-81.

[4] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘Oliver & Company (1988)’, pp. 79-81.

[5] Credit: Don Hahn, Waking Sleeping Beauty (2009).

[6] Credit: Kiki Evans, ’10 Things You Didn’t Know About Oliver & Company’, CBR.com, 29th March 2021.

[7] Credit: Sam Scott, ‘Things Only Adults Notice In Oliver And Company’, Looper.com, 16th October 2022.

[8] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘Oliver & Company (1988)’, pp. 79-81.

[9] Credit: Don Hahn, Waking Sleeping Beauty (2009).

#47 Meet the Robinsons (2007)

  1. BACKGROUND
  2. PLOT
  3. CHARACTERS & CAST
  4. PRODUCTION
  5. MUSIC
  6. RECEPTION
  7. LEGACY
  8. FINAL THOUGHTS
  9. REFERENCES

BACKGROUND

I remember when I first watched Meet the Robinsons.

It was only when DisneyLife – the little-known streaming app that was the precursor to the streaming giant that is Disney+ – was released in the UK around 2015, allowing me the chance to catch up on those animated movies that I’d missed out on; Meet the Robinsons was one of those. And I must say: it surprised me. A lot.

I hadn’t even been paying much attention to it at the time. It was just playing on a tablet while I did something else, but soon, it caught my attention, and by the end of it, I found I’d actually quite liked it.

I hadn’t expected much because Meet the Robinsons was released in 2007, during that timeframe when Disney was being outdone by the likes of Pixar and DreamWorks, with a new Disney animated movie not receiving much attention, or, if it did, receiving it for all the wrong reasons. Disney was not being compared favourably to the other animation studios, so why did I think Meet the Robinsons would be any different? It was just something I wanted to get through, to say I’d watched it. I was wrong to think that.

Not everything Disney touches turns to gold, and Meet the Robinsons is still evidence of that, but it was at least a step in the right direction, after the dismal reviews of Home on the Range (2004), which I partly agree with, and Chicken Little (2005), which I wholeheartedly do not.

I know that Meet the Robinsons does not have much of a following. I personally don’t know many who have watched it, but it has managed to gain a cult following over the sixteen years since its release, and I am only too pleased by that. Now, granted, it’s not my favourite film, nor is it one that I revisit often. It doesn’t look brilliant, at least not very “Disney-like”, due to this only being their second attempt at a fully CG animated movie, after Chicken Little, and, on top of that, parts of the film feel a bit slow and drawn-out. However, I like some of the plot points, along with a couple of the characters, but the emotional ending with its touching message is really what sticks with you.

PLOT

The movie is quite heavily influenced by science-fiction, specifically time-travel and changeable timelines, kind of like the Back to the Future franchise, but less complicated.  Though having said that, there are multiple time jumps in Meet the Robinsons, so bear with me while I try to recount the plot.

Meet the Robinsons begins on a dark, rainy night, outside an orphanage, where a woman leaves her baby on the doorstep to be taken in. We skip forward twelve years to see that the baby has become an imaginative kid inventor called Lewis, who wants nothing more than to be adopted. Unfortunately, his latest “adoption interview” goes awry when his newest invention malfunctions, spraying his prospective parents with peanut butter and jelly – only for the man to be allergic to peanuts…Needless to say, Lewis is devastated and runs up to the orphanage roof to be alone. Mildred, Head of the Sixth Street Orphanage, tells Lewis he’ll be adopted soon, despite having had 124 of these interviews so far, with none of them coming to anything. Mildred tries to lift his spirits, but Lewis is intent on finding his birth mother, the only person, he believes, who has and will ever love him. So, he sets out to make a “memory scanner” to retrieve the only memory he has of his mother so he can find her. Lewis makes the scanner and takes it to his school Science Fair, where he is taken aside by a dark-haired boy called Wilbur, who claims to be from the future, and is looking for a perpetrator– a strange, lanky man with a bowler hat – who has stolen his time machine. Lewis dismisses the idea; however, this man does exist and his bowler hat, which moves on its own, tampers with Lewis’ scanner, causing the Science Fair to descend into chaos.

Wilbur follows Lewis and tries to convince him to help him find “Bowler Hat Guy” and retrieve his stolen time machine. Lewis dismisses him again, so Wilbur takes him in the spare time machine to the future, the year 2037, to prove he isn’t lying. Meanwhile, Bowler Hat Guy and DOR-15, the hat, (pronounced “Doris”) have stolen the memory scanner, to pass it off as their own to InventCo, a big corporation, however, as he knows nothing about it, he is thrown out and the scanner is broken. Bowler Hat Guy and Doris go back to the year 2037 to find Lewis, and get him to fix the scanner. There, Lewis has been trying to fix the spare time machine, on the proviso Wilbur takes Lewis back to see his mother, but while doing so, Lewis accidentally meets the other members of Wilbur’s family, the crazy, zany Robinsons. After Wilbur says that he was never going to take Lewis back in time to see his mother, Lewis walks off angrily, to be picked up by Bowler Hat Guy and Doris in the other time machine; they get Lewis to fix the scanner, promising to take Lewis back to see his mother, but he is captured and told the true story of Bowler Hat Guy – that he is actually Lewis’ former roommate at the orphanage, Michael Yagoobian, known as “Goob” – shock twist! After being kept up for days on end while Lewis made his scanner, Goob fell asleep during an important baseball game, missing a vital catch, and subsequently being beaten up by the team, and, holding on to that blame, became consumed by his hatred of Lewis for ruining his life and decided to join forces with Doris, one of Lewis’ abandoned inventions, to ruin his life instead. Bowler Hat Guy and Doris go back and sell the scanner to InventCo, along with an idea for “helping hats”

Lewis realises this will ruin his future timeline, so fixes the time machine, and, now in this new parallel universe, sees Doris has enslaved every human with these “helping hats”. He vows never to invent her, destroying her, and causing the original future timeline to go back to how it was. Bowler Hat Guy, now without his hatred of Lewis, no partner-in-crime, and with no future plan, goes away to figure out what to do next, while Lewis realises that he is in fact the elusive “Cornelius”, father of Wilbur, patriarch of the Robinson family – or he will be anyway! Cornelius and Lewis meet, where he states that the memory scanner started his career as an inventor. Now Lewis must return to his time to see out this future, but before doing that, Wilbur does take Lewis to see his mother. Just as he’s about to say something to her, Lewis realises he doesn’t need to, as he has a family waiting for him, and that he needs to move on from the past. Lewis returns to his time, wakes Goob up during his baseball game so he can make the winning catch and have a happier future, and then Lewis gets to show the now-working memory scanner again at the Science Fair, where he finds that one of the judges, scientist Lucille Krunklehorn, and her husband, Bud, will adopt him, moving him to the famous Robinson house that he saw in the year 2037, cementing his future with them. The movie ends with a quote from Walt Disney, saying not to dwell on failure and to “keep moving forward”, this being the ultimate message and theme of Meet the Robinsons.

CHARACTERS & CAST

Meet the Robinsons involves a few main characters, but has a large supporting cast – something that had troubled some of Disney’s previous animated features, due to the lack of central focus, giving them a “busy, hectic” vibe. The main characters are strong enough to support the plot, however, the supporting cast does not make a huge influence on the story, or the viewer. But let’s focus on the primary characters of Meet the Robinsons.

The point of the duo of Lewis and Wilbur is for them to be contrasting, in look and personality. Even in the original source material, Wilbur was the extrovert, the driving force of the relationship, and Lewis was the introvert, taking more of a passenger-role in the story[1]. Lewis in the movie is blond, kind of nerdy, with glasses and a sweater vest, compared with Wilbur’s look of dark hair, styled in a sort of slicked-back Danny-from-Grease style, with his cool shades, black t-shirt and jeans. Personality-wise, Lewis is a bit shy, and unsure of himself. He seems quite apologetic, thinking he’s a failure and never going to amount to anything. This is probably because of his unfortunate luck with prospective adoptive parents. He’s also going through a difficult time in his life, feeling like he doesn’t belong. Lewis doesn’t start to feel more comfortable in himself until he meets the Robinson family, who teach him that it’s ok to fail, and that it’s great to just be yourself. No matter how “weird” or “strange” you may come across to others, it doesn’t matter what people think.

Wilbur, on the other hand, is confident, and quite sure of himself. He comes from a large, loving family, and that has clearly helped him feel secure. He doesn’t seem like much of a friend to Lewis at the start of the movie, ordering him around a lot, and lying about taking him back to his mother, but that is partly due to the fact that he needed to conceal his identity from the family, and get the timeline back on track. By the end, after Lewis realises he will actually be Wilbur’s father in the future, they seem to get along much better, and Wilbur does keep his promise to take Lewis back to see his mother by the end.

Lewis is voiced by two different voice actors: Jordan Fry and Daniel Hansen. Daniel Hansen seems to have retired from acting since the release of Meet the Robinsons. Jordan Fry is probably best known for playing the role of Mike Teavee in the 2005 film Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (the one with Johnny Depp). Wesley Singerman provides the voice of Wilbur Robinson. Since the release of Meet the Robinsons, Singerman retired from acting and now focuses on his career in music.

The other main characters are Bowler Hat Guy and his sidekick Doris – or is that the other way round? At the start of the movie, we are led to believe that Bowler Hat Guy is the villain of the story. Only, he doesn’t act like much of a villain. Sure, he intends to ruin Lewis’ future, and he wants him to be miserable, but Bowler Hat Guy isn’t a very effective villain! For one thing, he isn’t particularly scary or sinister-looking. He has a black cape, his bowler hat, a long moustache, and he moves a bit like a snake, but as soon as he opens his mouth, he doesn’t sound at all like a villain. The other thing is that he isn’t really sure what he’s doing. He’s a bit of a dope to be honest, but a funny one at that.

That’s why Doris is so important, because she is the mastermind of all the schemes, and has to tell Bowler Hat Guy where to go, what to do, and what to say, for the most part. The couple of times he is left on his own to deal with things, they do not go to plan. When he is in InventCo, for example, trying to pass off the memory scanner as his own, Doris is not able to tell Bowler Hat Guy exactly what to say, and as a result, he breaks the invention and gets thrown out of the building. When Bowler Hat Guy is left to capture Lewis, with a mini-Doris to help, he manages to get mini-Doris to control both a frog and a T-Rex, only to find that they are both useless minions because the frog is too small to capture a teenage boy, and the T-Rex’s arms are too stubby to do it either!

The identity reveal of Bowler Hat Guy is the best part for me, and makes him a very sympathetic character in the end. To find he is actually Goob, Lewis’ roommate at the orphanage, who has set out to ruin Lewis’ life after he “ruined” his, is heart-breaking. Goob has been so consumed by hate that he has let his whole life pass him by, not being able to function properly, and ending up without a family, living in the abandoned orphanage alone. He finds Doris when he is about to exact his revenge on Lewis’ company building – by throwing toilet paper over it, very scary – and she tells him to join forces. When Doris is shown to be the evil one, enslaving all the humans, Bowler Hat Guy is clearly upset by this turn of events, and Doris casts him aside. Once Lewis has fixed the timeline, by saying he will never invent Doris, he is about to ask Goob to become one of the Robinsons, but Goob has already walked off. They find his checklist on how to exact his revenge on Lewis, which now is just a question mark, resembling his future. It’s very sad to see. I really like him as a character; I like how he is more complex as a villain, with a complicated backstory, an attempt at being evil, and a redemption at the end[2].

The director, Stephen Anderson, is actually the voice of Bowler Hat Guy, which isn’t unheard of and is quite common if you look into it. For example, Brad Bird who directed The Incredibles (2004) voices Edna in that movie, and Stitch is voiced by the director of Lilo & Stitch (2002), Chris Sanders. Sometimes the scratch voices they use during production stick, and they have to use the same person, even if they are the director! I think he does a brilliant job with it.

For the supporting cast, every member of the Robinson family from the book makes an appearance in the movie, each with their own trait or unique quality. They are free to do whatever makes them happy, whether that is Franny, Wilbur’s mother, who has made a full frog band, as frogs have a capacity to be musical, more so than humans, or Uncle Art, who is a pizza delivery man with a superhero persona. If you want the full details of the family, and their relations, you’ll have to either watch the film or Google it, because it would take forever for me to recount them all here! I wouldn’t say many of the family members are particularly memorable; I could only remember a couple of them, but it is still useful in showing that the Robinsons are a huge, quirky, but loving, family.

For the secondary roles, Disney managed to get a few big names to come in for the voice work. This includes Laurie Metcalf, who voiced Jim’s mother in Treasure Planet (2002) and Andy’s mom in the Toy Story franchise (1995-present), amongst other things. Metcalf voices Lucille Krunklehorn, Lewis’ adoptive mother. Adam West voices Uncle Art. He did quite a lot of other voice work before his death, but is perhaps best known for playing Batman in the 1960s. Nicole Sullivan, known for playing Holly Shumpert in The King of Queens (1998-2007) as well as voicing Shego in Disney’s Kim Possible (2002-07) around this time, provides the voice work for Franny. Angela Bassett, now perhaps most known for her role as Ramonda in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, including in the films Black Panther (2018) and its sequel Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (2022), voices the part of Mildred, the head of the orphanage. American actor Ethan Sandler ended up voicing seven different characters, including Doris, and Tom Kenny, best known as the voice actor for SpongeBob SquarePants since 1999, voices Mr. Willerstein, Lewis’ teacher.

The biggest name in my view that Disney somehow managed to get is Tom Selleck as the voice of Cornelius, who only makes a brief appearance towards the end of the movie. The team had always planned to have the joke of the visual image in the movie: Lewis asks Wilbur who Cornelius looks like and he responds with Tom Selleck, so a picture appears in his space in the family tree as Lewis lists off what he’s learned about the family. Disney weren’t sure if they could get the rights to use the image, so looked into trying to sweeten the deal by having Selleck voice the part. Fortunately, when he was pitched the idea, he thought it would be funny and agreed to do it. The team had all grown-up watching Magnum P.I. (1980-88) so needless to say, they were pleased! Tom Selleck is also known for his roles as Peter Mitchell in Three Men and a Baby (1987) and its (far superior) sequel, Three Men and a Little Lady (1990), and as NYPD Commissioner Frank Reagan in Blue Bloods (2010-24). He was also Jesse Stone in a series of television crime drama films from 2006 to 2015.

PRODUCTION

Meet the Robinsons is loosely based on the children’s book, A Day with Wilbur Robinson by William Joyce, published in 1990. The plot of the book follows a boy visiting a family friend’s home, only to be introduced to the strange Robinson household and having to join the search for Grandfather Robinson’s missing false teeth. This is a very minor plot point that does appear in Meet the Robinsons, with Lewis helping Grandpa find his teeth being the way he meets the other Robinson family members. Joyce took inspiration from his childhood in Louisiana. One of his childhood friends had a large family, who all lived together in a huge house and were quite a unique household, apparently[3].

Disney being involved with Meet the Robinsons goes back as far as the book’s publishing in 1990. Bill Borden, an executive producer for Meet the Robinsons, had asked William Joyce to show the book to Disney executives, just before it was finished, to pitch it to them as a live-action film. They both thought the pitch had gone badly, so were surprised when Disney optioned it. Joyce wrote around eleven or twelve draft scripts for this live-action film, but it wasn’t being moved forward, mostly due to the cost element. It went quiet for many years, until Disney executive Leo Chu got in touch to try to bring the story to the animation department instead.

Around 2001, they were told that the concept would follow Wilbur as a time-traveller and Lewis as an orphan. Joyce and Borden weren’t overly convinced by this story-route as they felt it would feel too much like Jimmy Neutron and not like Joyce’s book at all[4]. Around late-2002, Stephen Anderson was approached with the script, as he had expressed an interest in directing for the studio someday. He had just finished work as a story supervisor on Brother Bear (2003), when he was handed this script for a movie called “A Day with Wilbur Robinson”, based on Joyce’s book. Anderson had an instant connection with Lewis as he too was adopted, and had the same sort of questions about his life: why did his mother give him up? Where was he from? Should he find his birth parents? Anderson felt he had to do this movie[5].

Work on the movie progressed from 2004, with a 2006 release date planned. However, when Pixar was bought by Disney and the leadership of Walt Disney Animation Studios was changed so that it would be led by John Lasseter, some parts of the movie had to be changed. Lasseter was shown the movie, and disliked the villain, Bowler Hat Guy. He asked for the villain to be changed, as he wasn’t scary at all, so the sidekick of Doris was brought in to become the main villain. Apparently, 60% of the film was scrapped and redone at this time, with the ending also being rewritten[6].  

Disney did have some struggles with the computer animation side of production since it was only Disney Animation’s second fully CG animated movie. The team found that humans were difficult to capture because any errors or lack of flexibility in movement would be easy to spot, as we know how humans should look and how they move. Bowler Hat Guy in particular was a challenge as they wanted him to be quite sleek and snaky with his movement, but the characters could not bend as well back then. Still, Bowler Hat Guy was quite a step forward for CG in terms of this movement. The clothing also did not wrinkle as fabric should, instead it just stretched, but it would’ve been too expensive to do any cloth renders[7]. It kind of works in Meet the Robinsons because the clothing resembles rubber suits which sort of fit in a futuristic film. For the stylisation of the characters, the team were trying not to use the original illustrations for Joyce’s book, as his style had been used in the 2005 film Robots, produced by Blue Sky Studios, a competitor to Disney. I still feel like the style is kind of similar, especially in the robot butler to the Robinson family, Carl, which would explain why the entire film doesn’t look particularly “Disney”.

However, the most important thing that Disney wanted to get across during Meet the Robinsons was the message of hope and positivity, something that is very “Disney”. They wanted to make the future look hopeful, especially compared to most films that had made the future look bleak or even horrifying. They also wanted to evoke the ideas and the creations of Walt Disney’s original ideas for the Disney Parks, such as Epcot and Tomorrowland. There is even a quick reference to Tomorrowland in the film: as Wilbur takes Lewis to the future for the first time, you can briefly see a sign that says “Todayland”, with a building resembling the attraction Space Mountain in the background.

Then the team got to the phrase “Keep Moving Forward”, and it stuck as a theme. It worked with the adoption element, of not feeling the need to look back at the past, because hope comes from the future. Stephen Anderson mentioned in an interview that he had received letters from people saying how the theme of Meet the Robinsons had gotten them through some really hard times, and that’s all they could’ve hoped for[8].

MUSIC

The soundtrack of Meet the Robinsons is quite an eclectic mix. Danny Elfman, composer for such films as The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) and multiple other Tim Burton projects, was asked to compose the score for Meet the Robinsons. He successfully went from very crazy, such as the music that plays when the Robinsons are being introduced, and the strange song when Lewis is seeing the future for the first time, to the emotional scenes, like the opening scene outside the orphanage, Goob telling his story, and the ending where everyone is reunited. Elfman also wrote the song “The Future Has Arrived” which he asked The All-American Rejects to perform as the End Credits song.

There are also multiple other songs in the movie. For example, Rufus Wainwright wrote three songs: “Another Believer”, which he performs; a gently peppy song, which is used for the time-lapse of Lewis researching and experimenting with his memory scanner invention, and “Where is Your Heart At?”, performed by Jamie Cullum, a proper swing-time, band leader type of song, performed in the movie by Franny’s frog band, so yes, Jamie Cullum is a singing frog. The third song is the second End Credits song, “The Motion Waltz (Emotional Commotion)”. Rob Thomas performed a song called “Little Wonders”, which is probably the most emotional song, talking about how the past can’t be changed and to look for the good things in life. It plays at the end of the movie when we see that Lewis and Goob have both been adopted and that Lewis’ future home has become his present home[9].

Even the Jonas Brothers got involved in the music, though the song has very little to do with the movie and is quite clearly more of a cross-promotional thing with the Disney Channel than anything else. The music video uses some clips from Meet the Robinsons. It is called “Kids of the Future”, a parody of “Kids in America”. There is even a version of “There’s a Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow” from the Disney attraction Carousel of Progress on the soundtrack, performed by They Might Be Giants. Though I like the majority of the soundtrack individually, I don’t think there is much cohesion with the music. It feels like there are too many big names in there, and all the styles are quite different. The best song for me is probably “Another Believer”. The score is good though, and I feel it helped me connect with the emotional scenes in particular.

RECEPTION

Meet the Robinsons was released a year later than expected, in March 2007, earning very little attention during its release. It made $169 million at the box office against a budget of $150 million, being seen as a “break-even” film[10].

Though it has since gained a reputation as a “cult classic” by some, who say the movie is underrated and not talked about enough, it was not what Disney had hoped for the movie. Those who enjoy Meet the Robinsons like the film for its science-fiction theming, its plot twists, and some clever humour. It was different to what Disney Animation had been making and seemed to signal a turning point for the studio after a few difficult years.

However, the animation style was criticised by others who did not like the look of the movie. Some said the plot was complicated and convoluted, and I can understand that with all its time-travelling and parallel universes. There were actually comments as well that the movie tried too hard with its humour, with this not being well-balanced again the more serious, emotional moments.  

Having said that, Meet the Robinsons was nominated for some awards, although it was quite a tough year to be competing in the animation sector as many other popular films were also released in 2007, such as DreamWorks’ Bee Movie, Sony’s Surf’s Up, and 20th Century Fox’s The Simpsons Movie.

At the Annie Awards, Meet the Robinsons was nominated for Music in a Feature Production, for Danny Elfman, Rufus Wainwright, and Rob Thomas, and Storyboarding for Don Hall, but ultimately lost to Michael Giacchino’s score and Ted Mathot’s storyboarding of Pixar’s Ratatouille, the film that won the Annie Award, the Academy Award, the Golden Globe, and the BAFTA Award for Best Animated Feature, amongst numerous other accolades; Meet the Robinsons was not even nominated in these major ceremonies. Meet the Robinsons was nominated at the Saturn Awards for Best Animated Film but also lost to Ratatouille.

LEGACY

Unfortunately, most people do not know this film, either having never seen or having never heard of it. It is not referenced in Disney merchandising and no characters are seen at the Disney theme parks. Or are they?

I thought Meet the Robinsons was completely ignored by Disney; however, I remembered that in actual fact, Bowler Hat Guy makes an appearance in Mickey’s Boo To You Halloween Parade. I saw the parade on YouTube one year, and thought: who is that guy? He’s supposedly a villain, but who is he? It wasn’t until years later, once I’d seen Meet the Robinsons for the first time, that I realised it was Bowler Hat Guy. He appears towards the end of the parade with the other villains, as one of the characters walking/dancing in front of the main villain float. I believe he has been a fixture in that parade since 2014, at least intermittently. The villains seem to be swapped out every year, but Bowler Hat Guy has been there most years I have seen footage of this Disney Halloween parade.  

Lewis and Wilbur did appear as “meet-and-greet” characters when the film was first released for a while, at then-named Disney’s MGM Studios, now Disney’s Hollywood Studios at Walt Disney World Resort, but have not been seen for many years, with the most recent sightings being at Disneyland Paris around 2018 for the Disney FanDaze event, along with Bowler Hat Guy. But there was a MagicBand released in 2022 for the movie’s 15th anniversary, with Lewis on one side and Bowler Hat Guy on the other. It is possible these three will appear again, probably for Special Events, but if you’re desperate to see any character from Meet the Robinsons, seeing Bowler Hat Guy during Halloween is likely to be your best bet. For merchandise, looking around a milestone anniversary is the best option.

