Rating
-
Animated
(US); 2000; Rated G; 75 Minutes
Cast
An animated representation of various classical music pieces
conducted by James Levine and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra;
featuring guest appearances from Steve Martin, Quincy Jones,
Bette Midler, James Earl Jones, Itzhak Pearlman, Penn Jillette
and Angela Lansbury
Produced by Lisa C. Cook, Roy Edward Disney, Donald
W. Ernst, Patricia Hicks and David Lovegren; Directed
by James Algar (“The Sorcerer’s Apprentice”), Gaëtan
Brizzi and Paul Brizzi (“The Firebird Suite”), Hendel Butoy
(“The Pines Of Rome” and “Piano Concerto No. 2”), Francis
Glebas (“Pomp And Circumstance”), Eric Goldberg (“Rhapsody
In Blue,” “Carnival Of The Animals”), Don Hahn (Host Sequences),
and Pixote Hunt (“Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5”); Screenwritten
by Don Hahn, Irene Mecchi and David Reynolds; the
“Piano Concerto No. 2” segment is set to the story of “The
Steadfast Tin Soldier” by Hans Christian Anderson
Review Uploaded
6/23/00 |
Written
by DAVID KEYES Like
most prominent filmmakers, Walt Disney was a pioneer of
cinematic innovation, and when the success of animation
marked a new turning point in filmmaking in 1937 with “Snow
White And The Seven Dwarfs,” the idea of blending classical
music and detailed hand drawings in the movies was an experiment
too promising to ignore. Over half a century after that
test, his endeavors are proudly recognized across the globe;
the now-legendary production of “Fantasia,” originally dubbed
by Disney “The Concert Feature,” remains the benchmark for
the continuing growth of animation and the imaginative minds
that help bring it to life. Few people are able to see the
picture (or rather, the event) and not remember the beautiful,
colorful images that visually represent the brilliant musical
compositions of composers such as Beethoven and Bach. In
most respects, the perception of Mickey Mouse wearing the
magician’s hat has become the perennial Disney trademark.
Walt’s
original dream, however, was to keep his “Fantasia” experiment
an ever-changing work in progress, where new segments would
be added every few years of release. But since the original
film financially flopped in theaters, and future projects
would only allow limited budgets, the plans for new “Fantasia”
segments were put on hiatus until further notice. Unfortunately,
Disney died long before any of those plans were put back
into motion.
In
the years to follow, “Fantasia” has returned to the theaters,
stronger and more appreciated than ever before, with new
generations acknowledging it as the innovative experiment
Disney had originally hoped it to be. Thanks to its renewing
success, which eventually took in profit for the studio,
Disney revived its plans to wake “Fantasia” from its deep
sleep in the late 80s by setting new pieces in production
exclusively for a new film scheduled for release in 1996.
Technology and money issues, of course, incessantly pushed
the release date back, and as the project was nearing completion,
the studio finally settled on the date of January 1, 2000,
giving an excuse to dub the new experiment “Fantasia 2000.”
And like his uncle, executive producer Roy Disney was also
in pursuit of an unorthodox method of releasing the test
(a similar search made “Fantasia” the first movie in theaters
to use a form of stereo surround sound). He opted to have
the film released on the large IMAX screen, which is now
famous for its ability to make viewers feel like they are
living the screen journeys. Given the history of most IMAX
screen presentations, though, the idea of an animated studio
film playing on the six-story high screen seemed rather
impossible. But you know what they say in the movies: expect
the unexpected.
The
immense IMAX presentation of “Fantasia 2000” was undoubtedly
a wondrous sight to behold, because the newly-released print
alone, playing for four weeks on local multiplex screens,
is one of the most impressive marriages of music and animation
since the original film. But colorful pictures and vibrant
orchestrations are secondary qualities here; the foremost
success is owed to the preservation of Disney’s original
purpose, which was to use the classic music as an mechanism
to bring our imaginations to illustrious life. Such intent
was what made “Fantasia” a classic, and what makes “Fantasia
2000” one of the finest achievements of the new millennium;
the segments are energetic, intricate, fun, exciting, and
tell imaginative stories using suitable music as their filters
into reality.
The
movie contains only eight pieces (some of which are rather
short), but that is to be expected, given the enormous size
of the IMAX film print to which it was optimized for (a
longer film would only cost more). The opening segment comes
from Beethoven’s magnificent 5th symphony, and, like the
opening segment of the first “Fantasia,” is set to abstract
images: a template for how the mind’s pictures tend to appear
while listening to the notes play. Following its footsteps
is Ottorino Respighi’s symphony “The Pine Of Rome,” which
serves as inspiration for a story of a colony of CGI-animated
whales, who take flight in the air when a nearby solar disturbance
intrigues them.
Each
of the cuts features its own diverse style and mood, and
two of the best are, not surprisingly, the “Rhapsody In
Blue” and “The Firebird Suite.” Not just memorable for its
musical backdrop, the “Rhapsody” segment adopts a simplistic
style of thick lines, plain colors and flat backdrops to
take glimpse at New York City during the depression era,
when dreams were the only thing left to hold on to. Meanwhile
“The Firebird Suite,” one of the finest musical pieces ever
written, inspires the story of life, death and rebirth from
a natural perspective, where thriving plants and animals
are collapsed by the eruption of a volcano, then reborn
in the wake of absolute desolation. The foreboding tone
of this tense piece serves as sort of a climax for the film
in general.
Similar
success is attained by the pairing of classic music and
familiar stories with ironic twists. Elgar’s “Pomp And Circumstance,”
for instance, is given a biblical treatment through the
Noah’s arc legend, in which Donald Duck portrays an assistant
who monitors all the creatures on board. Likewise, Shostakovich’s
“Piano Concerto No. 2” is set to the famous story of Hans
Christian Anderson’s “The Steadfast Tin Soldier,” and even
though the grasp of his plot is altered slightly on screen,
the music’s upbeat ending gives animators the right to modify
the climax.
Keep
an eye peeled for some familiar faces, too, as “Fantasia
2000” saves one of the original segments in its lineup:
“The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.” Is this a necessary thing?
In a way, yes; there are better segments that could have
been kept this time around, but whenever the word “Fantasia”
comes into discussion, Mickey Mouse’s visage of a sorcerer’s
apprentice is the first thing most tend to think of. The
inclusion, in any case, honors the memory of its predecessor.
“Fantasia
2000” is a masterwork, blossoming with beauty, nostalgia
and pure energy, further implementing that the possibilities
in movies are unlimited (particularly those that are animated).
My only hope is that Disney’s experiment with merging animation
and music does not end here; in the foreseeable future,
new segments and movies should be put into production. The
evolution of animation is a never-ending cycle, and there
are thousands of pieces of music still waiting to get visual
treatments. Why wait another 60 years to put those plans
into motion? We aren’t getting any younger, you know.
©
2000,
David Keyes, Cinemaphile.org.
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