I suspect that this one has a particular resonance for Disney. It was their first feature-length cartoon, and they hold onto their legacy TIGHT.
For a long time most people thought it was THE first feature-length cartoon, but that requires you to ignore Lotte Reininger’s silhouette animated The Adventures of Prince Achmed ( Die Abenteuer des Prinzen Achmed ) and the two lost cartoons by Argentinian animator Quirino Castiani. I suspect Disney folk still think of theirs as the first “real” feature-length cartoon.
Honestly, I just watched Snow White with my kid the other day, and… It’s not THAT good. It barely has a plot. In many ways, it feels more like a cartoon than a movie. I had that thought during the scene where Dopey is wrestling with the soap, or during the “Dwarfs sing to Snow White” scenes - they hardly move the plot along but they’re nifty to look at.
It’s a fun movie for kids to watch - my daughter loved it - but it definitely feels transitional, between cartoon shorts and full length animated movies.
I can’t really see it working as a live action movie, at least not without some serious rewriting.
Albinos maybe. It’s a figure of speech. Snow White is typically portrayed as very pale with black hair and bold red lipstick (like Krysten Ritter or Rose McGowen in Planet Terror for example).
I’m in a weird state in that I’ve effectively forgotten about the controversy. The only one I remembered was people being upset they weren’t all Dwarfs, but actually different sizes and such. So I just approached this on “do I like it?”
And I think I kinda do. I like the hyperreal aesthetic, as a stylish thing. I like Snow White’s look. And because of the above, I didn’t remember people were complaining about her skin color. Because she just looked like a white person.
I thought the Dwarfs looked fine for the aesthetic. They look like the originals. I’ve seen many adaptations that make them actual dwarfs, so having them look like that and fit into the aesthetic worked.
I did wonder what the story could possibly be. They just seemed like they were doing dramatic beats. But it still is visually appealing to me.
So not the type I would pay full price for, but enough that I’m interested. And I very much wonder how people would be reacting to this if if was the first they’d heard of this, without all the baggage.
I definitely didn’t see any “DEI” in it. If anything, it seemed too white.
Snow White and the Extended Copyright Protection doesn’t look appealing to me. I hope they fix her friends before release because they look very out of place in a live action movie.
“Little Women: LA” star and producer Terra Jolé said that while she appreciates Dinklage speaking out, his power and privilege also create adverse effects. Jolé said that many little people in the entertainment industry don’t necessarily agree with Dinklage’s take; people in her family auditioned for the Disney film. With his condemnation, she said, Disney made Dinklage the sole arbiter on the topic.
“It boggles my mind that a network, instead of listening to an entire community, [is] listening to one person,” she said. “That’s just how much pull this one person has created in this society because of where he is on the level of popularity.”
I hope they do this again for Disney-
Advocates from the pressure group Little People of America issued a statement arguing the film industry should be casting actors with dwarfism as “characters that were written to be played by short people”.
The movie Snow White and the Huntsman, which opened in the US last week and is currently at the top of the box-office charts, instead used actors such as Ray Winstone, Bob Hoskins Ian McShane and Eddie Marsan in the roles.
“This is akin to blackface,” complained Danny Woodburn, an actor with dwarfism best known for his role on Seinfeld, in an interview with The New York Post.
In Los Angeles, a “dwarf theatre group” called Beacher’s Madhouse said yesterday it was organising a “100-midget march” to the offices of Universal Pictures, the producers of the film, in protest against the “injustice and prejudice”.
I liked Beauty and the Beast live-action. Aside from that, no thank you. If there was a petition that would be taken seriously, I would sign one to stop them from re-doing these cartoons with live action.