Meet the Robinsons was not a big success, and divided critics. And yet, a direct-to-video sequel was in the works, at least initially, with a title of Meet the Robinsons 2: First Date. This was cancelled by John Lasseter after he became Chief Creative Officer at Walt Disney Animation Studios, as he did with the plans for many other direct-to-video sequels that had been customary releases by Disney in the late 1990s and early 2000s. There was a video game based on the movie, unsurprisingly. More surprisingly, some of the characters featured within the 2023 short Once Upon a Studio, the 100th anniversary celebratory short for Disney animation, with Lucille, robot butler Carl, and Bowler Hat Guy being the easiest to spot. These lesser-known faces finally got to have their moment in the spotlight – even if it was just a few seconds.

FINAL THOUGHTS

Meet the Robinsons was a failure in some ways, and a success in others. It was Disney’s attempt to compete with the other animation studios, yet also trying to find a way to differentiate themselves. The movie gave Disney more confidence in the computer-animation medium which would help them immensely just a few years later. They tried a new concept by moving into science-fiction, which they hadn’t done before, and they got back to creating an emotional story, something the audience could connect with, rather than the comedy route they had previously gone down.

But most importantly, the film presents the audience with a significant message: “keep moving forward”. There were plenty of audience members who were touched by this and saw this movie at a time when they needed that message most. It is a shame that more people did not take something from it.

Meet the Robinsons tells us that the future is full of hope and possibilities if you can learn from your mistakes and failures instead of reliving them. It’s also a story of family, showing us that no matter how lost you feel, you can always find somewhere you belong.


REFERENCES

[1] Credit: Disney, Inventing the Robinsons: The Making of Meet the Robinsons (2007).

[2] Credit: Scott Mendelson, ‘Walt Disney’s Most Underrated Cartoon Just Turned 15 Years Old’, Forbes (online), 31st March 2022.

[3] Credit: Shania Russell, ‘Meet the Robinsons at 15: An Oral History of Disney’s Underrated Gem’, SlashFilm (online), 28th December 2022.

[4] Credit: Shania Russell, ‘Meet the Robinsons at 15: An Oral History of Disney’s Underrated Gem’, SlashFilm (online), 28th December 2022.

[5] Credit: Jeff Ames, ‘Interview: Meet the Robinsons Director Stephen J. Anderson Discusses the Classic Disney Film’, ComingSoon.Net (online), 23rd August 2022.

[6] Credit: Mari Ness, ‘When Even Dinosaur Fights Aren’t Enough: Disney’s Meet the Robinsons’, Tor.com (online), 19th May 2016.

[7] Credit: Disney, Inventing the Robinsons: The Making of Meet the Robinsons (2007).

[8] Credit: Jeff Ames, ‘Interview: Meet the Robinsons Director Stephen J. Anderson Discusses the Classic Disney Film’, ComingSoon.Net (online), 23rd August 2022.

[9] Credit: Disney, Inventing the Robinsons: The Making of Meet the Robinsons (2007).

[10] Credit: Scott Mendelson, ‘Walt Disney’s Most Underrated Cartoon Just Turned 15 Years Old’, Forbes (online), 31st March 2022.

#58 Frozen II (2019)

  1. BACKGROUND
  2. PLOT
  3. CHARACTERS & CAST
  4. PRODUCTION
  5. MUSIC
  6. RECEPTION
  7. LEGACY
  8. FINAL THOUGHTS
  9. REFERENCES

BACKGROUND

Frozen II was released six years after the original film. This gave Disney plenty of time to establish that love of the Frozen franchise, with their merchandising, their visual media, their written media, and, of course, their theme parks.

The people were ready. They were hyped up and ready to go, waiting to be the first people to see Frozen II. And what was that reaction? Amazement, awe, pure joy?

Well, actually, that reaction was mixed.

Some critics did enjoy the film, saying it was a gorgeous film to watch and was technically amazing, with praise also going to the music and the development of the main characters. But alongside this, unlike the original Frozen, there was quite a lot of negativity, mostly around the complicated plot and whether there was a “need” for this story at all.

I remember watching Frozen II at the cinema in 2019, and I really liked it. I was going through a bit of a difficult time around then, so there were moments in the movie that spoke to me, such as the song “Some Things Never Change”, and Anna having to push forward when she feels really down and unable to carry on. It was good to have a Disney film look at more complex and emotional themes, though I am not a child, and I am also not a parent, so I can understand why this “target audience” may not have felt as connected to Frozen II, with the film feeling quite dark at times, and the music being less cheerful and more affecting. 

But that’s not to say I think Frozen II is perfect, because I will happily admit that the plot is confusing, especially if you think about it too much; not ideal for any movie! I’ll do my best to explain it, or at least explain how I interpreted it, because there are different explanations to some of the events of Frozen II, depending on who you ask.

PLOT

Frozen II begins with a riff on the opening song from Frozen, “Vuelie”, during its opening titles. But this time, there’s no song about harvesting ice because we go straight into the action, seeing young Anna and Elsa playing “Enchanted Forest” in the castle’s hall. It is some sort of playset Elsa has made out of snow, with lots of snow figures – including Dumbo and Baymax, if you look closely. Their parents, King Agnarr and Queen Iduna – yes, this time they get actual names; how lucky are they! – come into the room to talk about a real enchanted forest, telling them about the one Agnarr saw years ago, very far north of Arendelle. This forest was home to the Northuldra people, non-magical people who live in harmony with nature and the spirits of air, fire, water and earth. King Agnarr visited this land as a child, since his father, King Runeard, had made a treaty with the Northuldra to build a dam in their area. Somehow, a fight broke out between the two groups, with Agnarr being saved and brought back home by an unknown girl. Everyone else either died or was trapped in the forest forever, which became surrounded by a thick mist. King Agnarr tells his daughters that the forest could wake again and bring danger. Queen Iduna tells the girls that Ahtohallan has all the answers of the past, at least that’s what she was told as a child, and sings them a lullaby all about Ahtohallan and its mysterious powers.

We then skip ahead to three years after Elsa’s coronation and the events of Frozen. Elsa is trying to get on with her duties as queen, but keeps hearing a strange voice that seems to be calling her. Anna and a newly permafrost Olaf discuss how things always seem to be changing, yet Anna tells him that some things are forever like their family, friendship, and Arendelle, whilst Kristoff and Sven talk about Kristoff’s plan to propose to Anna. That evening in the castle, it is Family Game Night with the five playing charades. Olaf and Kristoff win, as Elsa becomes disturbed by The Voice again and is unable to keep playing. She goes to her room, leaving Anna and Kristoff alone. Kristoff tries to propose but Anna is too concerned about Elsa and follows her to her bedroom. Anna tries to talk to Elsa about what’s bothering her, but Elsa evades her questions. They sing their mother’s lullaby about Ahtohallan together, before falling asleep.

Suddenly, Elsa is awoken by The Voice again. She thinks it means trouble and tries to ignore it, before deciding to follow it, thinking that it might be able to help her figure out where she belongs. Elsa’s magic begins to show her visions of a forest and spirit elements, like horses and rock giants, showing Elsa where she needs to go first to get answers. Elsa follows The Voice and magic outside. The sky is then filled with diamond-shaped ice shards, symbolising the four natural spirits or elements; Elsa has awoken the spirits who then force all of the people out of Arendelle. Elsa and Anna lead the evacuation to the cliffs. The trolls come to them, with the Troll King, Grand Pabbie, telling them that the spirits are angry, and that a wrong needs to be righted, with the truth needing to be found or there is no future for Arendelle. The five decide to go to the Enchanted Forest to figure out what needs to be done. It’s a long journey there, with Kristoff trying another proposal which goes very wrong.

They arrive at the misted edge of the Enchanted Forest, but the mist pushes them away. Elsa uses her magic to push it back, revealing four stones, one symbolising each spirit. Elsa’s magic then gets them inside, where they are pushed deep into the forest. They see the dam that their grandfather built, with Kristoff telling Anna that if it broke, the water would destroy Arendelle and the fjord it sits on. Olaf is separated from the group and is spooked by the spirits, asking if they are “Samantha” – whoever that is. It is clear the spirits are angry as a huge tornado traps the group. Eventually, only Elsa remains trapped inside. She uses her magic to free herself, but when she does, visions of the past, captured as ice statues, appear in the forest. They see one of their father being saved by a girl of Northuldra.

Then, they find themselves surrounded by the Northuldra tribe and Arendelle soldiers. The two sides are about to fight again but Elsa stops them by making the ground icy. This confuses everyone else, leading Olaf to give them a quick rundown of the events of Frozen and how they got to this point, in his own theatrical way! This doesn’t explain to the Northuldra why someone of Arendelle would be blessed with magic. Unfortunately, Elsa cannot answer that question either. Anna recognises one of the soldiers to be Lieutenant Mattias, from a portrait in the castle; he protected their father when he was a young prince. This little introduction is soon interrupted by the fire spirit, who sets all the forest around them on fire. Anna is told by Elsa to get to safety as everyone else flees – except her, who uses her ice powers to track the spirit down. It turns out the fire spirit is just a little salamander, called Bruni. Bruni likes Elsa’s ice powers and soon calms down, along with the wind spirit, who Olaf nicknames “Gale”. Anna is happy to see Elsa safe, but annoyed that she wasn’t allowed to help. Anna passes Elsa’s mother’s scarf to her, which confuses the Northuldra as that scarf is one of theirs. They see that the ice statue of the girl saving their father wears this same scarf, confirming that their mother was Northuldra and she was the one who saved their father that day.

Anna and Elsa plan to free the forest and the people who have remained trapped there since that fateful day. They are told to rest up for the night before continuing their travels north in the morning, since Earth Giants roam the forest at night. Elsa learns from a young Northuldra woman, Honeymaren, that there is meant to be a fifth spirit to unite the people with the magic of nature. Anna speaks to Lieutenant Mattias more about their father, and Kristoff talks to a young Northuldra man, Ryder, about a great proposal idea, which involves lots and lots of reindeer! They prepare this all through the night, so at sunrise, when they hear someone approaching, Kristoff declares his love to her and proposes marriage – only to find it wasn’t Anna approaching, but the Northuldra chief, Yelena. Yelena tells Kristoff that Anna, Elsa and Olaf have left, and that the tribe is moving on – he may join them. Kristoff is devastated that Anna would leave him, and sticks with the Northuldra tribe.

Away from the forest and travelling north, after some time, Anna, Elsa and Olaf come across a shipwreck. This ship was actually the ship their parents went away on all those years ago when they drowned. It’s not in the Southern Sea as they expected, but seems to have washed in from the Dark Sea, nowhere near where they said they were going. The trio step aboard to figure out what they were doing. They find a map and some notes in the waterproof compartment of the ship. It turns out their parents were trying to get to Ahtohallan, to figure out what Elsa’s powers meant, but that their ship capsized on the way from the stormy, difficult waters. Elsa feels guilty for her parents’ death and decides she must go to Ahtohallan to get the answers. But she wants to go alone. She tricks Anna into hugging her, before conjuring up an ice boat, sending Anna and Olaf backwards, away from her. Anna, and even Olaf, are furious that Elsa would do this to them and put herself in danger. They traverse a rough lake, avoiding the Earth Giants they pass, and end up going down a huge waterfall inside a cave. They get out off the boat and try to find a way out of the cave.

Meanwhile, Elsa is at the Dark Sea. She uses her ice powers to try and navigate the harsh ocean, but is almost drowned by a wave in the process. Under the water, she sees the Nøkk, the water spirit, shaped as a horse, who guards the sea. Eventually, Elsa manages to tame the horse and it allows her to ride across the Dark Sea to Ahtohallan. At Ahtohallan, Elsa is led through the huge glacier by The Voice, as she tries to figure out who she is and what needs to be done to save the forest and Arendelle. Elsa learns that The Voice calling her is actually her mother’s voice and that Elsa was granted powers as a gift from nature because her mother saved her father, the enemy, all those years ago. She also discovers she is the fifth spirit, the one to unite people with the magic of nature. From here, Elsa sees memories from the past appear in front of her: some from her life, some from before she was born. She notices King Runeard and one of his soldiers walking away from the room, and she follows. At this point, the actions of that fateful day play out in front of her: Runeard insists that all soldiers go with him to meet the Northuldra as he is suspicious of them and their connection to the magic of nature. The King is told that the dam is weakening the Northuldra people by the Chief, but he ignores their worries, as that’s exactly what he intended to do, saying that he will meet later to discuss it. The King actually murders the Northuldra Chief when his back is turn, which sparks the conflict between the two sides. At this point, Elsa freezes, sacrificing herself to the depths of Ahtohallan to know the truth. She just manages to send this information to Anna before she appears to freeze to death.

Anna and Olaf see a frozen memory appear to them in the cave: it is of King Runeard attacking the Northuldra Chief. They realise that the dam must’ve been a trick and that to make things right again, the dam must be destroyed – even if that leads to the destruction of the kingdom of Arendelle. That was the reason why the people were forced out the night Elsa awoke the spirits. At this point, Olaf spots an exit from the cave, however, he begins to “flurry away”, because Elsa’s magic cannot be sustained after her death. Anna holds Olaf tight through the night, not wanting him to disappear as well.

The next morning, Anna awakes to find Olaf gone. Now he has gone, Elsa is dead, and she is separated from Kristoff, Anna has nothing left in the world – except knowing that she has to set things right. Pulling herself up out of the cave, and the threat of deep depression, Anna heads towards the Earth Giants and convinces them to follow her to the dam. On the way, she meets up with Kristoff and Sven, who help her get to the dam quickly. When she arrives there, the Arendelle soldiers stand in protection of the dam, saying that this was their order from King Runeard. Anna convinces them that to free them from the forest, the dam must be broken. After some consideration, the guards, starting with Lieutenant Mattias, bang against their shields to encourage the Earth Giants towards the dam. Anna gets them to throw their boulders at the dam; Anna is saved by Mattias as the dam breaks under her. Once the dam breaks, a symbol of the fifth spirit appears in the sky, and Elsa unfreezes. Using the Nøkk, she rides over to Arendelle on the flood waters. She reaches Arendelle in time to block the tidal wave of water with her ice, and pushes it back. The people rejoice from the cliffs as they see their home saved. Elsa then rides back towards the forest. At the forest, the mist has finally cleared after 34 years, the world is in harmony, and Kristoff and Anna are reunited again. Suddenly, they see something coming towards them from the sea: it’s Elsa; she’s alive. Anna is relieved, and to top it off, Elsa tells her that Arendelle was not destroyed by the flood. Elsa then revives Olaf, and Kristoff finally proposes to Anna, who accepts gladly. Elsa tells the others that she is the fifth spirit. The Northuldra tribe tell Elsa she belongs with them. Elsa becomes the protector of the forest and Anna is made Queen of Arendelle.

Back in Arendelle, Anna is formally announced as Queen of Arendelle to the people, with Olaf, Kristoff and Sven dressing up for her big day – not that that lasts long; snowmen and mountain men aren’t made for suits! She unveils a statue of her father and mother when they were children, signifying the truce between the two sides. Anna sends a message over to Elsa using the wind spirit, Gale, inviting her to charades on Friday night and telling her Arendelle is fine. Elsa then heads off for a ride, with Gale and the Nøkk. The ride takes her through the forest, across the Dark Sea, and back to Ahtohallan, where she feels at home.

In a funny End Credits scene, Olaf reenacts the end of Frozen II to Marshmallow, from Frozen, and the snowgies, from Frozen Fever, in a similar scene to his reenactment of Frozen to the Northuldra tribe and the Arendelle soldiers.

CHARACTERS & CAST

Frozen II continues to follow the characters of the original film, namely Elsa, Anna, Olaf, Kristoff and Sven, though the last two don’t actually feature all that much in the movie. Starting with Elsa, in Frozen, she was incredibly scared of her powers and very unsure of herself. She wanted to be alone, free to use her powers how she wanted, without fear of judgement from others. But in Frozen II, her and Anna, along with Olaf, Kristoff, and Sven, are very much a family unit, even having Friday Family Game Nights! Though Elsa is adjusting to her role as Queen of Arendelle, she still feels like something is missing, and when The Voice calls out to her, she is initially wary of it, not wanting anything to change, before realising that it might be the key to her figuring out where she belongs and why she has powers unlike everyone else. This begins a chain of events where Elsa finds out she is the fifth spirit, and was granted her powers as a reward for her mother saving her father, despite the young prince being part of the Arendelle dynasty, the enemy to Northuldra. Elsa also sacrifices herself in Ahtohallan to find the truth about her grandfather and his betrayal of the Northuldra tribe’s trust. She does all this, alone, much to Anna and Olaf’s annoyance, who want her to be safe and trust them to help her more. Her final act of bravery is when Elsa unfreezes and protects Arendelle from being destroyed by the flood waters after the dam is broken. After all of this, Elsa then realises that she should never have been queen, a role that Anna is much more suited to, and that she actually belongs in the forest, either alone or with the Northuldra tribe – which is exactly what she does. In her final scene, Elsa is riding the Nøkk over to Ahtohallan, a place that feels very much like home to her. She finally seems content and happy with herself, and has found exactly where she belongs.

To fully show that Elsa has found out the reason behind her powers and that she has found some sense of belonging in the forest and in Ahtohallan, Elsa gets another transformation scene, similar to her one during “Let It Go”. The team knew that this had to be a big moment, as Elsa becomes the person she was meant to be all along: the fifth spirit, the connection between people and magic. Her blue dress is transformed into a white gown, that has the diamond shapes of the four elements infused onto it, showing her transformation to the fifth spirit. She was also given an ethereal cape, and she lets her hair down[1].

For Anna’s emotional journey, she is happy at the start of Frozen II: she has a close relationship with her sister again, she’s going strong with her boyfriend, Kristoff, and of course, Olaf is still with them. She loves being in Arendelle and isn’t looking for anything to change. Because of this, she is overly protective of Elsa in Frozen II, not wanting her to do anything on her own, in case something bad happens to her. Anna is concerned about Elsa when Elsa first hears The Voice, and is upset that Elsa wouldn’t tell her about it initially. In the Enchanted Forest, Anna is reluctant to leave Elsa when the fire spirit hits the area, and has to be taken away by Kristoff at Elsa’s orders. Things get progressively worse when Anna is tricked into being led away from Elsa at the Dark Sea, and is angry with her for not wanting Anna’s help and for, literally, pushing her away. At this point in the movie, Anna is also separated from Kristoff, unable to find him before they departed North because she didn’t want Elsa to have a reason to leave without her. When Elsa appears to be dead, leaving her magic to disintegrate, which includes Olaf, Anna is left completely alone. She has to pull herself out of her grief and to carry on and complete their quest, to free the forest and the people trapped within it. Despite the difficulties, Anna succeeds and is relieved to find Elsa is not dead. She realises that she cannot guard Elsa for the rest of her life, and has to let her go. Anna goes back to Arendelle to become queen, and Elsa remains in the forest, though they continue to visit each other when they can. Oh, and Anna gets engaged to Kristoff at the end of the film! Much like Elsa, Anna has a change of appearance in Frozen II. Like Elsa, Anna goes through a transformation, but to become Queen of Arendelle. She is given the same hairstyle as Elsa has during her Coronation – basically a fancy bun with a plait – and is wearing a regal green dress, purple cape, and a tiara.

Kristoff and Sven don’t feature too much in Frozen II really. The main part of Kristoff’s “journey” during Frozen II is his attempts at proposing to Anna which keep going wrong, sometimes very badly wrong. First, Anna is too preoccupied with Elsa to notice Kristoff even talking to her, then Kristoff accidentally says that Anna was “crazy” when they first met, because of her engagement to Hans, and then Kristoff misspeaks again and makes it seem like he isn’t happy with Anna. Just when he thinks he’s sorted out the best proposal ever, which involves reindeer making him doubly sure of himself, he finds that Anna has left with Elsa and Olaf! From that point, Kristoff doesn’t feature again until Anna needs help outrunning the Earth Giants, to get to the dam before them. After all that’s done, and Anna is reunited with Elsa, and Olaf is revived, he finally gets to propose – and luckily, Anna says “yes”, or that would’ve super awkward… I said that I didn’t like Kristoff in the first film, but I like him much more in Frozen II; I feel sorry for him with all these disastrous proposal attempts and can’t help but root for him to finally succeed, mostly because it’s so embarrassing to watch!

Olaf is quite different in Frozen II. Olaf is still funny and curious, but during this time, we find that actually Olaf is quite scared of the future, and is worried about things changing. He’s had some sort of emotional growth and is more aware of the world and his feelings. At the start of the film, Olaf talks to Anna about how to cope with constant change, and she tells him to look at things that are permanent, like their family. In the Enchanted Forest, when Olaf encounters all the spirits, he feels that things are wrong and dangerous, but tries to remain optimistic. When Elsa pushes Anna and Olaf away from her so she can go through the Dark Sea alone, Olaf realises that he is angry with Elsa for doing that, but also angry at Anna, because she told him that their family wouldn’t change and actually it has. Olaf later disappears, but then reappears as the lovable Olaf once again. This just shows that Olaf is not just the “comic relief” figure in the film, but is realising things about life as he’s gotten older[2]. There is a point in the film where Olaf tries to help the children of Arendelle cope with the change of being thrown out of their homes. He calls it “controlling what you can when things feel out of control”. This would’ve been an incredibly poignant message had Frozen II been released just a few months later, as the COVID-19 pandemic was the ultimate uncontrollable aspect of many people’s lives. I’m sure Olaf’s character and behaviour through Frozen II would’ve been very comforting to children at that time.

Idina Menzel, Kristen Bell, Jonathan Groff, and Josh Gad were very happy to return to the Disney Studios to reprise their roles as Elsa, Anna, Kristoff (and Sven) and Olaf respectively. Another actor who reprised his role from Frozen is Ciarán Hinds, who voices the part of Grand Pabbie, the wise Troll King, who tells the girls in Frozen II that they must go to the forest to right the wrongs of the past. Hinds has performed in numerous films including Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 (2011), as Aberforth Dumbledore, as “Soldier”, or Roy Bland, in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (2011), and as “Pop”, Buddy’s grandfather, in Belfast (2021), alongside Dame Judi Dench, for which he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.

But there are new characters in Frozen II as well. It turns out King Agnarr and Queen Iduna have a backstory: the two met as children, when Agnarr was a young prince at the time that Arendelle visited Northuldra, and Iduna was a young member of Northuldra. The two even talked and played together, with one memory from Ahtohallan showing Iduna asking what Agnarr is reading – it turns out it is actually The Little Mermaid, written by Hans Christian Andersen, author of The Snow Queen, the basis for the first Frozen film. Iduna saves Agnarr during the conflict in the forest and returns to Arendelle with him, to escape the mist that trapped everyone else. The two obviously eventually married, but it took a while for Iduna to tell Agnarr of her past life, and they seemingly never told their children. During the bedtime story about the Enchanted Forest at the start of Frozen II, Agnarr does not reference Iduna at all and she doesn’t mention it either. Iduna does sing the girls the lullaby about Ahtohallan, something she was taught as a young child, but the girls don’t find this strange at all. The parents are made to be much more likable in this film, at least, in my opinion, because I felt that, in Frozen, the King in particular seemed to be quite cold and distant, especially to Elsa, and the Queen says very little during the film.

Evan Rachel Wood voices Queen Iduna, and provides her singing voice too. She is perhaps most known for her main role as Dolores Abernathy in Westworld (2016-22). She also recently appeared as Madonna in the 2022 film Weird: The Al Yankovic Story. Alfred Molina voices King Agnarr. Molina has starred in numerous stage and screen productions. Some of these include performing as Tevye in the musical Fiddler on the Roof on Broadway from 2004 to 2005; Comte de Reynaud in the Academy Award-nominated film Chocolat (2000); Jack Mellor in another Academy Award-nominated film An Education (2009); and as Doctor Octopus in Spider-Man 2 (2004) and Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021). Also, for Disney, Molina voiced the roles of Double Dan and Professor Derek Knight in Ralph Breaks the Internet (2018) and Monsters University (2013) respectively, and played the role of Maxim Horvath in The Sorcerer’s Apprentice (2010).

Lieutenant Mattias is the extremely loyal and protective Arendelle soldier that Anna and Elsa first met in the Enchanted Forest. He was their father’s official guard, but has been trapped in the forest for 34 years. He is still suspicious of Northuldra, as King Runeard instructed them to be, and is initially suspicious of Anna and Elsa, however, warms to them quite quickly when he finds they are Agnarr’s children and Arendelle royalty. Mattias speaks to Anna about her father at points during the film. Mattias is voiced by Sterling K. Brown, who portrayed Christopher Darden, co-prosecutor in the O.J. Simpson case, in the series The People v. O. J. Simpson: American Crime Story (2016) and starred as Randall Pearson in the series This Is Us (2016-22). He won Primetime Emmys for both performances.

On the other side of this conflict are the Northuldra tribe. They are led by their stoic chief Yelena. She is not overly friendly to the group at their first introductions, very suspicious of anyone from Arendelle claiming to want to help them, as well as confused about why the Queen of Arendelle would have been blessed with magic. She just wants to protect her people though, and avoid the risk of being betrayed again. There is also Honeymaren, the kind sister of Ryder, both members of the Northuldra tribe. Honeymaren seems quite sweet, and speaks to Elsa of the rumoured fifth spirit, whereas Ryder bonds with Kristoff over their love of reindeer and how they both talk for them. The character of Ryder was named after Chris Buck, the director’s, son Ryder who was killed in a car accident just as Frozen wrapped production in 2013[3]. The three characters are voiced by: Martha Plimpton (Yelena), who has performed on stage productions such as Pal Joey from 2008 to 2009 as Gladys Bumps, and on screen as Virginia Chance in Raising Hope (2010-14); Rachel Matthews (Honeymaren), who played the part of Danielle Bouseman in Happy Death Day (2017) and its 2019 sequel; and Jason Ritter (Ryder), who voiced Dipper Pines in animated series Gravity Falls (2012-16), and performed as Pat Rollins in the series Raising Dion (2019-22).

Finally, if you’re wondering where Alan Tudyk is in Frozen II, since his character of the Duke of Weselton was not going to return for this film, he voices a guard, a Northuldra leader, and an Arendelle soldier – so don’t worry; he’s there!

Those are the main human characters, but we can’t forget the characters of the four spirits. Though the Effects Team had a major role in bringing these four to life, there was also a large amount of character animation involved. Starting with the best, we have the fire spirit, Bruni the salamander, who was originally going to be called Sally, apparently! The size of Bruni’s fire is affected by his emotions, which explains why he goes a bit crazy in the forest when the group first arrive, because he’s scared[4]. We soon see that this little fireball is just a really cute fiery salamander, who loves to be cool, eat snowflakes and roll around in snow – or on Elsa’s cold palms! He’s the best new character in Frozen II for me; I think he’s so adorable. The inspiration from Bruni came from mythology, which said that salamanders would run out from fires when new logs were thrown on to them.

For the Nøkk, this water horse was inspired by a mythological creature, the Norse Nøkk, which is said to drown anyone that does not have truth in their heart. There is a big moment of Elsa struggling with the Nøkk, but successfully taming it with her powers and the trueness of her heart. The Nøkk was going to be introduced in a different way to begin with. Kristoff would’ve been encouraged by Anna and Olaf to ride the Nøkk, however, Kristoff was reluctant to do this as he knew he was lying about being happy with his new life in Arendelle, especially with all the necessary royal customs. Kristoff tries to ride the Nøkk, but as predicted, it tries to drown him. Anna goes in to save him, but he has to tell her the truth about everything. Anna is crushed and tells him they shouldn’t get married[5].

For the wind spirit, or “Gale”, it is meant to be ominous to begin with, but then become more mischievous as it finds out about the people around it. Since wind is invisible, its personality had to come through by how it interacts with people and its surroundings, such as picking up leaves, or someone’s hair. Gale was created using a new animation tool named Swoop. And finally, there are the Earth spirits, or Earth Giants, monstrous pieces of rock with earth and moss on top of them, so they blend into their surroundings. An Old Norse myth was the primary inspiration for their creation, though the team did also look at how the trolls look in the two movies as they felt the Earth Giants would be linked to them in some way. They are not meant to be villainous, just angry, but they do befriend Anna and Elsa later on, wanting to live in peace and harmony with the people around them[6].

PRODUCTION

The team working on Frozen and Frozen II were thrilled with the reception they received to the first movie; they were inundated with letters from children who had responded particularly deeply to Elsa and her story and obviously the social media buzz proved how much of a phenomenon Frozen became. But with all that excitement from the audience came a lot of pressure and responsibility on Disney to get the sequel right.

Jennifer Lee, co-director of both Frozen and Frozen II alongside Chris Buck, began story development for the sequel by writing a journal from Elsa’s point of view. From there, Lee and Buck started to discuss the ideas from the journal, with Buck drawing sequences and scenes from within it[7]. They wanted to look at the characters from a more mature and deep perspective, needing them to change emotionally through the story, especially as Frozen II takes place three years after the events of the first, meaning that everything that happened to the characters in Frozen will have affected them in some way. Frozen II needed to grow with its audience, since those viewers would be six years older by the time this film was released. The main question Disney wanted to answer during Frozen II was why Elsa has her powers, and follow the group’s quest to find out. Another inspiration for the story of Frozen II was looking at Scandinavian folklore and Norse mythology. The team found that mythic magical figures tend to have to carry everyone else’s burdens on their shoulders, and they sacrifice themselves for their end goals. This sounds a lot like Elsa, so they wanted to explore this idea further, when looking into why she has her powers.

The Frozen II team were also inspired by their research trip to Norway, Finland and Iceland in September 2016. They hiked through Finnish forests which gave them ideas for the Enchanted Forest, including much of the colour palette, which involved lots of oranges, reds, and violets[8]. The artists were also inspired by Eyvind Earle’s backgrounds for Sleeping Beauty (1959) for the look of the Enchanted Forest, specifically the vertical planes and his way of grouping trees. They consulted with a botanist from Norway to ensure they were accurate in their depiction of native vegetation[9].

For the Northuldra tribe, Disney looked to the Sámi community for inspiration during their 2016 research trip to Scandinavia. The Sámi are the indigenous community from Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia, known for their colourful clothing, a cappella story chants, and reindeer herding, which are characteristics that appear in Frozen II. The Disney team collaborated with the Sámi over the Northuldra tribe clothing and other specificities to ensure that the culture was represented respectfully. Disney even signed an agreement with the Sámi Council and three Sámi parliaments in Norway, Finland, and Sweden to say that the film would give back to the Sámi communities. One way they did this was by releasing a Sámi language dub of the film on the same day Frozen II was released in other Scandinavian countries, like Norway[10]. This representation was particularly important to the Sámi people, as they have had a history of being segregated, discriminated against, and their lands have been abused. This is similar to the Northuldra in Frozen II, who have been tricked and manipulated by a greedy, selfish king, intent on taking land for himself.

Throughout the next three years, the Frozen II team agonised over the story for the film, making multiple edits and revisions to the writing, animation, and music of certain sequences, as per feedback from both in-house and external audience screenings. The in-house Story Trust at the Disney Studios, involving directors and employees from different animated movies in production as well as their own team, discussed the plot at length, due to its complexity and complicated nature in places. Some of these thoughts were echoed at an external audience review, with numerous story meetings taking place after these screenings to figure out the right route to take. Though the audience screening showed that the music played well, and that Olaf and Bruni were favoured characters, some story issues resulted from who The Voice is and the song “Show Yourself”, as well as how to show the backstory of the Enchanted Forest via the prologue. The prologue was reworked as late as August 2019, just a couple of months before release. This was due to the fact that the original prologue started at the Enchanted Forest, following a young girl looking for her mother when suddenly a battle commences between her tribe of Northuldra and the Arendelle soldiers. These were unfamiliar characters and an unfamiliar setting to the viewer. It was decided that the audience needed to see Arendelle and Anna and Elsa first, before introducing the Forest’s backstory[11]. To make things even more difficult, Jennifer Lee was promoted to be Chief Creative Officer for Walt Disney Animation Studios in June 2018, meaning that she not only had to work on her own movie of Frozen II, but now every movie in the animated slate had to be supervised by her.

Once the story had been locked in, quite late in the production schedule, then the animation had to be completed – and some of those elements came with their own problems. In Frozen, one of Disney’s biggest difficulties was creating the ice palace but for Frozen II, they had a different icy challenge: the glacier of Ahtohallan. Ahtohallan had to have a grand exterior as well as a large interior. They knew the best way to get information about glaciers was to go and see them in real-life. During their 2016 research trip, they looked at glaciers first-hand, even getting to walk on one. The team were overcome by the beauty, and the mystifying nature of these glaciers. They saw that the inside of the glacier was a vibrant blue, matching Elsa’s “signature colour”, and that Elsa would feel connected to this huge icy glacier because of her powers. Visual Designer Brittney Lee was brought in to take a look at the design work on Ahtohallan. She came up with concepts of what the inside would look like, and how Elsa would interact with it, showing that she would be led through the glaciers by the elements and The Voice[12].

MUSIC

The Voice was provided by Norwegian singer-songwriter AURORA. It features heavily in Elsa’s two big numbers “Into the Unknown” and “Show Yourself”, my two favourite songs from the film. This musical motif is called “Dies Irae” and comes from an ancient Gregorian chant, which is associated with death and danger. It even appears in the opening theme for The Shining (1980). Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez, who returned to write the songs for Frozen II, felt that this motif was the perfect thing to awaken Elsa, and set her on her path to self-discovery as she could only do that by facing many dangers and obstacles[13]. “Into the Unknown” is a very powerful number, and shows how Elsa is torn between leaving the comfort zone of Arendelle, where she does not feel like she truly belongs, and trying to figure out what her powers mean. It’s a beautiful sequence, especially when she gets outside and her magic shows her visions of what is to come on her journey; it’s a really spectacular song and much better than “Let It Go” in my opinion.

“Show Yourself” is the big emotional moment of Elsa’s journey as she gets to Ahtohallan and finds The Voice that she has been hearing was actually her mother’s call. This is a very touching scene, and the song culminates in Elsa’s transformation to becoming the person she was always meant to be: the fifth spirit to connect all of nature. “Show Yourself” went through a lot of changes through the movie, up until the last couple of months of production, with talks of it being cut at one point because nobody could figure out what to do with it; not the directors, the songwriters, or the story writers. It was said that this was the hardest of all the Frozen songs to work on. In the end, the breakthrough was deciding that The Voice was Elsa’s mother, and that they should reprise “All Is Found”, their mother’s lullaby from the start of the film, to connect the past with the present. And I am so thankful they worked all that out, because I love this song and this huge moment for Elsa.

Speaking of the lullaby, “All Is Found” is sung by Queen Iduna to the girls at the start of the film, telling them about the mysterious river of Ahtohallan. It’s a tender song, but also quite haunting, with some of the lyrics detailing not to dive too deep into her sound, or else you’ll be drowned… It sets up the mystery of Ahtohallan to be revisited later on in the journey. The song that follows is quite a contrast: it is “Some Things Never Change”, a very upbeat number where Anna and Olaf talk about how, though things change, they will always be together; Kristoff and Sven discussing his proposal to Anna; and Elsa not wanting things to change despite hearing The Voice. It’s a perfect big crowd number to start the film.

 Unlike Frozen, Kristoff finally gets his own song, and a brilliant song at that. It begins with a brief version of “Reindeer(s) Are Better Than People”, from Frozen, before leading in to this big 80s power ballad. Kristoff was going to sing a song called “Get This Right”, which would’ve talked about how he wanted his proposal to Anna to go perfectly; it was quite a nice song, but “Lost in the Woods” is so much better! Jonathan Groff, though he was proud of “Reindeer(s) Are Better Than People”, despite many people saying how it wasn’t a “real song”, including me, did love recording “Lost in the Woods” and liked how a man was being given a song to sing about these deep feelings he has for the woman he loves, instead of having to be macho about it and pretending he doesn’t have feelings. For this song, the reindeers of the Northuldra tribe and Sven join in with the backing harmonies. Groff actually recorded all of these harmonies himself, with there being around 18 in total[14]!

Anna this time had quite a dark song written for her: “The Next Right Thing”. It details how Anna is going to get herself back on her feet and keep going, despite Olaf disappearing, Elsa being gone, and being separated from Kristoff. Anna is normally the upbeat, optimistic one, so it is hard to see and hear her feeling so broken. It is very dark for a Disney song, and must’ve been difficult for Kristen Bell to record. In fact, in the behind-the-scenes documentary, Bell was crying as she sang it. She said that her personal struggles with anxiety and depression were something she brought to the acting of the song, and that sometimes on the worst days, it is good advice: to just take things one step at a time[15].

The remaining song is Olaf’s song “When I’m Older”, which he sings as he’s walking through the Enchanted Forest, getting spooked by all the spirits. He is trying to be optimistic and say that everything’s fine and when he’s older and wiser, he’ll be able to explain all this away and it won’t be scary anymore. Like I said earlier on, Olaf’s emotional state during this whole film must’ve been quite comforting to children who felt out of control and uncertain about global issues, such as COVID-19, climate change, political hostility, and more age-specific problems, like moving to a new school, for example. This is my least favourite song of the seven original songs written for Frozen II, but I still like it.

Pop rock band Panic! At The Disco recorded a version of “Into the Unknown”, which appears first during the End Credits. I don’t normally like covers of Disney songs, but this is actually quite a good one. Country singer Kacey Musgraves covered “All Is Found”, and rock band Weezer cover Kristoff’s “Lost in the Woods”. These are second and third in the credits.

Christophe Beck returned as the composer of the score. I particularly like how much “Vuelie” from Frozen reappeared in Frozen II, such as in the “Introduction” to the film, and when the Northuldra sing it a cappella. But my favourite of all the instrumentals is “The Flood”, which plays during the scene where Elsa protects Arendelle from being flooded and destroyed when the dam breaks. It’s such a powerful moment, as Elsa is found to be alive and because all the people of Arendelle are stood watching, expecting their homes to be destroyed, but instead Elsa saves them all. Again, it’s these big emotional moments in the score that always stand out for me – and usually make me cry! Overall, I really like Frozen II’s soundtrack, and so much more than Frozen’s.

RECEPTION

Due to Frozen’s huge success in 2013, it was quite clear that Frozen II would be widely anticipated. A teaser trailer was released in February 2019, showing Elsa at the Dark Sea, the diamond-shapes in the air, Kristoff riding on reindeer, Anna in the cave, and then shots of the forest. It didn’t say or show much, but it created discussions over how dark the movie looked. It certainly made me interested, because it didn’t give you much idea about what Frozen II’s story would be, just that it looked like an epic quest would take place. In June 2019, the official trailer was dropped. This time it gave some more information, including The Voice and Grand Pabbie’s warnings about Elsa’s magic and the past needing correcting. Again, it didn’t give much away, but it got people talking.

In August 2019, there was a D23 convention where further details on Frozen II were announced. These details included announcing Evan Rachel Wood as Queen Iduna and Sterling K. Brown as Lieutenant Mattias. The creators told the audience that the film would answer questions about Elsa’s powers, as well as those about their parents. They showed snippets of the film, including the scene of the group playing charades and moving into the sequence for “Into the Unknown”, which confirmed the appearance of the mysterious voice and that Kristoff was planning to propose to Anna. Then, Idina Menzel, Kristen Bell, Josh Gad, and Jonathan Groff came on stage to sing “Some Things Never Change”[16].

To further create excitement around the movie before its release, merchandise was released in October 2019 to be bought at locations around Walt Disney World, Disneyland, and on the Shop Disney online store. A little bit closer to the release date, speciality food and beverage items themed to Frozen II were also released at the Parks.

Finally, on 7th November 2019, Frozen II had its official premiere at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, before having its general release in the United States on 22nd November. It continued to be released in other countries through to the end of 2019. There was certainly a lot of talk about the movie, however, Frozen II was not perceived as superior to Frozen by many. The more cynical amongst us claimed that Frozen II had only been made to satisfy the market and to bring out more merchandise to sell. Some also said that the film was too complicated in places and was difficult to understand. On the positive side, though, others liked how it tackled heavy themes, such as colonialism, environmental issues, psychological reactions to change, and depression. The music and the look of the movie were also praised, and the characters were still as likeable as they were in the original film. But critics were split, whereas the majority of reviews were positive for Frozen.

To further show this split of opinion, Frozen II did not do as well at the awards ceremonies. Whereas Frozen won both the Academy Awards for Best Original Song for “Let It Go” and Best Animated Feature, Frozen II was only nominated for Best Original Song for “Into the Unknown”, losing to “(I’m Gonna) Love Me Again” from Rocketman (2019). It was not even nominated for Best Animated Feature, with Toy Story 4 (2019) winning that award. Even without Frozen II being snubbed, this was bitterly disappointing to me because I really do not like Toy Story 4 and felt it was not at all necessary for the franchise. It creeped me out with all those dolls and ventriloquist dummies too… But that childhood trauma is for another time. Frozen II did win the Annie Award for Outstanding Achievement for Animated Effects, and so it should because there were an awful lot of effects in this film and I thought they looked amazing, and Josh Gad won Outstanding Achievement for Voice Acting for Olaf once again. Frozen II’s soundtrack did win Top Soundtrack at the Billboard Music Awards and the film won Favorite Animated Movie at the Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards.

Despite being named the highest-grossing animated movie in history, this is only true depending on who you talk to. I personally would class The Lion King 2019 remake as animated, since the movie was entirely computer animated. Disney however class this film as a live-action remake, so it is not considered on some lists of highest-grossing animated movies. I would though, so Frozen II in my view became the second highest-grossing animated movie of all time, generating $1.3 billion at the box office compared to $1.65 billion for The Lion King (2019). Still, it outperformed the original movie, and was not surpassed by The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023) a few years later.

LEGACY

Since Frozen spanned spin-offs and featurettes, Frozen II was obviously going to do the same. Obviously, Frozen II was released on DVD and Blu-Ray, along with a sing-along edition, but the first Frozen-related series to be released after the release of Frozen II was actually a series of shorts, released on YouTube on the Walt Disney Animation Studios’ official channel, called At Home with Olaf (2020) at the start of the pandemic. Each short is just a couple of minutes long, and look at Olaf exploring the world, such as drinking pink lemonade, eating candy, having fun on a swing, little things like that. I remember I was watching them at the time, and they were comforting for both children and adults alike, giving us all a bit of stability and a bit of wholesomeness to get through the seemingly unending lockdown period. Josh Gad returned to voice Olaf, though he does not say much in these shorts, mostly just giggles or mumbles. There were 21 shorts in total, with the final one being a musical short titled “I Am With You”. It is of Olaf writing a letter to someone saying how he will always be with them. It was accompanied by clips from previous Disney animated features. This was the best short of all the series.

After this, Disney released a Virtual Reality short in June 2020, which premiered on Oculus Quest, before being released in a 2D version on Disney+ in 2021. It is called Myth: A Frozen Tale (2020) and shows a family in log cabin telling a bedtime story to their children all about the forest and the four spirits. It does turn quite dark at the end though, as after saying the human fifth spirit brought everything into harmony, we are then told that the fifth spirit got out of rhythm with the others, leading to the world to fracture and the spirits to vanish. But if the fifth spirit can find its rhythm once more, then the others will return. I’m assuming this was a metaphor about humans and their contributions to climate change, but yeah, a bit dark for a Disney project! It is visually stunning though, showing each of the four spirits in turn: Gale, Bruni and his pink fire, the Nøkk, and the Earth Giants. It was apparently inspired by the visual poetry of Fantasia (1940) and by the artistic stylings of Eyvind Earle and his work on Sleeping Beauty (1959), as well as the artwork of celebrated Disney artist Mary Blair.

In June 2020, a six-part documentary series titled Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II shows some behind-the-scenes footage of the Disney Studios during their last year of production on the movie. It was fascinating to watch and I would recommend it to any fans of movie history. In October 2020, a new short was released called Once Upon a Snowman. It looks at Olaf’s journey from his creation by Elsa during “Let It Go” in Frozen to him meeting Anna, Kristoff and Sven in the icy oasis. We see him interact with Oaken at his shop, just missing Anna and Kristoff, and then shows him being chased by wolves, as he was given a nose made of “summer sausage” by Oaken. The wolves then chase Anna and Kristoff. It also shows Olaf remembering his name and that he likes warm hugs, before following Anna and Kristoff to the place they meet. It’s both funny and interesting to see how Olaf’s journey here interacts with the events of Frozen.

But my favourite of all the Frozen II spin-offs is Olaf Presents, a six-part series of shorts released on Disney+ in November 2021, which includes a compilation episode of the previous five. The compilation episode also shows Olaf’s recap of Frozen that appears in Frozen II, I assume as context in case you haven’t seen the film and are wondering what on Earth you’re watching! The five other films that Olaf recaps are The Little Mermaid (1989); Moana (2016); The Lion King (1994); Aladdin (1992); and Tangled (2010). These are all hilarious, but my favourites are The Little Mermaid (1989) and The Lion King (1994), especially with the snowgies representing the wildebeest stamped! I bet Josh Gad had fun recording these! Sadly, Disney confirmed that Olaf Presents would not get another series.

A Frozen III was confirmed back in February 2023 by Disney CEO Bob Iger. At the D23 Expo in 2024, it was announced that Frozen III will be released in 2027, with some concept art being shown. The plan is for Frozen III, as well as a Frozen IV, to resolve all the unanswered questions around Elsa and her magic. It will be interesting to see what this means, seeing as I thought Frozen II wrapped the characters’ stories up quite nicely.

At the Disney Parks, I wanted to find only the Frozen II specific attractions and there are a few. Generally, clips and songs from the movie can be seen and heard during some of the Disney Parks’ nighttime shows or projection shows but in terms of attractions, at Walt Disney World Resort, at the Royal Sommerhus in the Norway pavilion of Epcot, Elsa and Anna have been meeting in their Frozen II costumes since the movie’s release in 2019. This means Anna’s queen gown and Elsa’s white dress; basically, what they are wearing at the end of the film. This is also the case at Anna and Elsa’s Royal Welcome at Disney California Adventure Park at Disneyland and should be the same at Hong Kong Disneyland’s World of Frozen when it opens 20th November 2023. It is unclear whether Anna and Elsa are appearing in their Frozen II outfits when meeting guests at Shanghai Disneyland, Tokyo Disneyland and Disneyland Paris, though it would appear not, in Paris at least.

 At Disneyland Paris, the Frozen Celebration event was held from January 2020 for a few months until the park was forced to close for COVID-19. It featured a Frozen II parade, with a float of Elsa as the fifth spirit with the Nøkk positioned at the front and Anna and Olaf in their ice boat in the middle, with an animatronic Sven at the back, before Anna and Elsa came off the float to dance along with the rest of the performers, including Kristoff. Another parade to feature a Frozen II float is the daytime parade Magic Happens at Disneyland, which has been running since early 2020. It features Anna and Elsa, with animatronics of Olaf and Sven, on a float of half forest and half ice. The Nøkk is featured on the float as well, but Kristoff seemingly isn’t allowed on the float and must walk behind for some reason!

Shanghai Disneyland’s Frozen: A Sing-Along Celebration show began to feature songs from Frozen II after the movie’s release. It uses “Some Things Never Change” on the sing-along screen, with Anna, Elsa, Kristoff and puppet Olaf appearing on stage towards the end of the show to sing “Into the Unknown”; they are wearing their Frozen II costumes. At Hong Kong Disneyland’s World of Frozen, there is a show at the Playhouse in the Woods. Anna and Olaf are planning a surprise for Elsa, to show her that they have restored the playhouse from their childhood. It is themed to Frozen II, with a lot of interactive elements designed to mimic the four spirits.

On the Disney Cruise Line, on the Disney Wish, the restaurant Arendelle: A Frozen Dining Adventure features the characters from Frozen II as they encourage guests to help celebrate Queen Anna and Kristoff’s royal engagement, as per the end of Frozen II. The characters walk by tables to interact with guests and there are some musical performances too whilst you eat.

FINAL THOUGHTS

The more sceptical among us would say that Frozen II was purely made for money, that there was no sequel needed for Frozen, and that this was just a ploy to get more merchandising and entertainment ideas. Disney were milking Frozen for all it was worth.

Like everyone, I can be cynical at times, but I disagree that the making of Frozen II was just for money. Many of these reviews were written well before any behind-the-scenes footage and documentaries were released to the public, and if anyone has seen Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II, it is clear to see, from all the dithering and constant story rewrites, that the team were determined to get this film right and to do it justice. Why else would they be bothered about this if it was all just about money? I do believe Disney do make certain films just as a money-making exercise, such as Pixar’s Cars franchise, with Cars 2 being a particularly low point for the company, and even to some extent the Toy Story franchise, which really should’ve ended with Toy Story 3. But not Frozen II.

I like Frozen II so much more than the original one. I think the music is more enjoyable, although perhaps not as catchy, it looks amazing, and it touches on some very important ideas. It is one of Disney’s best animated sequels, a fact that is hard to deny.

Frozen II felt like a real adventure of self-discovery, with mature themes to make it more complex and profound, which is much appreciated by those Disney fans over the age of 10, who need just a bit more than a cute snowman and sisterly bonding to impress them!


REFERENCES

[1] Credit: Disney, Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II (2020): “Episode 5: Race to the Finish”.

[2] Credit: Disney, Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II (2020): “Episode 4: Big Changes”.

[3] Credit: Disney, Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II (2020): “Episode 3: Journey to Ahtohallan”.

[4] Credit: Disney, “Did You Know?”, from Frozen II (2019), Blu-Ray 2-Movie Collection (2020).

[5] Credit: Disney, “Deleted Scenes”, from Frozen II (2019), Blu-Ray 2-Movie Collection (2020).

[6] Credit: Disney, “The Spirits of Frozen 2” from Frozen II (2019), Blu-Ray 2-Movie Collection (2020).

[7] Credit: Disney, Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II (2020): “Episode 1: A Year to Premiere”.

[8] Credit: Carolyn Giardina, ‘Making of ‘Frozen 2’: Disney Aimed to Mark an “Evolution” for Elsa and Anna’, The Hollywood Reporter (online), 12th December 2019.

[9] Credit: Disney, “Did You Know?”, from Frozen II (2019), Blu-Ray 2-Movie Collection (2020).

[10] Credit: John Hazelton, ‘How the ‘Frozen II’ filmmakers dealt with the pressure: “we built it very honestly, from character out”, ScreenDaily.com, 26th December 2019.

[11] Credit: Disney, Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II (2020): “Episode 5: Race to the Finish”.

[12] Credit: Disney, Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II (2020): “Episode 3: Journey to Ahtohallan”.

[13] Credit: Joanna Robinson, ‘Frozen II Songwriters on the Surprisingly Creepy Inspiration Behind the Movie’s Latest Earworm’, Vanity Fair (online), 5th December 2019.

[14] Credit: Disney, Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II (2020): “Episode 2: Back to the Drawing Board”.

[15] Credit: Disney, Into the Unknown: Making Frozen II (2020): “Episode 3: Journey to Ahtohallan”.

[16] Credit: Eliana Dockterman, ‘Everything We Learned About Frozen II From the D23 Footage’, Time (online), 24th August 2019.

#53 Frozen (2013)

  1. BACKGROUND
  2. PLOT
  3. CHARACTERS & CAST
  4. PRODUCTION
  5. MUSIC
  6. RECEPTION
  7. LEGACY
  8. FINAL THOUGHTS
  9. REFERENCES

BACKGROUND

After becoming the highest-grossing animated movie of all time shortly after its release; the fifth highest-grossing film of all time for a spell; winning two Academy Awards; and causing one of the biggest frenzies that a Disney movie has created in decades, you’d be right to think that the hype around Frozen and its characters is far from over.

Despite being over a decade since the movie was first released in November 2013, the film has spanned numerous merchandise items, games and books; multiple theme park attractions and areas; many screen featurettes; a Disney on Ice show; and a Broadway musical – and yet its popularity keeps growing, with whole lands dedicated to the film being built at not one, not two, but three of the six total Disney Resorts! It’s crazy how much of a phenomenon Frozen has become, rivalling the popularity of The Lion King (1994), which came out two decades prior to Frozen.

I’m not going to lie and say that I’m obsessed with Frozen, but I cannot say that I dislike it either. As I’m no longer young, I struggle to get that excited about any new Disney or Pixar release. They come out, I watch them, and I decide whether they fit in to one of three categories: 1) Hate it and never want to watch again; 2) That was alright; I’ll watch it again or 3) Love it and will rewatch it often. I am a “die-hard fan” of just one Disney film that I will love and cherish forever, but most movies I watch tend to sit within Category 2 or 3, with it being very rare that I find a Disney or Pixar film that fits into Category 1. Frozen sits comfortably in Category 2, but perhaps there was a time when 3 would’ve been more fitting.

When I first watched Frozen at the cinema in December 2013, I laughed, I cried, I was happy, I was sad – I went through all the emotions, as you do when you watch a really good Disney movie, typically of the fairy-tale Broadway musical variety, as Frozen is. I did really like it, more so than Tangled (2010), its “princess predecessor”. The music was good, the characters were funny and relatable, and it was nice to see a twist on the typical fairy tale, with the heroes being two strong women, and the prince being the villain.

But then came the perfect storm of small children, Christmas, a standout musical hit – and social media. Nobody would stop talking about Frozen! There were videos of people singing “Let It Go” everywhere; the soundtrack was all over the radio; Frozen was being talked about on the news, on panel shows – it went on and on. That’s when I found I didn’t like Frozen half as much as I had when I left that cinema a few months before, because it had been talked to death, and by doing that, it lost some of its magic for me.

I don’t generally choose to watch Frozen, much preferring its sequel, but when I did re-watch it this week, I did find I still liked it – but I’m not about to go and make a TikTok video about it or anything. Just think how bad “Frozen fever” would’ve been had that app been around in 2013, not just the standard Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube….

PLOT

Frozen begins in a quiet, calming way, with scenes of snowflakes falling over a blue screen. The title card shows the film’s title written as a block of ice. A choral tune plays during this section. After this, we are transported to a cold, snowy area where men are cutting out blocks of ice from the ground; they are ice harvesters. A small boy and a young reindeer watch nearby and join in with the group. The men take away the ice in their sleds. 

In a castle, a little girl, Princess Anna, is annoying her sister, trying to get her to play with her in the middle of the night because “when the sky is awake, [she’s] awake”, meaning she can see the aurora borealis, or “northern lights”, through their bedroom window! Eventually, the sister, Princess Elsa, relents after being asked if she wants to build a snowman. The girls head to a large hall where we see that Elsa has magical ice powers: she makes the floor solid ice so they can skate on it, makes huge snow drifts, and of course, builds a snowman, which she calls Olaf. All this fun, though, ends in tears. As Elsa tries to catch Anna as she dances from snow drift to snow drift with her magic, Elsa accidentally hits Anna in the head. Anna tumbles to the ground, unconscious. Elsa cries for her parents, with the four hurrying to the trolls for help. At this point, the small boy and reindeer from earlier follow the trail of ice that is following Elsa, Anna, and the King and Queen over to the trolls. The two are both adopted by a troll as they watch this strange meeting. The Troll King says that it is lucky only Anna’s head has been frozen, as a frozen heart cannot be easily thawed. The Troll King takes away all memories of Elsa’s magic, which heals Anna. He warns Elsa though her magic can be beautiful, it needs to be controlled or it could be dangerous; fear will be her enemy. The King vows to help Elsa control it and orders the gates to the kingdom be closed, to conceal Elsa’s powers from everyone else.

Over a number of years, the girls are separated. Anna is lonely without her sister, constantly wanting to play with her, but being told to go away every time. Elsa is struggling to control her power, and the more she is afraid of it, the more powerful and uncontrollable it gets; it is clear Elsa’s emotions feed into her magic, mimicking how she feels. As Anna gets older, she doesn’t bother Elsa anymore, so the two don’t speak. One day, their parents leave for a two-week trip – we aren’t told where or why – but their ship sinks and they drown. Elsa becomes the new Queen. Anna and Elsa are both broken at the news of their parents’ death, but as Anna seeks comfort from Elsa, Elsa continues to ignore her.

When Elsa is 21, it is time for her Coronation Day, where she will formally become Queen of Arendelle, their kingdom. The gates to Arendelle will finally be open and Anna will actually get to talk to someone; she’s very excited. As she explores the day’s festivities, she bumps into someone and stumbles into a boat, almost falling into the harbour. This someone is Prince Hans of the Southern Isles; Anna is instantly smitten. But it’s time for the Coronation, so she heads to the ceremony. Elsa’s Coronation is a relatively simple affair, with not too many attendees, but that doesn’t stop Elsa’s nerves. As she goes to pick up the orb and sceptre to conclude the formalities, Elsa is asked to remove her gloves, something she wears to conceal her magic. She holds the objects for the smallest amount of time necessary, before hurriedly placing them down and putting her gloves back on. She did it.

Now it’s time to party. At the party, Anna and Elsa speak for the first time in years, surprising Anna. Elsa sends Anna off to dance with the Duke of Weselton, the ruler of Arendelle’s biggest trade partner. The Duke is suspicious of the Queen but cannot get information from Anna. Anna is soon saved by the arrival of Hans, who she spends time with instead. The two fall in love over the course of the evening and Hans proposes to her; Anna eagerly accepts. She takes Hans to Elsa to ask for her blessing on their marriage. Elsa refuses, telling Anna she cannot marry a man she just met, and orders her guests to leave and for the gates to Arendelle to be closed once more. Anna is angry and upset that Elsa won’t talk to her, and asks why Elsa continues to shut her out. Elsa gets upset at Anna’s questioning and holds out her arm to tell her to stop – but one of Elsa’s gloves has been removed in the lead up to this and icicles shoot out from her hands, shocking everyone. The guests are scared of her evil powers, with the Duke calling her a monster. She flees, but is confronted by even more people, scaring her more. As Elsa steadies herself by the courtyard fountain, that too freezes. Elsa runs over the fjord to escape, freezing the whole fjord as she does so, and setting off an eternal winter everywhere – it is actually July in Arendelle.

Anna decides to follow Elsa to ask her to unfreeze Arendelle. She leaves Hans in charge of the kingdom until she returns. Elsa has escaped to the North Mountain, and is alright being alone and free to use her powers without fear of hurting anyone. She builds a huge ice palace on the mountain and seems happy with her life choice. In the meantime, Anna journeys through the snow to try and find Elsa, but doesn’t know where to look. At Wandering Oaken’s Trading Post and Sauna high in the mountain, she meets an ice-seller, Kristoff. After angering Oaken over his “ridiculous prices”, Kristoff is thrown out of the shop. Anna buys some winter clothes, to change out of her snow-soaked Coronation dress, and buys Kristoff’s items for him to use a bargaining tool. She finds Kristoff and asks that he take her to the North Mountain, as she suspects this is where Elsa may be. Eventually, he is persuaded, so Anna, Kristoff, and his reindeer, Sven, head off via his sled.

As they discuss Anna’s argument with Elsa, namely her stupidity at wanting to marry a man she knows nothing about, which caused this wintry mess, they are pursued by wolves – with a cliff edge coming up quickly. Anna and Kristoff jump onto Sven, and tell him to jump across the gap to the opposite ledge. Kristoff’s sled falls over the edge and bursts into flames. Kristoff wants to leave Anna to go on alone, but she says she’ll buy him a new sled once their mission is over. Reluctantly, he continues on with her. As they walk through a frosty oasis, they meet Olaf the snowman, who was built by Elsa but has now come to life. He tells them how he likes warm hugs, and would love to know what summer is like. Anna persuades Kristoff not to burst Olaf’s bubble about what happens to snow in heat… Olaf joins the three on their journey.

Anna’s horse returns to Arendelle – it got spooked before she got to Wandering Oaken’s. Hans is concerned for her safety, and organises a party to search for her. Hans asks for men to join him; the sneaky Duke of Weselton volunteers two men, telling them to kill Elsa on sight if they see her. At the same time, Anna, Kristoff, Sven and Olaf make it to the North Mountain, where they find a handy ice staircase to take them up to the top. They are presented with an enormous palace built purely from ice – Kristoff is quite overcome by this! Anna goes in to speak to her sister alone. First, she tries to persuade Elsa to come back to Arendelle with her, but Elsa refuses, saying it’s best for everyone that she stays up here, alone. Olaf comes in during the conversation, with Elsa amazed that her powers conjured a living snowman. Anna then tells Elsa that they have a problem because all of Arendelle is frozen, and asks Elsa to unfreeze it. This scares Elsa, since she had no idea she even did that, and has no clue how to unfreeze it. Anna tries to calm her down, saying they can work it out together, but the damage is done; Elsa gets so upset that she sends icicles shooting out of her hands at all angles, with one of those hitting Anna in the heart.

Kristoff and Olaf come to Anna’s aid, but Elsa conjures a huge snowman, called Marshmallow, to literally throw them out of the palace. They are tossed down the stairs, with Marshmallow planning to leave them alone, but Anna is so angry that she throws a snowball at him. Bad idea! Marshmallow becomes enraged and starts to chase them down the mountain. Kristoff and Anna throw themselves over the edge to hide from Marshmallow, using a rope to keep them from falling down the 200-foot drop. Olaf meets up with them at the edge, but he falls down the drop. Marshmallow finds the rope that Kristoff and Anna are dangling from and pulls them back up the mountain; Kristoff hits his head on a rock here and is knocked unconscious. Marshmallow shouts at them to not come back. Anna assures him they won’t and cuts the rope, letting them fall the massive distance to the bottom. There’s plenty of fresh snow at the bottom to cushion their fall, so they’re ok.

Anna’s plan to talk to Elsa failed, and worse still, Kristoff sees Anna’s hair is turning white. They find Sven, who couldn’t get up the icy staircase to the palace, and heads to find Kristoff’s family, the “love experts”, to get help. When they arrive, Kristoff seemingly starts talking to rocks, making him look crazy. Anna tries to leave, but as she does, the rocks turn into trolls. The trolls get over-excited, thinking Kristoff has brought a girl home and start setting up their wedding, but Kristoff tells them Anna is already engaged to be married and they have bigger problems to worry about – Anna’s heart has started to freeze from Elsa’s magic. The Troll King tells them that only an act of true love will thaw a frozen heart. Believing a kiss from Hans would fit that description, they hurry to Arendelle.

Meanwhile, despite Marshmallow’s bodyguarding skills, Hans and his “search party” get into the ice palace, with the Duke’s men about to kill Elsa with crossbows. As she protects and defends herself, she gets very closing to killing the men herself, when Hans arrives to tell her not to become the monster they think she is. The icy chandelier above Elsa is cut from the ceiling. As Elsa tries to outrun it, she falls to the ground and is knocked out. She is taken to Arendelle, and locked in a cell, with cuffs and chains keeping her from using her magic. Kristoff delivers Anna to Arendelle, and leaves with Sven. In the castle, she is brought to Hans, and explains her frozen heart situation, asking Hans to kiss her. As he leans in to kiss Anna, however, he tells her “if only there was someone out there who loved you”. In a big twist, Hans is the villain! With twelve older brothers, Hans is 13th in line to his own throne, and knew to get power he’d have to marry into the throne. It was only too easy to get Anna to fall in love with him, and knows now that he will be King, after he sentences Elsa to death for treason. He leaves Anna alone to die, and tells the others she is already dead, but that they married just in time, making him “legitimately” in line to be King. They go to kill Elsa, but find that Elsa has managed to destroy her cuffs and cell with her powers and has escaped. Her fear causes an icy storm to surround Arendelle.

Olaf finds Anna and tries to keep her warm enough to survive. He inadvertently tells Anna that Kristoff must love her – something Kristoff has figured out for himself and is on his way back to Arendelle. Olaf helps Anna out on the fjord to look for Kristoff to get her kiss. Meanwhile, Hans has found Elsa on the fjord and tells her that she has killed her own sister. Elsa is distraught and collapses on to the ice, pausing the snow storm. With the storm calmed, the fjord is clear, and just as Anna sees Kristoff coming towards her, she sees Hans ready to kill Elsa. She rushes over there. Anna shields Elsa from Hans, and turns to ice at this exact moment, breaking Hans’ sword and pushing him backwards on to the ice. Elsa sees Anna turned to ice, and begins to cry. After a few seconds, Anna then begins to unfreeze. They figure that Anna sacrificing herself to save Elsa was the “act of true love” that was needed to thaw Anna’s frozen heart. This makes Elsa twig that love must be the way to unfreeze Arendelle. With this in mind, Elsa manages to thaw Arendelle, which starts to make Olaf melt – so she gives him his own personal flurry to keep him alive! Hans regains consciousness and is surprised to see Anna alive because of her “frozen heart”. Anna tells him “the only frozen heart around here is yours” before punching him in the face, sending him into the harbour! Hans is taken back to the Southern Isles by one of the dignitaries; Elsa dissolves the trade agreement between Arendelle and Weselton; and Anna buys Kristoff a new sled, giving him a kiss and a new job title: Official Arendelle Ice Master and Deliverer; and Olaf is happy to be able to see summer in Arendelle. As a final “happy ending” moment, Elsa makes the whole courtyard of the palace an ice rink and teaches Anna how to skate, also vowing never to close the gates to Arendelle again. 

CHARACTERS & CAST

Anna is the younger, slightly clumsy, quirky sister of Elsa. From a young age, it’s obvious that Anna likes being around her older sister, and wants to be close to her. Though they are for a few years, after the incident where Elsa hit Anna with her powers, they are separated from each other for a very long time, making that once-close sisterly bond quite difficult and complicated. As Anna has been cooped up in the Royal Palace for so long, she does not have particularly good social skills. Though she’s overly enthusiastic and will clearly talk to anyone, her naivety is clear when Hans asks to marry her, after knowing her just a few hours, and she accepts. Her stubbornness to not accept Elsa’s reasoning for not blessing the marriage is what ultimately causes Elsa to reveal her powers and flee Arendelle. Because of this, Anna does feel guilty and responsible for trying to find Elsa and get the eternal winter thawed. When she speaks to Elsa, though, she ends up working Elsa up and is not able to calm her down again. Sometimes Anna just talks too much, and doesn’t have much of a filter when she does! Still, her sacrifice at the end of the film to save her sister shows how much she loves Elsa, despite being isolated from her, and this goes a long way to fixing their “sisterly bond”. Originally, Anna and Elsa were not sisters. Anna was going to be a peasant who went to the Snow Queen to ask for her broken heart to be frozen. This story idea was not working, and the team knew they needed to make it more personal, so it was suggested that they be sisters instead.

Anna spends much of her time in the film with Kristoff, Sven and Olaf. With Olaf, she is protective of him and his dreams to see summer, even though she is well aware that snowmen don’t exist in summer because they melt in the sun, and she is thankful to Olaf for helping her at the end, saving her from dying alone in a random room in the palace. With Kristoff, she has a funny relationship. They spend most of the film arguing and bickering with each other; they are quite different people after all. But somehow, they realise that they actually love each other. It’s pretty obvious this is the route that we are being led down throughout their scenes together, so the only people who are surprised by this “turn of events” are Anna and Kristoff themselves.

Kristen Bell voices the role of Anna. Though Anna is likely to be Bell’s most recognisable screen performance now, one of her earliest screen roles was as the title character in the mystery drama television series Veronica Mars (2004-07). Bell was also the voice of “Gossip Girl”, the narrator of the show, for the original run of Gossip Girl (2007-12) and its revival from 2021 to 2023. Another quite big film role before Frozen was Bell’s role as Sarah Marshall in the romantic comedy film Forgetting Sarah Marshall (2008) alongside Jason Segel and Mila Kunis. Since Frozen, as well as obviously reprising her voice role as Anna on numerous occasions, Kristen Bell starred in the lead role of Eleanor Shellstrop in the fantasy comedy series The Good Place (2016-20), alongside Ted Danson. She currently stars as Joanne Williams in Netflix’s Nobody Wants This (2024-present) with Adam Brody.

For her character, Kristen Bell brought a goofy side to Anna, with many of her expressions being taken from her recording sessions and put into Anna’s animation. Bell was very specific about wanting this quirky side to come across well in Anna, as Bell didn’t have the standard “princess personality” when she was that age, and wanted Anna to resonate with anyone who doesn’t feel like they quite “fit in”. Some examples of Anna being completely different from the regular Disney princess is that she falls over a lot, speaks without a filter, and even wakes up drooling and with messy hair – that is certainly not something Disney would normally represent in their “princess movies”, even though everyone looks like that in the morning! Bell also stated that as she has two older sisters, she could relate to Anna wanting to seek approval from Elsa, and wanting to be a part of her life, perhaps more than Elsa would like. Rebecca Bresee is the supervising animator for Anna, and as well as using characteristics from Kristen Bell for the character, Bresee used herself as reference material for Anna, recording herself acting through some of Anna’s scenes so she could accurately recreate the right sort of poses and facial expressions that someone like Anna would make in real-life. Bresee’s children also acted out some of the scenes of young Elsa and Anna to help in those animated sequences.

Elsa is the nervous, overwhelmed Queen of Arendelle, and the uptight sister of Anna. It’s not her fault she’s like that, though. Her parents taught her that it was better to conceal her powers than to be free with them, so Elsa has always felt like there’s a huge part of her that is “wrong” and must be hidden from everyone else so she can act “normal”. She is taught that her magic is dangerous and that other people will not be able to understand it. These can’t have been easy messages for Elsa to have lived her life by for so many years, and on top of that, she feels like she has to isolate herself from everyone to keep them safe from her. She spends most of the film keeping herself away from everyone, and only allows herself to be free with her magic when she is alone – but she loves having the freedom to be able to do that. When you start bringing people into that, with Anna showing up with Kristoff and Olaf, plus Hans and his search party, it’s no wonder she gets scared again and her powers start to become unpredictable. She just wants to not have to hide anymore, and wants to be accepted by her family and her kingdom. It’s so good to see at the end that she has learnt how to control her powers to suit everyone, including herself, and that after being persecuted and almost killed by different men with their own hidden agendas, Elsa is able to overcome all that, to be a good queen, and be a good sister to Anna. Elsa doesn’t have much interaction with Olaf, Kristoff or Sven in this movie.

Idina Menzel voices the role of Elsa, and continues to reprise that role in further Frozen projects, but Menzel is probably best known as the originating role of Elphaba in the musical Wicked, from 2003 until 2005. She won a Tony Award for this performance. Also on stage, Menzel performed the role of Maureen Johnson in the New York Theatre Workshop of Rent in 1994, and then went on to perform the role on stage from 1996 to 1997. She also reprised this role for the 2005 movie. But as well as this, Menzel played the role of Nancy Tremaine in Enchanted (2007) and its sequel Disenchanted (2022), and performed alongside Adam Sandler in the recent films Uncut Gems (2019) and You Are So Not Invited to My Bat Mitzvah (2023).

Supervising animator for Elsa, Wayne Unten, wanted to animate Elsa as he felt that her inner turmoil and complex character arc would make her an interesting project for him. He said that when Idina Menzel was brought to the studios as part of her audition process, she ended up having to speak in front of about 80 people. Unten could see how nervous and overwhelmed she was by the experience, but that when it came to her singing, her strength came from that action, which is very similar behaviour that we see from Elsa. Elsa was originally going to be the villain of the film, and from concept art, she was going to a blue-skinned typical evil queen with a live weasel fur coat. There was even a scary villain’s song written for her, as she builds a terrifying snowman army to attack those who try to find her. In the end, thanks to the creation of “Let It Go”, with that being an emotional, vulnerable song, talking about her fears around her magic and her difficulties trying to be the “perfect girl”, Elsa was no longer written to be a villain, meaning that the majority of the whole film also had to be rewritten. She then became more of a “tortured hero” than a villain.

Kristoff is the grumpy, hard-to-get-close-to iceman who Anna encounters at Wandering Oaken’s shop. He must’ve had a tough childhood as, apart from Sven, his reindeer friend, he doesn’t seem to have a family until one of the trolls chooses to adopt both of them – at least, I hope he didn’t have a family and that he wasn’t kidnapped by the trolls…We don’t get to hear about his childhood here so who knows! Anyway, he grows up with Sven and his troll family, who he does seem happy around, but when he meets Anna, she seems to be the last person he’d ever want to talk to and ends up stuck with her, just to make sure she doesn’t get herself killed trying to travel to the North Mountain with no clue about the real world. If she dies, he’ll never get a new sled, after all! Eventually, he softens and does start to fall for Anna, though we still don’t hear him be particularly open about his life, or his hopes and dreams. He doesn’t even tell Anna what his favourite food is, or his foot size, or his best friend’s name, all things he moans that Anna doesn’t know about Hans and therefore can’t marry him! He has Sven, who is probably classed as his best friend, I guess, rightly or wrong. I personally don’t particularly like Kristoff, I don’t think Anna should’ve ended up with Hans, but I think she could do a bit better than Kristoff. He’s just too closed off, and since Anna clearly likes talking to people after her isolated childhood, I think she needs more in her life… But what do I know? I do think Sven is a cute reindeer, though. To animate Sven, Disney artists observed a real-life reindeer in the studio as reference material. They saw that reindeers can use their back legs to itch their ears, just like dogs do, so this behaviour was put into Frozen in one scene[1].

The voice of Kristoff and “Sven” is Jonathan Groff, who originated the role of Melchior Gabor in Spring Awakening from 2006 to 2008, alongside Glee (2009-15) star Lea Michele. Groff also had a recurring role as Jesse St James in Glee from 2010 to 2015. More recently, Groff is well-known for playing the part of King George III in the smash-hit musical Hamilton from 2015 to 2016; his performance can be seen in the film version of Hamilton (2020) as well. Groff has reprised his role as Kristoff, and Sven, in other Frozen projects. Groff said that though it was fun recording both Kristoff and Sven’s lines, he did feel like he was going a bit crazy as he did so.

Rounding out Anna’s “sidekicks” is the lovable Olaf. He is a bit dopey at times, but he is very cute, his laugh is particularly adorable. Everyone loves Olaf, don’t they? Hyrum Osmond – yes, of the famous Osmond family; his uncle is Donny Osmond – is the animator for Olaf, and he stated that Olaf is an animator’s dream, because, since he’s a snowman comprised of snowballs, he can be pulled apart and put back together in the wrong order; he can have his legs running away from his head; be impaled on icicles and think it’s hilarious, that sort of thing. Olaf has infinite numbers of animation possibilities. For Olaf’s childlike mannerisms, Osmond looked to his son for reference material to get that childish, innocent quality into Olaf.

Josh Gad, Olaf’s voice artist, gave everything into his recording sessions and is said to have very much enjoyed voicing the character[2]. He even won the Annie Award for Outstanding Achievement in Voice Acting for Olaf. As well as reprising Olaf in every Frozen project, Gad has had numerous stage and screen roles. On stage, Gad originated the role of Elder Cunningham in the musical The Book of Mormon (2011), for which he was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Actor. Starring alongside him was Andrew Rannells. The two are currently performing together in the 2023 Broadway revival of Gutenberg! The Musical! As well as this, Gad currently voices the role of Birdie in, and is co-creator of, the musical animated sitcom series Central Park (2020-present). For some of his film roles, Gad played the role of LeFou in the live-action Beauty and the Beast (2017), Hector MacQueen in Murder on the Orient Express (2017) and “Headphones” in The Internship (2013). He also voices the character of Chuck in The Angry Birds Movie franchise and starred as Gary in the television series Wolf Life Me (2022-23) with Isla Fisher.

When it comes to Hans, Anna is just so happy about the idea of falling in love, something she’d hoped would happy on Coronation Day because it was going to be one of the few days that Arendelle allowed visitors into the palace, that she doesn’t think about getting to know Hans or spending much time with him; she rushes into it, because she decides it feels right. This plays perfectly into Hans’ hands, who knew that he would not be able to get close to Elsa to marry her, but the relative ease it took to get Anna to accept his marriage proposal was probably much quicker than even he anticipated! The reveal of Hans as the villain was such a good twist, because who would ever think that the prince and the husband-to-be could possibly be faking his feelings just to take the kingdom of Arendelle for himself? Hans is just a selfish jerk, it’s as simple as that. Some say that they don’t like that Hans became the villain, saying that it was never foreshadowed and seemed forced. I disagree and felt it was a really good twist, and set up the final confrontation well. It also continued the trend of other “villain reveals” in other Disney and Pixar releases, like Wreck-It Ralph (2012), Big Hero 6 (2014), Zootopia (2016) and The Incredibles 2 (2017).

Santino Fontana voices the role of Hans – poor guy, he’s now known as voicing one of the most hated villains in Disney history! But this isn’t all he’s done. Fontana has numerous theatre credits, including originating the role of Tony Elliot in Billy Elliot the Musical on Broadway in 2008, Prince Topher in the 2013 Broadway production of Rodgers + Hammerstein’s Cinderella, for which he was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Leading Actor, and originated the role of Michael Dorsey / Dorothy Michaels in the 2019 Broadway production of Tootsie. Fontana has reprised the role of Hans when required, though Hans does not appear in all of the Frozen-related spin-off projects.

A final note on casting is that Alan Tudyk, Disney’s “good luck charm”, voices the role of the Duke of Weselton, who is meant to be evil, but is mostly just someone to laugh at, as he’s too old and infirm to be that menacing. This was only Tudyk’s second role for Disney, with his first being King Candy in Wreck-It Ralph (2012), but he has gone on to voice a part in every Disney release that has followed. There are too many to list here, but he did voice Duke Weaselton, a parody of his Frozen character, in Zootopia (2016). Tudyk also voices Valentino in Wish (2023).

PRODUCTION

Some of the Frozen character names are a reference to author, Hans Christian Andersen. Obviously, there is Hans, then Kristoff, Anna and Sven. If you say all four one after the other, it kind of sounds right, and is a clever tribute to the writer of The Snow Queen, the story that Frozen is loosely based on. The tale was written in the early 1840s. It was apparently inspired by the story East of the Sun, West of the Moon, which is similar to Beauty and the Beast, with both being inspired by the tale of Cupid and Psyche. It is told in seven stories, with none of them baring any resemblance to the story of Frozen.

In the first story, a troll creates a mirror to distort beauty. This mirror breaks which spreads the evil glass all over the world, distorting people’s vision and making them see the worst in everything. The second story moves to Kay and Gerda, who are two poor children who are close friends. One day, Kay sees the Snow Queen in a window. Shortly after, fragments of the evil mirror’s glass enter his heart and eye, turning him into a heartless bully who abandons Gerda, and follows the Queen to the north. In the third story, Gerda is convinced Kay is still alive and sets out to find him, going on a boat down the river, where she meets a witch. In the fourth, Gerda encounters a prince and princess. Gerda believes the prince to be Kay, but he is not. The two help Gerda on her way the next day. The fifth story sees Gerda encounter a band of robbers, with one of the girls threatening to kill her. The following day, in the sixth tale, Gerda continues her journey where she encounters two old women who tell her the secret to saving Kay is her innocent heart. In the final tale, Gerda’s frozen breath turns into angels who defeat the Snow Queen’s guards, letting her enter the palace. There, she sees Kay alone and immobile on a frozen lake trying to solve a puzzle for the Snow Queen. If he can do this, the Queen promised to give him a pair of skates. This part of The Snow Queen is referenced in Frozen when Elsa gives Anna skates at the end of the film. Instead of finishing the puzzle, Gerda uses the power of her love to break the curse, and Kay and Gerda return home together[3].

Walt Disney had been interested in developing Hans Christian Andersen’s The Snow Queen from around the mid-1940s. He had planned to collaborate with producer Samuel Goldwyn, co-founder of MGM Studios, to make a biographical film about Hans Christian Andersen. MGM would’ve been involved in shooting the live-action footage, whilst the Disney Studios would’ve animated some of Andersen’s most famous works such as The Little Mermaid, The Steadfast Tin Soldier and, of course, The Snow Queen. Unfortunately, this movie never went further than initial planning.

In the 1970s, animator Marc Davis designed an attraction based on the story of The Snow Queen, to be developed for Disneyland and Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom. The attraction was titled The Enchanted Snow Palace. It would’ve been housed in a big white and blue show building, made to look like a glacier. This was going to be a boat ride, whereby the boats went past animatronic polar bears, walruses and penguins, to the background music of Tchaikovsky’s “The Nutcracker Suite”. The boats would then drift into a snow cave full of frost fairies and snow giants with ice clubs, before coming to the throne room of the Snow Queen. The Snow Queen would’ve conjured a blizzard, something the boats would get caught in, before calming down for the end of the ride. It was meant to be a literally cool attraction, good to cool down guests on some of the Disney Parks’ hottest days. As the estimated cost for the attraction was $15 million, it was never made.

But that wasn’t the last Disney heard of The Snow Queen, as the project kept being thought of every now and again. In 2002, the Disney Studios came close to adapting the story, with composer Alan Menken onboard to compose the songs, one of which was completed and called “Love Can’t be Denied”. Animator Glen Keane was also involved in this project. Then-CEO of the Walt Disney Company, Michael Eisner, thought about passing the project over to Pixar, but it was dropped altogether[4].

Different teams continued to pitch the idea through the 2000s, including Chris Buck, who had co-directed Tarzan (1999) as well as Frozen. Finally, after the success of Tangled (2010), a return to the Broadway musical style of Disney film but with a modern twist on its fairy tale source material, an adaptation of The Snow Queen was brought back into consideration as a CG movie. Jennifer Lee, who was one of the screenwriters for Wreck-It Ralph (2012), was brought on as a writer for Frozen, but then became co-director with Buck.

Adapting The Snow Queen, though, proved difficult, as it is a challenging story to make sense of, since much of the prose is quite poetic and the fact the story is split into seven parts makes it less cohesive of a plot than other fairy tales[5]. Because of this, the film went through many rewrites, with numerous scenes and character arcs ending up on the cutting room floor. The biggest of these was Elsa, the Snow Queen, who was going to be the villain of the film. In one scene from early drafts of the film, Elsa had a snowman army ready to attack the guards who were sent to her palace on the mountain to find Anna. She electrocuted the guards with her ice powers, and is clearly intent on destroying them. As mentioned earlier, once the song “Let It Go” was written, Elsa’s character development was flipped completely and she was no longer a villain. From these early drafts, Anna would’ve been more similar to the character of Gerda in the original tale.

Even when this element, and Anna and Elsa becoming sisters, had been decided, there were plenty of other changes that occurred. One of which was going to be a scene in Elsa’s room, with Anna borrowing some of her clothes and talking about what she was going to wear to Elsa’s Coronation, to show a typical sisterly relationship. It would’ve still shown Elsa not wanting to get too emotional and not wanting Anna to get close to her, like how she ended up in the final movie, but it was decided that it was better for the story to keep the sisters divided throughout the lives, so this scene was removed[6].

For the design of the movie, some of the Disney artists were sent out on a research trip to Norway, as it was decided that its vast and grand area would suit the story well. They looked at snowy hamlets and Norwegian fjords, thinking that the kingdom of Arendelle should be situated at the foot of one of these fjords. Rosemaling, a Scandinavian decorative painting style known for its floral designs and curves, was seen everywhere in Norway, in columns, ceilings, clothing etc., and so the team decided this had to be included in Frozen, and it is added to many different parts of Frozen, such as Elsa’s magic making curving patterns, and it being on many of the characters’ costumes, as well as within the castle.

Another thing Frozen would need was lots of snow! This is not something that had been particularly prominent in other Disney animated films at this point in time. So, another research trip was needed! Some of the artists went sent to have a “snow day” at Jackson Hole, Wyoming. They slid down hills, as Olaf does when they are racing back to Arendelle after they find Anna needs “true love’s kiss” to thaw her frozen heart, and looked at how snow reacts to people, and how people interact with snow. They also, both the men and the women, tested walking through the snow whilst wearing a big fabric skirt, as Anna does when she sets out to find Elsa, to see how that would need to look for the animation.

A huge design challenge was actually figuring out how Elsa’s ice palace should look. After much trial and error, and many different concept art paintings, it was decided that the ice palace should be built from the ground up, with the foundation of the six points of a snowflake. When Elsa stomps her foot during the “Let It Go” scene, you can see that the six-pointed snowflake appears under her feet, before building upwards from there, coming together like a puzzle, and then creating a ceiling. From this point, the chandelier comes down from the centre of the ceiling and takes us back to the ground. The rosemaling pattern is also prominent in the design of this palace. The whole palace took nine months to create, but the Design Team knew this was an important moment in the film and that it had to look spectacular, needing to show Elsa being free and empowered to use her magic at last.

MUSIC

Speaking of “Let It Go”, this turned out to be the biggest hit on the whole Frozen soundtrack, which I think Disney did expect, seeing as this song was re-recorded by Demi Lovato, a pop rendition of it, anyway, for the End Credits. This version was recorded and released in other languages, such as in Malaysian by Marsha Milan, and in Spanish by Martina Stoessel. All three of these artists also filmed music videos for the song, which were released as bonus features on the home release on Frozen.

But back to Idina Menzel’s film version of the song, written by husband-and-wife songwriting duo, Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez, who wrote all eight songs in Frozen. The duo had written music for the 2011 Disney film, Winnie the Pooh, prior to Frozen. Robert Lopez had much success composing for musical stage shows, such as Avenue Q and The Book of Mormon. “Let It Go” was a huge success, becoming the first song from a Disney animated musical to reach the top ten of the Billboard Hot 100 since 1995 when Vanessa William’s “Colors of the Wind” from Pocahontas (1995) peaked at number four; “Let It Go” peaked at number five. “Let It Go” only hit number 1 in the South Korean music charts and the Billboard US Dance Club Songs chart. But it did win numerous awards, including the Academy Award for Best Original Song, which led to Robert Lopez becoming one of a select group of people that have won an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar and a Tony. The song also won the Grammy for Best Song Written for Visual Media. With its message of feeling free to be yourself, and the amazing vocal performance by Idina Menzel, it was obvious “Let It Go” would be Frozen’s standout hit, resonating with many people.

But that’s not all, as there are seven other songs to discuss. The first one is “Do You Want to Build a Snowman?”. It details Anna’s isolation and increasing distance from her sister, Elsa, as they grow up. It’s a good song for creating a backstory for the girls, and is particularly emotional at the end, when Anna and Elsa are dealing with the grief of suddenly losing both their parents. It’s hard not to feel emotional when listening to this song. As well as Kristen Bell singing as Anna at the end of the song, Jennifer Lee’s daughter, Agatha, sang as 9-year-old Anna, and Katie Lopez, the daughter of the songwriters, sang as 5-year-old Anna. Would you believe that this song was actually cut from the film and put back in on numerous occasions? There were a lot of Disney staff members who wanted to keep it, but as late into production as February 2013, it was felt during a screening that the song did not work and was removed. It would not be put back into the final film until quite close to its November release date. I’m sure many viewers are pleased that this decision was made[7].

The next song in the movie is “For the First Time in Forever”, sung by Kristen Bell and Idina Menzel. I particularly like the change in tone when Elsa begins to sing about her fears for the day, after Anna has been focused on how excited she is about it. It also showcases Anna’s funny, quirky personality, which is great. During this scene, there is a brief cameo of Rapunzel and Flynn entering the gates of Arendelle[8]. My favourite song in the whole soundtrack is “For the First Time in Forever (Reprise)”, when Anna is trying to calm Elsa down after she tells her Arendelle is completely frozen. Again, I like the “duelling voices” of the two, and Elsa’s final high note. Menzel and Bell’s voices blend very well together.

I am less enthusiastic about “Love Is an Open Door”, the customary romantic Disney duet, between Anna and Hans, and Olaf’s showtune of “In Summer”. They are catchy enough, with some memorable and funny lines, but I don’t love them. “Love Is an Open Door” does fit with the parody of princess relationships that Frozen makes fun of, though, so it is useful for that purpose; it makes you think you’re watching a normal Disney fairy tale film, but after this point, everything you thought was going to happen, i.e., Hans and Anna getting married and living happily ever after, is turned upside down. For “In Summer”, as cute as Olaf is with his dreams of summer, I don’t think it adds much to the film; it seems like it was added to give Josh Gad a chance to showcase his vocal talents – which are very good.

But there are three songs in Frozen that I think aren’t relevant to the story and I really don’t like. One of those is the first song: “Frozen Heart”, performed by the ice harvesters. I just don’t think this song or opening sequence is needed for the story and I’m not sure why it’s here: to add to the atmosphere of Norway and showcase the location, maybe? It foreshadows Anna’s “frozen heart”? I don’t know, but I feel like the movie could start from the point where Anna is waking Elsa up and it wouldn’t make any difference to the plot! Another one I don’t like is “Fixer Upper” from the trolls. It’s not that the song isn’t funny, but when the movie is about to take such a serious turn, it doesn’t feel like it fits well, as after this very upbeat, happy song, Anna is told she could die soon, and it was her sister’s fault… It’s just a bit strange. But the worst song for me is “Reindeer (s) Are Better Than People”, sung by Jonathan Groff as Kristoff (and Sven). It’s just strange and I don’t find it very funny – though I bet kids love it. It seems like it was only included so we could hear Groff’s singing voice, which, again, is very good – I’ve heard him on the Spring Awakening musical soundtrack – but I don’t think the song adds anything.

The score is composed by Christophe Beck, who has composed scores for other Disney movies such as The Muppets (2011) and Muppets Most Wanted (2014), as well as Frozen II (2019), and other films such as Trolls (2016) and The Hangover Trilogy (2009-13). Beck infused Norwegian musical influences into his score, which was recorded by an 80-piece orchestra, with 32 vocalists, including native Norwegian Christine Hals, who provided the authentic herding calls, or “kulning”, within some of the score’s tracks[9].

There a few instrumental pieces within the score that standout for me.  One of those is “Vuelie”, which features the vocal talents of Cantus, a Norwegian women’s choir. This is heard during the opening of the film, as the title card comes on. I love it; I think’s it’s so calming and relaxing, and the vocals are brilliant. Another is “Heimr Àrnadalr”, which is sung during Elsa’s Coronation; it sounds just like a Coronation piece. I hadn’t really noticed it until I re-watched the movie this week. I’m sad I’ve missed out on it for years. And obviously as I like “Vuelie”, I would like “The Great Thaw”, as it is a reprise of “Vuelie”. I tend to like the instrumentals that play during most Disney “finale” or transformation scenes!

Overall, Frozen has a good soundtrack and even the songs I don’t like are memorable and get stuck in my head often, which is actually really annoying! The album debuted at number 18 on the Billboard 200 chart, and topped the Billboard Album chart for thirteen non-consecutive weeks. It also peaked at number 1 on the UK Compilation Albums and UK Soundtrack Albums charts, as well as the Australian Albums, Canadian Albums, Chinese Albums, Irish Compilations, Japanese Albums and New Zealand Albums charts!

RECEPTION

Some buzz for Frozen was created via previews of the film, including Idina Menzel singing “Let It Go”, at the 2013 D23 Expo, as well as a teaser trailer being release in June 2013 of Olaf and Sven chasing Olaf’s carrot nose around on a frozen lake. Some of this animation was then used in the epilogue sequence of the final film. Merchandise lines were also released in early November, prior to the movie’s release, as well as character greetings being set up in Disneyland, Walt Disney World and Disneyland Paris. Segments from Frozen were added to their respective nighttime shows at the time: World of Color: Winter Dreams, Celebrate the Magic, and Disney Dreams! Of Christmas Show[10].

Frozen had its premiere at the El Capitan Theater in Los Angeles on 19th November 2013. A 5-day limited release in select theatres began on 22nd November 2013, before the film’s wide release on 27th November 2013. Frozen was released alongside the short Get a Horse! (2013), a Mickey Mouse short reminiscent of the traditional cartoons of Walt Disney’s era, featuring a mixture of black-and-white and colour animation, characters from the late 1920s Mickey Mouse cartoons, and even Walt Disney as the voice of Mickey Mouse.

Another fun fact. If you watch all of the End Credits, you can read this odd disclaimer: “The views and opinions expressed by Kristoff in the film that all men eat their own boogers are solely his own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of the Walt Disney Company or the filmmakers.”[11] Weird, right?

Frozen received critical acclaim, with its storyline, mixing traditional fairy tale themes with modern themes of female empowerment, its animation and its songs being particularly praised. Its universe appeal and message of accepting yourself are other points that were mentioned. Some critics did, however, feel it was slightly hypocritical to include so many male supporting characters in a movie that should’ve been focused on its two female leads; I personally don’t agree with this comment, but it shows the differing opinions. However, I do agree that Anna and Elsa were designed with that typical Disney “perfect princess” body type, i.e., tiny waist, skinny build, long legs. This is in contrast to the female empowerment message, and their more modern attitudes and behaviours. It’s not a great message to be sending out to children, that to be considered as “pretty as a princess”, you must be slim and have massive eyes, but this used to be the standard Disney body shape for the majority of their female protagonists. Disney has begun to make their female leads much more natural and diverse in their sizing in their more recent movie releases.

During awards season, to go alongside its two Oscars for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Song, “Let It Go”, Frozen won numerous other awards, including Outstanding Achievement for Directing, Music, Production Design, and Voice Acting, for Josh Gad as Olaf, at the Annie Awards; the BAFTA for Best Animated Film; the Critics’ Choice Movie Awards for Best Animated Feature and Best Song; the Golden Globe for Best Animated Feature Film; the Saturn Award for Best Animated Film; and the Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards for Favorite Animated Movie.

LEGACY

After the movie’s release, Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez returned to the world of Frozen to write a musical number with Josh Gad, Jonathan Groff and Kristen Bell called “The Making of Frozen”. The music video took place inside the Disney Animation Building and was directed by Kenny Ortega, who directed the High School Musical trilogy (2006-08). It was added as a bonus feature on the DVD and Blu-Ray where I stupidly believed it was an actual behind-the-scenes documentary. Imagine how disappointed I was! But there was a documentary about the making of the movie, a special released on ABC in September 2014, which was interesting. Towards the end of the television special, those who worked on the film discussed the mania around Frozen, mostly around the endless social media buzz. They also previewed a scene from Big Hero 6 (2014), where I discovered that Chris Williams, one of the directors on Big Hero 6, actually voiced the part of the upbeat shopkeeper in Frozen, Oaken[12]. The show also announced a sequel short to Frozen, Frozen Fever (2015). It was released alongside the theatrical release of Cinderella (2015).

This leads me to Frozen’s screen spin-offs. Frozen Fever (2015) followed on one year after the events of the first movie, detailing Elsa’s celebrations for Anna’s birthday, though the festivities are halted by Elsa’s sudden cold, whereby her sneezes result in “snowgies”, little snowmen, being created! I like the specially written song, “Making Today a Perfect Day”, written by Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez. The cameo of Hans at the end being hit by a giant snowball is also very funny! Following on from that, in 2017, the 20-minute short film Olaf’s Frozen Adventure was released in 3D alongside some theatrical screenings of Pixar’s Coco (2017). This is my favourite of the Frozen spin-offs, and follows Olaf as he tries to find holiday traditions that Anna and Elsa might like to participate in, since they don’t have any of their own due to their isolated childhoods. When all looks lost, with all of Olaf’s well-thought-out plans being destroyed by fire, wolves and getting lost, the residents of Arendelle all go out to look for him. They find him and celebrate the holidays all together, revealing that Olaf was the girls’ holiday tradition. The soundtrack here is particularly great, especially the songs “Ring in the Season” and “When We’re Together”, which can be heard as part of some Frozen Holiday Season shows at the Disney Parks. The four original songs in the short film were written by Elyssa Samsel and Kate Anderson. Christophe Beck returned to compose the score. It was directed by Kevin Deters and Stevie Wermers, both of whom directed the Prep & Landing short films (2009-11).

A sing-along edition of Frozen was also released in 2014. As well as this, Frozen II was of course released in 2019, and a Frozen 3 is apparently in the works too. Finally on screen, the characters from Frozen – Anna, Elsa and Kristoff – were added to the first half of Season 4 of ABC’s series Once Upon a Time (2011-18) in 2014. It’s a very interesting storyline, including elements from Frozen and The Snow Queen tale, but with the usual twist.

Frozen has also been the basis of multiple video games and board games, books and comics, as well as multiple merchandise lines. The story of Frozen has also been included within Disney on Ice, with a combined Frozen & Encanto show debuting in 2022, and a Broadway musical of the show premiered in 2018. The West End production opened in September 2021, but other international versions and tours have been ongoing since 2020, like in Australia, Japan, Germany and Norway. It was announced at the D23 Expo in 2024 that the on-stage musical of Frozen, starring Samantha Barks as Elsa, will be available to stream on Disney+ sometime in 2025.

So, to the Disney Parks. Now, there is a lot of Frozen-related and inspired attractions, shows and entertainment here, so I will not be going into huge amounts of detail on each area, because there is too much!

In September 2014, Disney announced that Maelstrom, the attraction housed within the Norway pavilion of Epcot at Walt Disney World would be closing to make way for a new attraction titled Frozen Ever After, which follows guests on a summer snow day journey through the forest, past trolls and up the North Mountain to visit Elsa in her ice palace. It features characters from Frozen and the snowgies from Frozen Fever (2015). New lyrics were created based on the original Frozen songs and the voice cast returned. Frozen Ever After opened on 21st June 2016, after much outcry from Epcot fans who felt the true meaning of Epcot was being lost forever with all these “IP” inclusions and loses the meaning of World Showcase. It is correct that Frozen is not set in Norway specially, but was only inspired by the country and its landscapes, so I can see both sides of the argument, for and against the ride[13]. But I really like the ride, and as it follows the same track as Maelstrom, the original attraction has not been lost completely; the original puffins also remain in the ride.

Entire Frozen-themed lands have, or will soon be opening at Hong Kong Disneyland, Tokyo Disneyland, and Disneyland Paris. Hong Kong’s World of Frozen opened on 20th November 2023, with Wandering Oaken’s Sliding Sleighs, an exclusive ride to Hong Kong Disneyland, at least for now, and Frozen Ever After, similar to Epcot’s ride being the primary attractions there. At Tokyo Disneyland as part of their Fantasy Springs expansion which opened in June 2024, as well as a recreation of Arendelle village and the castle, there are two food outlets: a snack stand named Oaken’s OK Foods, and the quick-service restaurant Royal Banquet of Arendelle located inside Arendelle Castle. The most exciting part of the Frozen land, though, is the ride Anna and Elsa’s Frozen Journey. It is not a copy of Frozen Ever After, but instead takes guests through the events of the movie and contains some very complex and impressive animatronics. Another Frozen land will be built for Disney Adventure World, the re-imagined Walt Disney Studios Park, at Disneyland Paris named World of Frozen, which is due to open in 2026. Also at Disneyland Paris, but in the main park, a section of their version of the Storybook Land Canal Boats attraction, Le Pays des Contes de Fées, was changed to include a miniature version of Arendelle.

Another Frozen-themed attraction to be based at multiple Disney Parks is For the First Time in Forever: A Frozen Sing-Along Celebration. It debuted at Disney’s Hollywood Studios at Walt Disney World in 2014 as part of their Frozen Summer Fun event, before moving to its permanent location within the Hyperion Theater in Echo Lake in June 2015. It replaced the former The American Idol Experience show.  There is also currently a version of the show, Frozen: A Sing-Along Celebration, at Shanghai Disneyland, since 2016. Both shows feature a mix of clips from the movie, along with singalong subtitles, and live performers. A similar concept, but without specific singalong instructions, can be seen at Disneyland Paris, under the name Frozen: A Musical Invitation. Other singalong shows existed at Disney California Adventure and Hong Kong Disneyland but these were short-lived. There was Frozen – Live at the Hyperion, an hour-long Broadway-style show, detailing the story of Frozen at Disney California Adventure from 2016 to 2020 though.

In terms of meet-and-greets, some Disney Parks have set up permanent meet-and-greet locations. At Walt Disney World, originally Anna and Elsa were resident princesses at Princess Fairytale Hall, until 2016 when they were then moved to their own custom-built location, Royal Sommerhus at the Norway pavilion in Epcot. At Disney California Adventure, the two can be seen at Anna & Elsa’s Royal Welcome location. It would seem at Hong Kong Disneyland, Tokyo Disneyland, and Shanghai Disneyland, that the two are likely to appear at times around the castle areas. For Olaf, he has a specific meet-and-greet location at Disneyland Paris simply called Meet ‘n’ Greet Olaf at Walt Disney Studios Park, and at Disney’s Hollywood Studios at Celebrity Spotlight, near to the singalong show location.

For the men of Frozen, they are not as easy to find at the Disney Parks. Kristoff used to be available for meet-and-greets, with him appearing in 2017 at both Walt Disney World and at Disneyland for a limited time, alongside Olaf generally. In 2021, he was spotted with Sven meeting and greeting at Animation Celebration, where the Frozen show is held, at Disneyland Paris. Hans is a little bit easier to find, at least over on the West Coast, as he made his debut there during the Disney Merriest Nites event at Disneyland in 2021. He was seen more recently in June 2023 at Character Close-Up, or Anna and Elsa’s Royal Welcome. Hans was also a part of the villains’ line-up at the Oogie Boogie Bash Halloween event. Hopefully, Hans will become a part of other Halloween events across all the Disney Parks. But if you don’t get to see your favourite Frozen character in person, they are likely to be featured on parade floats, including ones during the holiday season. Clips and songs from the movie can also be seen and heard during most Disney Parks’ nighttime shows or projection shows.

A stage show that features Olaf quite heavily is Mickey and the Wondrous Book at Hong Kong Disneyland and Mickey’s Storybook Adventure at Shanghai Disneyland. These are live theatre shows, featuring Disney songs and appearances by many Disney characters. There are Frozen-themed hotel suites available to book at the Hong Kong Disneyland Hotel, and Anna and Elsa makeover packages are available for little princesses at the Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boutique locations. I also learnt that Tike’s Peak, the children’s area of Walt Disney World’s Blizzard Beach waterpark, has been themed to Frozen. It features figures of Olaf and the snowgies in one location, and young Anna and Elsa in an igloo fortress. I had no idea about this.

On the Disney Cruise Line, you can experience a live stage show retelling the story of Frozen on the Disney Destiny, Wonder, and Fantasy ships with the show Frozen, A Musical Spectacular, and the Enchanted Summer Restaurant on the Disney Adventure is a buffet-style restaurant with one room themed to Frozen. The other is themed to Tangled. On a final note around Disney Entertainment, I will also just say thatthere have been special Frozen-themed events previously, general and ticketed over the years.

FINAL THOUGHTS

Frozen became one of the most popular and beloved Disney animated movies of all time. After only ten years, it still makes an impact and is still an easy franchise to choose for spin-offs, merchandise, and theme park expansion. Since its release, Frozen is no longer the highest-grossing animated film, but is now fourth, having been beaten by The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023); its own sequel Frozen II (2019); and then the “live-action” remake, The Lion King (2019). But Frozen kept its title for six years. It has also now fallen to 21st on the list of highest grossing films ever; that is still a big deal for a Disney animated film.

Not since The Lion King (1994) had a Disney animated movie created such hype. It has been quite a crazy ride for the film. Though this has made me less enthusiastic about Frozen than I perhaps might have been, I can’t help but like it anyway. Not as much as some people, but I’m a-ok with the Frozen franchise expanding a little bit more.

If you can’t stand Frozen, I’d keep away from the movies and the theme parks for a very long time. Otherwise, you might want to get onboard and “let it go”, because Frozen isn’t going anywhere any time soon. Sorry!


REFERENCES

[1] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘Frozen (2013)’, pp. 157-160.

[2] Credit: Disney, The Story of Frozen: Making A Disney Animated Classic (2014).

[3] Credit: Mari Ness, ‘Fairy Tale Subversion: Hans Christian Andersen’s “The Snow Queen”, Tor.com, 23rd June 2016.

[4] Credit Jim Korkis, ‘Jim’s Attic – Snow Queen Ride’, AllEars.net, 7th May 2014.

[5] Credit: Mark Harrison, ‘Chris Buck and Jennifer Lee interview: on making Frozen’, DenofGeek.com, 5th December 2013.

[6] Credit: Disney, “Deleted Scenes”, from Frozen (2013), Blu-Ray 2-Movie Collection (2020).

[7] Credit: Disney, The Story of Frozen: Making A Disney Animated Classic (2014).

[8] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘Frozen (2013)’, pp. 157-160.

[9] Credit: Jim Fanning, The Disney Book: A Celebration of the World of Disney (2016), ‘Melting Hearts’, pp. 110-113.

[10] Credit: Jennifer Fickley-Baker, ‘This Week in Disney Parks Photos: ‘Frozen’ Fun Debuts at Disney Parks’, DisneyParks.com, 23rd November 2013.

[11] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘Frozen (2013)’, pp. 157-160.

[12] Credit: Disney, The Story of Frozen: Making A Disney Animated Classic (2014).

[13] Credit: Jim Korkis, ‘A Friday Visit with Jim Korkis: Frozen Ever After and Norway’, YourFirstVisit.net, date unknown.

#7 The Three Caballeros (1944)

  1. BACKGROUND
  2. STORY #1: AVES RARAS/THE COLD-BLOODED PENGUIN
  3. STORY #2: THE FLYING GAUCHITO
  4. STORY #3: BAÍA
  5. STORY #4: LAS POSADAS
  6. STORY #5: MEXICO
  7. STORY #6: YOU BELONG TO MY HEART
  8. STORY #7: DONALD’S SURREAL REVERIE
  9. PRODUCTION
  10. RECEPTION
  11. LEGACY
  12. FINAL THOUGHTS
  13. REFERENCES

BACKGROUND

After the modest success that Saludos Amigos (1942) achieved in the United States, as well as its more enthusiastic response in South America, it was decided that the movie should have a sequel, to further cement relations between the Americas.

As only a few countries, namely Bolivia, Chile, Argentina and Brazil, were featured in Saludos Amigos, by creating another movie with the same intentions and the same format, the Disney Studios could explore more Latin American countries. Thus, The Three Caballeros was created, with this movie having a major focus on Mexico, as well as returning to Argentina and Brazil, with some brief mentions of Venezuela, Uruguay etc.

During production on The Three Caballeros, the United States of America was formally involved in World War II, which made the film all the more important for overall relations between South, Central and North America.

The Three Caballeros is the first Disney Animated Classic to be a sequel, and also follows the “package feature” format, although not quite as much as Saludos Amigos. Though it has more of a cohesive plot, as in more material linking the different sections together, The Three Caballeros can still be considered asseven separate sequences.

These seven sections are:

  1. “Aves Raras/The Cold-Blooded Penguin”
  2. “The Flying Gauchito”
  3. “Baía”
  4. “Las Posadas”
  5. “Mexico: Pátzcuaro, Veracruz and Acapulco”
  6. “You Belong to My Heart”
  7. “Donald’s Surreal Reverie”

I did think I liked The Three Caballeros before re-watching, and I still do, for the most part. I will say that certain sections did run on too long for me, such as “Baía”, where it felt like the dancing was never going to stop! I also felt that the Mexico beach sequence, with Donald Duck chasing lots of women around, got a bit samey after a while. But I was very happy to find that there was not as much narration here as in Saludos Amigos, and it also avoided using any of the travel footage that was abundant in the previous movie.

STORY #1: AVES RARAS/THE COLD-BLOODED PENGUIN

The Three Caballeros begins with the standard Opening Credits, showing concept art and sketches of characters and backgrounds which will appear in the upcoming animated sequences. A shortened version of the title song “The Three Caballeros” plays during the Opening Credits as well. It is performed by the Disney Chorus in this case, but will be performed later on in full by the actual Three Caballeros.

After this, we see that Donald has received a huge wrapped box. He reads the tag, written in Spanish, which basically says it is a present from his friends in Latin America for his birthday on Friday the 13th. A month is not given, however, in the 1949 Disney short “Donald’s Happy Birthday”, Donald’s birthday is stated as 13th March. The only Friday 13th March around this time was in 1942, not 1944 or even 1945 when the movie was released in South America and the United States. It is supposedly meant to refer to the bad luck that Donald constantly encounters. But it doesn’t matter anyway, because later, Disney officially decided that Donald Duck’s birthday is on 9th June, referencing his Disney debut in the short “The Wise Little Hen”, which was officially released on 9th June 1934. Clarence Nash continues to reprise his voice role as Donald Duck in The Three Caballeros.

Anyway, Donald opens this big box and finds three wrapped presents inside. He opens the first one, which is a projector, a screen, and rolls of film. He assembles it together and a film called “Aves Raras”, which translates to “Strange Birds”, begins to play. The first part of this film tells the story of “The Cold-Blooded Penguin”. The narrator for “Aves Raras” passes over story-telling duties to “Professor” Holloway, or Sterling Holloway, voice of The Cheshire Cat and Winnie-the-Pooh amongst many others. This “cold-blooded” penguin is called Pablo, and unlike the other penguins in the South Pole, Pablo likes to stay warm and dreams of moving away and living on a beach somewhere. He keeps attempting to leave the South Pole, but never makes it very far, either because he’s gotten too cold or because his methods of staying warm on the journey melt the ice he’s walking on! In the end, Pablo makes a “boat”; he actually just cuts a boat shape out of the iceberg his igloo resides on – but it means he can keep all his belongings with him. He travels through the Straits of Magellan, past Robinson Crusoe’s Island, past Viña del Mar, on the coast of Chile, moves through Lima, Peru, and finally ends up at the Galápagos Islands, though his “boat” melts in the warmer waters, causing Pablo to use his bathtub to paddle over to land. Though Pablo seems to be in paradise, sometimes, he can’t stop thinking about home in the South Pole!

After this story, the “Aves Raras” film continues, which shows many more exceptional birds from areas such as Venezuela, Paraguay, and Colombia. The birds that are mentioned include toucans, flamingos, and the eccentric Aracuan bird, who comes out of the screen to shake Donald’s hand. He is so-named because of the peculiar song that he sings. The Aracuan bird is crazy and always up to mischief. Not only does he appear in The Three Caballeros, but he also appears in the short sequence “Blame It on the Samba”, featuring Donald Duck and José Carioca, in Melody Time (1948), as well as in the short Clown of the Jungle, released in 1947. The “voice” of the Aracuan bird is provided by Pinto Colvig, the original voice performer for Goofy. Frank Graham is the narrator in this section of the film; he had previously narrated numerous other shorts for Disney, such as Chicken Little (1943), as well as for other studios, like Warner Bros, during the 1940s.

STORY #2: THE FLYING GAUCHITO

After this, a different movie is played on the projector: “The Flying Gauchito”, which is narrated by Fred Shields, who narrated all of Saludos Amigos. The story is told by the gauchito, who remains nameless, as an adult. The young boy likes to dress as a gaucho and go hunting for Condor birds in the Andes mountains. One day, he sees a nest, but as he waits for a bird to fly out, he is shocked to see a donkey fly out of it instead! The gauchito throws bolas at it, to try and capture it, but the donkey escapes. He eventually manages to catch it and rides on the back of the flying donkey. He decides to train the donkey to race and teaches him new tricks every day. It is soon Race Day in town, which is full of fiesta-spirit. Gauchito and Burrito get ready to race alongside the others, with the prize money standing at 1,000 pesos. After a very bad start, and a lack of speed, where the two trail further and further behind the others, Gauchito unties Burrito’s wings and they fly down the track so fast that they pass everyone. However, it is soon clear to the others that Gauchito has cheated by using a donkey that can fly, but before they can be punished, Burrito flies up high into the sky, with Gauchito still hanging on to him. The narrator says neither were ever seen again – but he’s laughing as he says it, so it can’t be a sinister end…I don’t think.

After returning from the South American tour in October 1941, one of the first stories to be developed was about a little gaucho, with a whole series about the character also being considered. The gaucho was originally going to be named Panchito, however, as the name “Panchito” was used for someone else, the gauchito ended up not having a name; he doesn’t even get to speak! Frank Thomas was the primary artist on Gauchito, having had much experience of drawing young boys for the feature film Pinocchio (1939). Many story ideas were devised for this gauchito segment, including one around an ostrich laying a golden egg, another about a singing horse, and another about magical bolas, however, as horse racing was big in the cities as well as the rural areas of the Pampas, they decided to base their “gauchito” story on that premise. A flying donkey added a twist to the story. The short was titled “The Winged Donkey” and was meant to appear in Saludos Amigos, but it was developed further and added to The Three Caballeros. For the character of Burrito, the donkey, the animators found that the characters of the “Pastoral Symphony” segment of Fantasia (1940) were popular with the people of Argentina, as the Disney artists were asked to drew these characters for them. Burrito ended up being a combination of the baby Pegasus and the comic donkey unicorn in that Fantasia scene. Ollie Johnston and Eric Larson both animated scenes of the flying donkey[1].

Of the two projected films, I definitely like “The Cold-Blooded Penguin” the best; Pablo is a cute penguin and I agree that the South Pole is much too cold for him; it’s better to move somewhere warmer, away from all that ice and snow! I’m wasn’t too interested in “The Flying Gauchito”, but it thankfully wasn’t too long, so I didn’t get bored watching it.

STORY #3: BAÍA

Next, Donald’s second present begins to dance, so he opens it up quickly, to find a book about Brazil. The book opens up to find a sambaing José Carioca inside, reuniting the two from their earlier escapades in Saludos Amigos.  Brazilian musician, José Oliviera, returns to reprise his voice role as José Carioca. After some brief introductions, and an appearance by the annoying Aracuan bird who rudely interrupts, José starts to tell Donald about Baía, or Bahia, one of the states of Brazil, situated on the Eastern Coast of the country. The segment moves into beautifully painted landscapes of the area, with some animated pieces of a boat and two doves flying, as the sun begins to set in the area, bathing everything in the colours of orange, purple and pink. This scene is accompanied by the calming song, “Baía”. The melody is based on the Brazilian song “Na Baixa do Sapateiro” written by Ary Barroso and first released in 1938. Another of Barroso’s songs, “Aquarela do Brasil”, featured in Saludos Amigos. New English lyrics were written for “Baía” by Ray Gilbert, who contributed lyrics to many Disney songs, and co-wrote the Academy Award winning song “Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah” from Song of the South (1946). “Baía” was performed by Nestor Amaral. I really like this part of the sequence, especially the song.

José then begins to sing to Donald, telling him he must go with him to Baía, right now. The song “Have You Been to Bahia”, which was written by Dorival Caymmi and originally released in 1941, is used, translated into English for the most part, though some of it is sung in its original Portuguese. The book then opens to a small train. Donald and José board the train and reach Baía, after the Aracuan bird tries to mess with the journey by drawing additional train tracks, which splits up the train carriages, though they do reassemble themselves in the end. The book flips its pages to the streets of Baía; Donald and José step inside. The music “Pandeiro & Flute”, originally written by Benedito Lacerda, is played here. This train sequence was animated from concept art created by Mary Blair, known for her vivid, bright colour palettes and bold stylisation. She had been invited on the tour of South America alongside her husband[2].

On the streets of Baía, the duo hears a woman singing; she is called Yaya. The live-action woman dances and flirts with the musicians and dancers who appear and surround her, but she also interacts with Donald and José, teasing Donald with a kiss, after Donald become quite jealous of Yaya’s relationships with some of the musicians! Aurora Miranda, sister of well-known Brazilian singer Carmen Miranda, performs as Yaya, also singing her song, “Os Quindins de Yayá”, which was again written by Ary Barroso. It was first released in 1941. The song was left in its original Portuguese. Though I enjoyed the dancing and seeing animated Donald and José’s interactions with the live-action Yaya, making this one of the first Disney theatrical releases to use this hybrid style, I felt the section went on for far too long; I lost interest for probably the last five minutes of it. I’m not a big fan of the song either.

After the dance, the book closes, leaving Donald and José to pull themselves out of it. They also have to magic themselves back to their normal sizes, as they shrunk down to get into the book. Finally, the third and final gift is opened – and what comes out of it?! A yelling, gun-shooting rooster! Yes, it’s Panchito. He gives José and Donald a sombrero each and begins to sing the title song, “The Three Caballeros”. It’s quite presumptuous really; he hasn’t even told the other two his name, it is never spoken in the film; they don’t know him and yet, he gets them to form a band with him – what if they didn’t want to? Well, I guess it didn’t matter, because the three look very happy together, dancing and singing, playing instruments, talking about women. This song bases its melody on the Mexican song “Ay, Jalisco, no te rajes!”, a Mexican song composed by Manuel Esperón. It was originally released in 1941 for the film of the same name. Walt Disney personally asked Esperón to participate in the movie. Ray Gilbert wrote new English lyrics for the song. It was performed, predominantly, by nightclub singer Joaquin Garay as Panchito Pistoles, the surname referring to Panchito’s love of guns, which he does not actually use again after his initial introductory scene. Joaquin Garay son’s played Paco in the 1980 Disney live-action film, Herbie Goes Bananas.

“The Three Caballeros” song is lots of fun, and is probably the best scene in the whole film; it’s quite an introduction to Panchito as well! Panchito’s full name is not just Panchito Pistoles, but is actually Panchito Romero Miguel Junipero Francisco Quintero González III. The incredibly long name is a reference to Spanish-speaking families who historically have very long names, as they seek to celebrate and honour their family history. According to Panchito’s song “My Name is Panchito”, which appears in the House of Mouse episode titled “Not So Goofy”, he does not only have relatives in Mexico, but also in Peru, Brazil, El Salvador and Dallas, Texas. As early as 1942, Walt Disney had the idea of a little Mexican rooster explaining the custom of “Las Posadas” in film. The bird was to be called Señor Gallito, but the character then became a much bigger, louder idea and morphed into Panchito, stealing his name from little Gauchito, who ended up nameless. Apparently, Alex Buelna, Head of the Mexican Department of Tourism, wrote to Walt Disney and asked for the rooster to be more manly to represent the “he-men” of Mexico, so I guess we can thank him for making Panchito the crazy, loud rooster that he is! Animator Ward Kimball handled the animation for Panchito and the staging of their song, which was a last-minute addition to the film, in order to have a song to represent the title of the film. Walt supposedly loved the scene, as did Ward Kimball, who particularly enjoyed the animation of José and Donald trying to distract or interrupt Panchito as he holds his long high note at the end of the song[3]!

STORY #4: LAS POSADAS

After this, a piñata appears, which Panchito tells Donald is full of surprises. Panchito tells the others of the custom of “Las Posadas” in Mexico, where in the nine days leading up to Christmas, children will recreate the journey of Mary and Joseph seeking shelter. The children plea for shelter at people’s houses, but always receive the reply of “no posada”, meaning “no shelter”. They finally reach a friendly house, which does provide shelter, where they celebrate with a feast and the breaking of a piñata. This scene is not animated, but shows artwork depicting this custom. It’s a short, but interesting, scene. This leads in to Donald trying to break his piñata, though he is tricked by José and Panchito who pull it up and down so Donald can’t find it! But eventually, he does and out spills confetti, pots, toys, including one very angry toy bull, and another book, this time all about Mexico.

STORY #5: MEXICO

Panchito tells a brief history of Mexico, its flag, and the building of Mexico City. Images and sketches of Mexico are then shown, accompanied by the song “México” sung by Colombian baritone Carlos Ramírez. It is the only song in the film to be completely original, and was composed by Charles Wolcott, who wrote and directed music for many of Disney’s 1940s film releases, with lyrics by Ray Gilbert. I quite like this song, not as much as “Baía”, but it is nice. The song was later used in the Pluto short, Pluto’s Blue Note (1947).

Then, the trio take a tour of Mexico via a magical sarape, or flying carpet. Some of the sarape work was animated from concept art designed by Mary Blair. They go into the book and traverse through live-action footage of the areas. At Pátzcuaro, we see fisherman on their boats, before seeing traditional Mexican dances. In Veracruz, we see more dancing, with Donald asking to dance with one of the local women, and then they get to Acapulco beach, where Donald precedes to ogle at and chase the local women in their swimsuits…which is fine, apparently, because Donald is a duck, and a Disney one at that, so what harm can he do? Though the aerial live-action shots of Acapulco beach were photographed, the scene of Donald chasing women on the beach was actually filmed on the Disney Studio parking lot, which was covered in sand, during January and February 1944[4]. This section is another one that gets a bit samey, lots of dancing and women yet again!

STORY #6: YOU BELONG TO MY HEART

Next, we move on to talk about the nightlife of Mexico City through the book again; an aerial shot of the city lit up at night is shown. Then, in a picture of stars, Mexican singer Dora Luz sings the song “You Belong to My Heart”. The song is based on the melody of Mexican song “Solamente una vez”, written by Agustín Lara, with new English lyrics written by Ray Gilbert. “You Belong to My Heart” was later used in the Pluto short, Pluto’s Blue Note (1947). It was also covered by other well-known singers such as Elvis Presley, Bing Crosby, and Engelbert Humperdinck. Donald goes crazy for this singer, and begins to dreamily dance over an animated sky. Animated lips kiss Donald as the song ends, leading to his “surreal reverie”, where he is “drunk on love”. This is a similar concept to the “Pink Elephants on Parade” sequence that appears in Dumbo (1941), though Dumbo is actually drunk.

STORY #7: DONALD’S SURREAL REVERIE

Donald starts to see José and Panchito and the singer in different forms, like flowers. Soon, more and more women start to enter this weird, trippy vision. As he begins to calm down, a new girl appears, dressed as a flower, then a cowgirl, and starts dancing. This woman is Mexican actress and dancer Carmen Molina. Lots of dancing cacti also randomly show up. “La Zandunga”, a traditional Mexican song believed to have originated in Andalusia, plays during the majority of this scene. It was arranged here by Charles Wolcott. The cacti dance scene uses the instrumental “Jesusita en Chihuahua”, written in 1916 by Quirino Mendoza y Cortés. These are definitely not my favourite songs; I don’t like how “La Zandunga” sounds at all, sounding quite tinny with its choice of instruments. Nor do I like the scene much; it’s far too weird and abstract for me!

Finally, the film ends as José and Panchito come out of a trumpet, shortly followed by Donald inside the toy bull from earlier. He is being teased by Panchito, as José lights up firecrackers which have been tied to the tail of the bull. The bull begins to light up and Donald is released from it. He then headbutts the bull, causing it to explode into a huge fireworks display. The Disney Chorus from earlier sings a reprise of “The Three Caballeros”, as the three new friends watch the display together.

PRODUCTION

After the US formally joined World War II at the end of 1941, the Disney Studios were asked by the government to make propaganda films for the military and the American public. These tended to be anti-German or anti-Japanese in nature, with one of the more infamous ones being Der Fuehrer’s Face (1943), which starred Donald Duck. Some animators had left the Studios at this time to join the Armed Forces. All of these things considered meant that “big budget” animation projects were temporarily off the table. But, as Saludos Amigos (1942) was popular enough, and since the war meant co-operation across the whole continent was still massively important to the US government, a sequel to it was pushed into production. This became The Three Caballeros. The movie is quite experimental in nature, with its mixture of live-action footage and animated material, and its incredibly surreal and abstract animation towards the end of the film. This is perhaps due to the fact that the Disney artists who remained at the studio were glad of an opportunity to work on something a bit more interesting than the same types of propaganda shorts!

Furthermore, this new movie looked to explore different countries that the Disney artists had seen during the tour of South America in 1941 but had not yet developed animation for. In actual fact, Brazil would once again feature heavily in The Three Caballeros, as it did in Saludos Amigos (1942), and the only “new” country to have much focus in this film is Mexico. Yet the Disney artists did also explore Ecuador, Uruguay, Chile and Guatemala, as can be seen in the travel documentary films South of the Border with Disney (1942) and Walt & El Grupo (2008). But they did visit Mexico, which was useful for The Three Caballeros. In Mexico, they saw the floating gardens of Mexico City with their boats covered in flowers. The Disney team also experienced Mariachi music, the food and colours of Mexico, as well as the art and pottery of Guadalajara and places like that[5]. The Disney Studio artists again visited Mexico from late 1942 to early 1943, in order to audition Mexican performers for the movie and make further sketches and artwork to use as reference material. A further trip was taken in July 1943.

RECEPTION

The Three Caballeros held its world premiere in Mexico City on 21st December 1944, where Carmen Molina and Dora Luz appeared onstage. The movie was later released in the US on 3rd February 1945[6]. The movie received mixed reviews on its release, with many confused by the more surreal, “flashy” animation at times, stating that it seemed to be a case of “style over substance”. Some even commented on Donald’s distasteful behaviour, of him running around after women, thinking it was suggestive and inappropriate for Disney. That still seems to be something that is discussed by those who have watched The Three Caballeros in contemporary times! But the abstract art is something that has been viewed more kindly by audiences of today, though it is not to my taste.

The Three Caballeros was later released as a television special called A Present for Donald, which aired on 22nd December 1954. It was an edited version of The Three Caballeros, with some of the changes being that instead of the presents being for Donald’s birthday, they were actually Christmas presents, and instead of “The End” being spelled out in fireworks in the final shot, they spelled “Merry Christmas” for this special.

In 1977, The Three Caballeros was re-released in theatres, however, the runtime was cut from around seventy minutes to forty, meaning that it was edited significantly, with most of the segments of the film receiving cuts. The film was re-released due to its increased popularity and interest in its “psychedelic imagery” that appears mostly in “Donald’s Surreal Reverie”. Alice in Wonderland (1951) received similar attention from audiences around this time for similar reasons.

Some of the sections of the film were released either as standalone shorts, or released within compilation television episodes or VHS tapes, though it was more difficult to do this, unlike with other “package features”, like Saludos Amigos (1942) or Make Mine Music (1946), since The Three Caballeros has more of a cohesive plot and is much less “episodic” than the others. “The Flying Gauchito” was released as a standalone short in 1955, with “Las Posadas” being released on compilation VHS tapes of Christmas stories, and “The Cold-Blooded Penguin” appearing in television compilation episodes in the 1970s and 1980s, which included an episode of The Wonderful World of Disney (1969-79).

As is customary for the majority of Disney films, it was, of course, released on VHS and DVD for home viewing. It was first released on Blu-Ray for its 75th Anniversary in 2018. The Three Caballeros was also released on Disney+.

LEGACY

There were plans for a third film in this Latin American-based movie set, to be named Cuban Carnival; obviously heavily based around Cuba. After the release of Saludos Amigos, many complaints came in from the people of Cuba, Venezuela, and other countries that had not been represented in the movie via a dedicated cartoon, though some individual shorts inspired by other countries were released in the 1940s, such as Pluto and the Armadillo (1943) and The Pelican and the Snipe (1944), set in Uruguay. As Cuba was a very touristy spot for Americans during this time, with some areas under supervision of American mobsters, apparently. Disney decided that they would represent Cuba in their next Latin American-themed feature film. A short research trip to Cuba took place between September and October 1944.

Like Panchito represents Mexico, and José represents Brazil, they wanted to create a character to represent Cuba. They considered another bird, like a scrawny fighting rooster. No final design was ever approved, though an early sketch from animator Fred Moore of this concept has been released in recent years. The idea was that Donald and José would become friends with this Cuban bird, who owned a plantation and would’ve taken them on a tour of Cuba. Lots of smoking and animated tobacco leaves with traditional Cuban music made up the majority of the story ideas. Mary Blair created some concept art for the movie of carnivals and cockfights[7].

However, as The Three Caballeros was not a success, critically or financially, and lost money, this planned follow-up movie was scrapped, meaning we were never introduced to this fourth “caballero”. As World War II ended in 1945, the European markets had also opened up again, and meant that the Disney Studios could try and get back to where they had been before the war began. Still, the history of this fourth “caballero” is quite interesting.

On screen, the Three Caballeros trio did appear on television shows, such as House of Mouse (2001-03) and Mickey and the Roadster Racers (2017-21). Panchito and José also featured within a few episodes of the animated television series reboot, DuckTales (2017-21), after the trio received their very own spin-off series, Legend of the Three Caballeros (2018), produced by Disney Interactive. The series sees the trio find they are descendants of great adventures known as the Three Caballeros, and must save the world from being destroyed by an evil sorcerer. I have not seen this thirteen-episode series; however, I believe it is available widely on Disney+.

The Three Caballeros have also featured in comic book form, with two sequels being written by comic book writer and illustrator Don Rosa, who designed many Disney comics stories. These are titled The Three Caballeros Ride Again (2000) and The Magnificent Seven (Minus 4) Caballeros (2005). A manga story from TokyoPop was also released in 2022, called Donald Duck Visits Japan! It saw the trio move from New York to Japan, an order from the president of the furniture business they work for, to learn all about Japanese culture. It was written and illustrated by Meru Okada[8].

Given the fact that the Disney animated “package features” aren’t generally talked about or remembered too much, you’d think The Three Caballeros wouldn’t have much of a presence within the Disney Parks. Well, in actual fact, the Three Caballeros are an incredibly popular trio, with the three characters prevalent at most of the Disney Parks across the world. The film as a whole is not referred to as much, though.

One of the most well-known references across all the Disney Parks, is The Three Caballeros-themed attraction Gran Fiesta Tour Starring the Three Caballeros, which resides within the Mexico pavilion at Epcot in Walt Disney World. This boat ride began its life as the opening day attraction El Río del Tiempo, which translates to “The River of Time”. It took guests on a cruise through the history of Mexico. In 2007, this storyline was changed to Panchito and José frantically searching for Donald, who has gone sightseeing whilst the group are in Mexico, to ensure he is ready to perform at their reunion concert of the Three Caballeros in Mexico City that evening. The revision of the ride was directed by George Scribner, who directed the Mickey’s PhilarMagic attraction, with Eric Goldberg, who animated numerous beloved characters such as Genie from Aladdin (1992), being the animation director. They combined character animation overlaid onto live background footage, and refurbished and enhanced the props, lighting and sound systems throughout.

Gran Fiesta Tour opened on 6th April 2007, where the final scene was a large screen showing animation of the Three Caballeros singing their well-known song. Theme Park Productions spent six weeks in Mexico to film footage of the area and cast the live-action actors who appear within the ride. There was also a lot of opportunity to include animated gags, such as Donald cliff-diving and climbing the Mayan pyramid, though images of José smoking and Panchito firing guns were not included so as not to disturb contemporary audiences. Some features from the original El Río del Tiempo were kept, such as the fiesta scene with all the dolls (my least favourite bit because I find dolls really creepy, though I have still always liked this attraction); the fibre-optic fireworks on the ceiling in the finale; and the overall track layout[9].

On 4th December 2015, three animatronics of the characters were put into the finale scene instead of the screen. These animatronics had come from the Mickey Mouse Revue attraction, that opened with Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World on 1st October 1971, before closing in September 1980 and being moved to Tokyo Disneyland, where it also opened with that park on 15th April 1983. The Mickey Mouse Revue consisted of small animatronics of Disney characters performing songs from their movies, so the Three Caballeros naturally sang their one and only song! The attraction closed in Tokyo Disneyland in 2009 to make way for Mickey’s PhilarMagic; at Magic Kingdom, the same area that housed the Mickey Mouse Revue eventually became Mickey’s PhilarMagic in 2003. Epcot wanted these animatronics as soon as the Mickey Mouse Revue closed in 2009, and took delivery of them, however, there was insufficient budget to install them at Gran Fiesta Tour so they were stored backstage. They made their first public appearance after the move at D23’s Destination D: WDW 40th in May 2011, and were finally installed into the ride on 4th December 2015[10].

As excited as everyone was to see the animatronics of the Three Caballeros appear in Gran Fiesta Tour, their constant breakdowns were a source of amusement amongst fans in recent years, because in 2020, José Carioca vanished one day and was replaced by a vase of flowers. Once he returned, the same thing happened to Donald. In January 2021, all three were replaced with cardboard cutouts, whilst the animatronics were refurbished and restored. The animatronics were re-installed in May 2021.

Also at Walt Disney World, and at the Epcot Mexico pavilion, there is a permanent meet-and-greet for Donald outside the pyramid; he is wearing a poncho and sombrero. Panchito and José have been available for meet-and-greets with Donald previously, however, that doesn’t seem to have been any earlier than 2013 when the trio were spotted at the Limited Time Magic event. But it is possible they would return as a trio for Special Events in the future. Gauchito and Burrito, from “The Flying Gauchito”, and Yaya, from “Baía”, have also been spotted at Special Events, such as Disney Dreamers Everywhere, but not for many years. At Animal Kingdom, Panchito and José were spotted at the Discovery Island Carnivale Street Party in 2018. The two do appear regularly on the Adventure Friends Cavalcade final float with Mirabel at the Magic Kingdom, and have been available to meet-and-greet guests at Disney’s Hollywood Studios ticketed festive event Jollywood Nights.

Also at Disney’s Hollywood Studios, during the Wonderful World of Animation nighttime show, the scene of the Three Caballeros singing in their film can be seen briefly on the middle screen of the Chinese Theater towards the end of the show. They also have a poster within the Mickey’s PhilarMagic queue, under the name “Festival de los Mariachis”. Finally, at the Mexican-themed Coronado Springs Resort, the hotel’s gift shop is named after Panchito, being called Panchito’s Gifts and Sundries, and a statue of the trio features in the centre of the main swimming pool at the All-Star Music Resort.

At Disneyland, small figures of the Three Caballeros can be seen in the South America section of the it’s a small world attraction. At Disney’s California Adventure, during the Festival of the Holidays event, specifically ¡Viva Navidad! and the Three Kings Day Celebration, the trio have previously had a meet-and-greet location, so it is possible that will appear again in the coming years. The three have been seen at the ¡Viva Navidad! Street Party in 2021 and 2022, and will also appear in 2023. Like Mickey’s PhilarMagic at the Magic Kingdom, Disney California Adventure’s PhilarMagic queue also features the same Three Caballeros poster. Mickey’s Soundsational Parade at Disneyland, which ran from 2011 to 2019, featured a Three Caballeros-themed float or “unit”, with Donald Duck standing on the float, and Panchito and José dancing in front of it. The music for this unit used snippets of the songs “The Three Caballeros”, “Saludos Amigos”, “Tico-Tico no Fubá”, and “Baía”, so two from The Three Caballeros and two from Saludos Amigos.

At Tokyo Disneyland, as mentioned, the park was home to the original Mickey Mouse Revue from 1983 to 2009, which featured the animatronics of the Three Caballeros. Like Disneyland, small figures of the Three Caballeros can be seen in the South America section of the it’s a small world attraction here, as well as the same Three Caballeros poster within the queue of their Mickey’s PhilarMagic attraction. In terms of meet-and-greets, José and Panchito have been seen at Tokyo Disneyland as recently as at least 2022, but without Donald, with these two also having previously appeared in the Happy Halloween Amigos event at the park and the Happy Halloween Harvest Parade in 2013, though it doesn’t look like they will be appearing for Halloween in 2023.

At Disneyland Paris, there are no shows, or attractions, dedicated to The Three Caballeros or its characters, however, meet-and-greets for the characters have been available at Special Events. One of these was the Disney Dreamers Everywhere finale show in 2013, and another was FanDaze in 2018 where Yaya, Gauchito and Burrito were a meet-and-greet location. José and Panchito were seen in 2018 for Halloween here too.

At Hong Kong Disneyland, there do not seem to have been any meet-and-greets for The Three Caballeros’ characters recently, however, small figures of the Three Caballeros can be seen in the South America section of the it’s a small world attraction here, and the same Three Caballeros poster is on the wall at their Mickey’s PhilarMagic queue too.

At Shanghai Disneyland, there do not seem to have been any meet-and-greets for The Three Caballeros’ characters recently, but there are some different references to the movie at this park. Firstly, a billboard on one of the alleys along Mickey Avenue, Shanghai’s main entry land, their alternative to Main Street, U.S.A, shows Pablo the penguin from “The Cold-Blooded Penguin” segment of The Three Caballeros; it is an advertisement for his ice delivery service – which doesn’t make an awful lot of sense when you think about it, since Pablo hates the cold… Mickey & Pals Market Café, also in Mickey Avenue, is a quick-service restaurant, which has a vaguely The Three Caballeros-themed seating area. It is themed to look like a fruit warehouse, with instruments for the band being visible on a balcony, and clips from the film being shown on a screen in the room.

Merchandise based on The Three Caballeros continues to appear for milestone anniversaries, such as limited-edition pins and ornaments for its 75th anniversary in 2020 and its 80th in 2025.

FINAL THOUGHTS

Given The Three Caballeros is one of the lesser known, and lesser appreciated, Disney “package features”, it might be a surprise to find that it has continued to be remembered decades after its initial release.

But when you think about it, it is the trio of characters that are especially popular, since Donald has always been a beloved Disney character. Panchito and José’s friendship with him would make them famous by association, but they are also fun and uniquely representative of other countries, not just representative of Europe or the US, as many other popular Disney characters are.

The Three Caballeros continued to further the United States’ relations with South America, which was incredibly important during wartime. It also gave the Disney artists some freedom to experiment with the animated artform. It may have gone slightly too far at times, but The Three Caballeros is a fun, strange film – and that’s what makes it memorable.


REFERENCES

[1] Credit: Jim Korkis, ‘Panchito, Little Gauchito, and Burrito’, MousePlanet.com, 25th September 2013.

[2] Credit: Disney, “The Art of Mary Blair”, from Cinderella (1950) 2-Disc Special Edition DVD (2005).

[3] Credit: Jim Korkis, ‘Panchito, Little Gauchito, and Burrito’, MousePlanet.com, 25th September 2013.

[4] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘The Three Caballeros’, pp. 19-21.

[5] Credit: Disney, “South of the Border with Disney (1942)”, from Saludos Amigos (1942) 1-Disc DVD (2002).

[6] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘The Three Caballeros’, pp. 19-21.

[7] Credit: Wade Sampson, ‘The Lost Caballero’, MousePlanet.com, 9th August 2006.

[8] Credit: Samantha King, ‘Donald Duck’s Three Caballeros Head to Japan in New Disney Manga’, ScreenRant.com, 18th January 2022.

[9] Credit: Wade Sampson, ‘The Three Caballeros Return’, MousePlanet.com, 10th October 2007.

[10] Credit: Jim Korkis, ‘A Friday Visit with Jim Korkis: The Three Caballeros’, YourFirstVisit.net, date unknown.

#6 Saludos Amigos (1942)

  1. BACKGROUND
  2. STORY #1: LAKE TITICACA
  3. STORY #2: PEDRO
  4. STORY #3: EL GAUCHO GOOFY
  5. STORY #4: AQUARELO DO BRASIL
  6. PRODUCTION
  7. RECEPTION
  8. LEGACY
  9. FINAL THOUGHTS
  10. REFERENCES

BACKGROUND

Saludos Amigos, or, “Greetings, Friends”, as the phrase literally translates to from Spanish to English, was the first of the Disney Wartime Era of movies and the first “package feature” to be released by the Disney Studios. It is also the shortest of the Disney Animated Classics, with a runtime of only forty-odd minutes.

Unlike many of the “package features” that came after it, Saludos Amigos was not created from bits and pieces of previously abandoned or shelved concepts and ideas, but was specially created with a specific purpose.

Saludos Amigos was actually requested by the US Government as a way of fostering and improving relations between the US and the countries of Central and South America. At the time of initial production on the movie, the US had not yet entered World War II, but they still wanted South America to align themselves with the US and the Allies. By the time Saludos Amigos was released in 1942, the US had formally joined World War II, making the movie even more important for military efforts.

Saludos Amigos consists of four separate sequences.

These four sections are:

  1. “Lake Titicaca”
  2. “Pedro”
  3. “El Gaucho Goofy”
  4. “Aquarela do Brasil”

Previously, I thought I liked Saludos Amigos, with the short runtime being part of that reasoning, but going back to it this week, I didn’t enjoy it much at all! Don’t get me wrong, I did like the four shorts, however, the narrated live-action footage that came before each one began to grate on me quite early on. Whether that was just the mood I was in when I watched it, I don’t know, but for some reason the narration made me feel really agitated, so it took away my enjoyment of even the shorts, as he narrated three of those four. Luckily, the movie ends with the calming song “Aquarela do Brasil”, so I did at least like the final section.

STORY #1: LAKE TITICACA

Saludos Amigos begins with the usual Opening Credits, at least, usual for the earlier Disney animated releases. The Opening Credits aren’t the most exciting; the credits appear over the top of a section of map featuring Central and South America, where some familiar names, such as Mary Blair, Ward Kimball, Milt Kahl, and Wooly Reitherman, are visible. A “thank you note” from Walt Disney, thanking South America for their hospitality, is shown on screen just before the movie begins.

The credits use the title song, “Saludos Amigos”, a relatively catchy and upbeat song to start the film. The song’s music was written by Charles Wolcott, also the Musical Director for Saludos Amigos, with lyrics by Ned Washington. Wolcott wrote music for other Disney productions, including The Reluctant Dragon (1941); The Three Caballeros (1944); and Make Mine Music (1946). Washington wrote the lyrics for such Disney songs as “When You Wish Upon a Star” from Pinocchio (1940), which happened to win the Academy Award for Best Original Song in 1940, becoming the first Disney song to win an Oscar, and “Pink Elephants on Parade” and “Baby Mine” from Dumbo (1941), with the latter being nominated for Best Original Song at the 1942 Academy Awards.

We then move into the actual film, which begins with a clip of Disney Studios’ staff boarding a plane. The narrator explains that the staff are flying to South America to find new material and inspiration for further Disney projects, saying “It’s adiós, Hollywood, and Saludos, amigos”. This narrator is Fred Shields, who narrated some Disney shorts during the 1940s, as well as “The Flying Gauchito” segment in The Three Caballeros (1944), and was the uncredited voice of the Great Prince of the Forest in Bambi (1942). I did learn that the footage of Walt and the team boarding this plane was actually shot after returning from their trip as boarding of the plane had not been filmed at the time. To make it as authentic as possible, though, the group all wore the same outfits as they would’ve had on for that first boarding[1]! An animated plane then flies over an animated map of South America, detailing the countries that the Disney team explored, and ones that we will be viewing as part of the film. Then, we are shown real-life footage of Bolivia, such as their marketplaces, their musicians, their animals, and, of course, their people. This is supplemented with images of Disney artists’ concept art and sketches.

After this footage, the animated segment “Lake Titicaca” begins, with Donald Duck looking at Lake Titicaca, located on the Bolivian-Peruvian border, and being warned that because the lake is situated almost 13,000 feet above sea-level that Donald may experience some symptoms of altitude sickness. Donald is then told of the fishing boats made of reeds that are important to the locals’ lifestyle. The boats are controlled heavily by the wind, which surprises Donald, leading him to be thrown from the boat into a baker’s dough! The narrator tells the viewer about the terrain and the music of the area. We then see a llama’s movements being controlled by a pipe player; Donald asks to have a go, and after some time, seems to get the hang of it, riding the llama up the mountains and over a suspension bridge, high above the ground. Donald has some difficulty with this bridge when the planks begin to fall off and the ropes start to snap. Though the llama gets across safely, Donald falls, right on to the pottery market and bounces back into the lake. The llama character in this short is one of the more memorable in the film, and his interactions with Donald are funny. Clarence Nash, the original voice of Donald Duck, continues to reprise his role here.

For their inspiration, the Disney team viewed many interesting parts of Bolivia, Peru and Lake Titicaca. They enjoyed the colourful marketplaces, and the handmade garments, like hand-woven woollen hats. They saw many llamas who it turns out are only used to carry small, less heavy items as llamas are “too proud” to move anything too heavy, which the donkeys end up having to do! This gave the team the thought that a llama would have great screen value because of its attitude, and felt it would be a good opportunity to use the llama and the musical rhythm of the area together. The Disney staffers sailed over Lake Titicaca in reed-woven boats, and learnt the amount of skill needed to handle them in the wind. They made models of the boats and sketches, with this element also ending up in the short[2].

STORY #2: PEDRO

Saludos Amigos then moves into its second section, which is linked via footage from the Disney staffers on a plane to Santiago, Chile, in which they flew over the Andes. We see the team sketching the mountains and landscapes that they see from the aeroplane windows. They started to think about the pioneer mail planes that would’ve flown over these same areas, where a sketch of a small, young mail plane begins to take shape, which leads us into the animated short “Pedro”.

In a little airport near Santiago, Chile, there are three planes, a large plane which is the father, a middle-sized plane which is the mother, and a little boy plane called Pedro. He wants to grow up to be a big mail plane like his dad, who flies the Santiago to Mendoza route. Pedro goes to school where he learns about sky writing, reading, history, geography etc., ready to take over his father’s mail route when he is older. One day, his father is ill, and his mother cannot fly the route due to her high oil pressure, so Pedro must do it. After a difficult take-off, Pedro seems to be ok, and picks up the mail easily enough from Mendoza, though there is a snow storm and he has to calm himself when he first sees the terrifying rockface of the Aconcagua Mountain in the Andes. Soon, he is on his way home and ahead of schedule; Pedro is having so much fun, darting in and out of the clouds and chasing a condor, that he doesn’t realise he is right by Aconcagua, which is not only scary for its menacing rockface, but also for its reputation for having strong, sudden storms nearby. Pedro struggles against the strong winds and rain, even dropping the mail bag. He flies down to retrieve, despite the narrator telling him to save himself. Pedro flies high enough to get out of the storm clouds but runs out of gas, and starts to fall. Back at the airport in Santiago, his parents wait anxiously, but there is no sign of Pedro’s return. As they start to think he’s lost forever, Pedro crash-lands into the airport, but he’s ok, and he’s got the mail! Though it turns out this “important” mail was only a postcard, Pedro is still happy that he successfully completed his job. That postcard is addressed to Jorge Delano, the cartoonist who was the Disney group’s guide whilst in Santiago; it was from Juan Carlos, who hosted a party for Walt and the team in Mendoza before they flew to Santiago[3]. I do like “Pedro”; it’s a nice story and feels very much like a typical Disney short story.

The original idea for “Pedro” came from a draft short story concept about a small aeroplane that acted like a young boy, devised by Disney staff members Joe Grant and Dick Huemer. Their plane was called P.T. or “Petey”, with the narration to be provided by Sterling Holloway. It followed a mail plane taking over his father’s route, and having to go by “Old Thunderhead”, a tall, unfriendly mountain, with this “important” mail being revealed to only be a postcard. Concept art was created by Mary Blair and Hardie Gramatky, who wrote the children’s book, Little Toot, which was published in 1939 and was made into a short for the Disney “package feature” Melody Time (1948); it’s actual quite a similar story.

Disney story man Bill Cottrell worked on developing this story to become a part of Saludos Amigos, as he was also on the South American tour. The group only spent a week in Chile, a third of the time they’d spent in Brazil and Argentina, so they struggled to come up with a concept piece around Chile, but the plane ride they took over the Andes to Santiago was thrilling and they passed close to Aconcagua, the 22,500-foot-high mountain. They even saw a crashed plane on the mountainside nearby. Cottrell remembered the P.T. plane story and felt it could be reconfigured easily to fit into the Chilean area. Pedro became the new name for the plane, it being the Spanish equivalent of Pete, and Aconcagua replaced the fictional mountain. Some of Disney’s best animators worked on the short, with Ward Kimball animating Pedro’s encounter with the condor, and Bill Tytla animating the storm. Though many viewers liked “Pedro”, the Chilean audience didn’t feel that the story represented them at all, not how the other shorts represented their respective countries anyway. In response, a Chilean cartoonist by the name of Rene “Pepo” Rios created a comic strip about a small condor called Condorito, living in a small Chilean town. It mimicked Disney’s animation style, and showed just what Disney could’ve done for Chile[4].

From Chile, the movie moves over to Argentina, specifically Buenos Aires, where footage of the city and its landmarks are shown, including the Congress Building and the Kavanaugh Building, the tallest building in Latin America. Though the team liked the city, they were drawn to the grasslands of Argentina and the gauchos of the area. The group met gauchos and saw them handle their horses in person, and learnt of their way of life, including the equipment, music and dance, and the food, where they saw firsthand how food is traditionally cooked, via a barbeque or “asado”. Argentine painter F. Molino Campos told the team stories of gauchos and painted numerous scenes, becoming their artistic consultant.

STORY #3: EL GAUCHO GOOFY

From here, we go into the animated “El Gaucho Goofy”, where cowboy Goofy is flown from Texas to Argentina and dressed in the appropriate dress of the Argentine gaucho. Goofy meets his sassy, untrained horse, which Goofy tries to lasso, except he’s the one who is tied up, not the horse, in typical Goofy style. Goofy is then taught how to correctly saddle the horse, and how to barbecue and eat his traditional steak for dinner. Next, Goofy tries to capture an ostrich with bolas, but once again, clumsy Goofy does not succeed and instead flies off his horse, leading to Goofy, his horse, and the ostrich being tied up! Then, Goofy learns about traditional Argentine guitar music and dance moves, such as the “pala-pala”, before being flown back to his home of Texas. I found this short to be just ok; I’m not a big fan of the Disney “How-To” style of shorts, and unfortunately, Goofy is not my favourite Disney character – sorry, he’s too clumsy for me! Pinto Colvig, the original voice of Goofy, continues to reprise his role in this short.

STORY #4: AQUARELO DO BRASIL

For the final section of Saludos Amigos, we are taken to Brazil and Rio de Janeiro. We see footage of Sugarloaf Mountain and Copacabana beach, as well as views of the city streets, with its mosaic pavements, and the local people. Concept art and sketches by Disney artists are also shown, with one of those being a “papagaio”, or parrot, which becomes José, or Joe, Carioca, a new character who will encapsulate the Brazilian culture. They also learn about the samba and Brazil’s carnival, full of music, dancing, and laughter.

“Aquarelo do Brasil” begins with the opening of a book of sheet music, telling us about the song that will be used in the short, and the casting for it, much like how all of the shorts in other “package features” like Make Mine Music (1946) and Melody Time (1948) are introduced. We then see an animated paintbrush begin to paint a rainforest landscape, which comes alive; the same happens with flamingos and various plants and flowers. One of those flowers turns into Donald Duck, who returns to the film after his appearance in “Lake Titicaca”. Donald is introduced to the new character of José Carioco, a well-dressed green parrot; José is very excited to be meeting the famous Donald Duck from Hollywood! José decides to teach Donald how to dance the samba, and begins to play a tune on his umbrella, which has somehow become a flute, and Donald’s hat, which has become an accordion. They samba over to a bar, where Donald is given some very strong alcohol to drink! From Donald’s hiccupping, José begins to orchestra a new samba tune for them both to dance to, alongside a mysterious silhouetted woman. They dance the night away together.

This is my favourite short of the four, mostly because I like the song, but I do also like Donald and José together; it was a good introduction to the new character. The artistic style is more vibrant and expressive than the other three, so it feels more exciting and interesting to watch. The song “Aquarela do Brasil” was composed by Brazilian composer and pianist Ary Barroso in 1939, and became one of the most famous Brazilian songs ever after appearing in this film. Apparently, Walt Disney and his team listened to a band while having dinner one night during their stay in Brazil, and this song they played piqued Walt’s interest. Walt had the song personally performed for him again whilst in Rio de Janeiro by Ary Barroso and decided it must be used in Saludos Amigos[5]. The song was performed by Aloísio de Oliveira here. The piece of music heard at the end of the short is an instrumental version of “Tico-Tico no Fubá”, which was written by Brazilian musician Zequinha de Abreu. The voice of José Carioca is provided by José Oliviera, a Brazilian musician who directed Carmen Miranda’s orchestra for ten years. The word “Carioca” means native of Rio[6]. Clarence Nash, the original voice of Donald Duck, reprised his role again in this short.

PRODUCTION

As far back as 1890, the United States of America were trying to strengthen the understanding and friendship between all the countries within North, Central and South America. In 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt promoted the importance of the USA’s relations with the countries south of it. In the years leading up to World War II, this became even more important as the US feared that as the Nazis gained more and more ground in Europe, that their propaganda would also take hold in Central and South America, with Argentina being of particular concern. The US wanted their own campaign to strength their support to South America, so that those countries would be on the side of the Allies. Therefore, a new agency, the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs, was formally established by President Roosevelt, with Nelson Rockefeller appointed as its head[7]

The Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs began this campaign in 1940 by asking Hollywood studios to visit Latin American countries and use their findings from the area and its people to come up with new movie ideas. Unfortunately, some of these films had the opposite effect, being so stereotypical to the South American people that instead of alleviating tensions between the areas of the Americas, they actually caused more conflict.

In Spring 1941, the Office looked to Walt Disney and his studios instead. Walt originally thought it was a diplomacy tour, and was reluctant to agree to it, as he “wasn’t good at just shaking hands”, but when it was suggested that he use the trip as a focus for research and new content for his next Disney projects, he agreed. World War II had cut off film profits from the Disney releases of the early 1940s in the European markets, and due to the Disney animators’ strike, which ended up lasting from May to September 1941, the Studios were struggling, as was Walt’s reputation with his workers.

So, it was decided: Walt would take himself plus 15 studio employees, and two wives, one of which was Lillian Disney, Walt’s wife, to South America for this “goodwill tour”. The group arrived in Rio de Janeiro in August 1941, though the group didn’t travel together all of the time; after visiting Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and Buenos Aires, Argentina, the team split into four groups, who went to different locations, with some heading to countries like Bolivia and Peru, and others exploring different parts of Argentina, to gather more material. The majority of the team reunited at the end of September 1941 in Santiago, Chile, with the whole group heading home on 4th October 1941.

Though the press and the people loved Walt, including hordes of local children who would come to see him and ask for autographs, Walt had some difficulties during this tour. Whilst in Argentina, Roy O. Disney, Walt’s brother, told Walt that the animators’ strike had been settled but not in the studio’s favour. Walt’s father also passed away on 13th September 1941, during the tour, however, Walt stayed in South America to continue with his commitments[8]. Furthermore, by December 1941, the US was fully engaged in World War II.

Whilst Saludos Amigos only details what the Disney employees experienced in the countries of Bolivia, Chile, Argentina, and Brazil, to link in with the background of the four shorts, there is actually much more behind-the-scenes footage of the Disney team visiting other countries, such as Uruguay, Ecuador, Guatemala, and Mexico. Ideas and research from these areas would be used for the “sequel” to Saludos Amigos, The Three Caballeros (1944), released two years later. This extra footage is detailed within the thirty-minute documentary, South of the Border with Disney (1942).

The film was originally meant to be twelve separately released shorts, with each short being dedicated to a specific country the Disney group had visited. Producer David O. Selznick felt that releasing one short based on one country would only make that short popular in that specific area, whereas by packaging a few together, it would make the movie as a whole more universally appealing. It also made sense to put shorts based on different cultures together to fit with the overall message of the goodwill tour; cooperation and understanding between all countries of the Americas.

RECEPTION

Saludos Amigos was the first Hollywood movie to premiere in all Latin American countries before it did in the US; it was released in South America in August 1942, with its premiere being held in Rio de Janeiro on 24th August 1942. It was later released in the United States in February 1943. The movie was incredibly popular in South America. In the US, many critics also liked the film, with the colourful animation, the relatively authentic music, and fun-filled familiar cartoons being the highlights. Even new characters, such as the llama in “Lake Titicaca” and José Carioca were singled out as being plus points. It was a different type of film, due to the travel documentary footage, and was not deemed to be entirely factual, but it succeeded in showcasing the areas of South America, as it was intended to do, though negative critique of the film called it “self-interested”. Nowadays, parts of the film are considered to be culturally insensitive, with some of the narration standing out to me as being “not very P.C.”

But at the time, Saludos Amigos was so popular, both critically and commercially, that The Three Caballeros (1944), a sequel of sorts, was released two years later, with it using the same “package feature” format as Saludos Amigos, but basing their shorts on different South American countries. These two films were a good way for the Studios to produce new feature-length movies, as World War II had caused the studio to lose staff and at this point, the Disney staffers who remained were primarily creating training films for the military to keep the Studios afloat financially; they did not have the budget to make the “big“ movies they had been, like Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) and Pinocchio (1940)[9].

Saludos Amigos was nominated at the 1943 Academy Awards for Best Score, Best Sound Recording, and Best Original Song for “Saludos Amigos”, but sadly, did not win any of these. It did, however, win the Best Documentary award at the 15th National Board of Review Awards in 1943.

All four of the shorts featured within Saludos Amigos were released as standalone shorts in 1955, to be used on television shows and within compilation shows. It is worth mentioning that for many home releases of the film, including my 2002 UK DVD release, Goofy’s smoking is edited out of “El Gaucho Goofy”, which makes for a very strange cut if you watch the original version. Yet, later on in the film, during “Aquarela do Brasil”, Donald is seen lighting up José’s cigar after drinking some very strong alcohol; so that scene of smoking is apparently ok, as it was not cut or edited out, but seeing Goofy smoke isn’t ok? The unedited version returned to home releases from 2018, and is uncut on Disney+.

LEGACY

Apart from these two documentary films and The Three Caballeros (1944) sequel, there is very little else in the way of representation for Saludos Amigos, both on-screen and off-screen. At the Disney Parks, there are predominantly mentions of The Three Caballeros and its three main characters, not anything specific to Saludos Amigos. As this piece is about Saludos Amigos specifically, I will not be talking about rides and attractions that reference The Three Caballeros (1944), so there is not too much to talk about.

At Walt Disney World, the former Epcot nighttime show, Harmonious, did use a snippet of the “Saludos Amigos” opening song within its soundtrack, during the Latin America section. It was played after “Remember Me” and before “The World Es Mi Familia”, both from Coco (2017). During Wonderful World of Animation projection show at Disney’s Hollywood Studios, a scene from Saludos Amigos can be seen. It is from “El Gaucho Goofy” and shows him and his horse dancing; it is on the screen to the left of the Chinese Theater.

At Tokyo Disneyland, there is a meet-and-greet location for Duffy the Disney Bear at Tokyo DisneySea. It is called ¡Saludos Amigos! Greeting Dock, with stalls showcasing South American ornaments, instruments, etc. surrounding the bear, who is dressed in a small poncho and sombrero, with Latin American-inspired prints. Duffy is nicknamed “Sombrero Duffy” for this reason. South American-inspired music plays throughout the area. But even this area is not specific to Saludos Amigos, as the bunting that is strung across the ceiling depicts the faces of the Three Caballeros trio of characters.

In terms of meet-and-greets, you cannot see Donald and José without Panchito, as they clearly have more worth as the trio, the Three Caballeros, so I will not be mentioning those, nor can you meet Pedro or Gaucho Goofy, the other characters from Saludos Amigos.

The only other thing to mention is that, in 2023, to celebrate the film’s 80th anniversary, Disney honoured the occasion by releasing an ornament of Donald Duck and José Carioca in the Brazilian rainforest.

FINAL THOUGHTS

Saludos Amigos is one of the lesser-known Disney animated feature films, partly for its age, partly for its “package feature” status, and partly because its popularity has been dwarfed by The Three Caballeros (1944). Yet Saludos Amigos was just as important to fostering good relations between the US and its neighbours to the south, even more so to some extent as the response to this film proved to be the first success within this campaign overseen by the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs. It allowed for The Three Caballeros to be created afterwards; if Saludos Amigos had not proved popular, then the sequel could not have existed.

Saludos Amigos will forever be known as being the movie that did more for cooperation between the countries of the Americas in just a few months than the Government had managed to achieve in decades – by using Disney for a vital strategic campaign, which ended up being fronted by none other than those great diplomats, Donald Duck and Goofy… Only Disney!


REFERENCES

[1] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘Saludos Amigos’, pp. 16-18.

[2] Credit: Disney, “South of the Border with Disney (1942)”, from Saludos Amigos (1942) 1-Disc DVD (2002).

[3] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘Saludos Amigos’, pp. 16-18.

[4] Credit: Jim Korkis, ‘Pedro and Planes’, MousePlanet.com, 7th August 2013.

[5] Credit: Keith Gluck, ‘Walt and the Goodwill Tour’, The Walt Disney Family Museum Blog, 8th September 2016.

[6] Credit: Jim Korkis, Everything I Know I Learned from Disney Animated Feature Films (2015), ‘Saludos Amigos’, pp. 16-18.

[7] Credit: Melodie Sweeney, ‘Donald Duck: An American Diplomat?’, National Museum of American History Blog, 12th April 2019.

[8] Credit Keith Gluck, ‘Walt and the Goodwill Tour’, The Walt Disney Family Museum Blog, 8th September 2016.

[9] Credit: Jim Korkis, The Vault of Walt Vol. 5 (2016), ‘The Disney Package Features’, pp. 65-73.