I have been screaming into the void that this is the best Disney movie since my childhood. This movie made me want to be an animator. Now, animation degree and design job in hand, I finally find someone screaming loud enough to be heard. Thank you for this. This is brilliant.
@fcv46166 ай бұрын
I hope you have a great career in animation!!! 👏🏻
@momentosaleatorios41612 жыл бұрын
Walt disney + Tchaikovsky = Pure Gold
@helvete_ingres4717 Жыл бұрын
I understand they chose pieces with popular appeal, but with the obvious exception of the Beethoven symphony, none of the pieces are among the 'great' music of the classical canon.
@cramerfloro5936 Жыл бұрын
I feel so validated by this video, because as a kid, I could TELL there were direct parallels between the Toccata and fugue in D-minor and the Nutcracker suite, but I couldn't put into words WHAT it was that meant.
@Kiiriminna2 жыл бұрын
Out of all Disney's "golden era" movies, this is without a doupt my favourite. I also love all those packege-era movies; they and the "dark age" movies are the ones that I rewatch the most...
@jordanjoestar-turniptruck2 жыл бұрын
Yes, say what you will about Disney's dark age, but I'm still in awe of those last original animation vets flexing on a shoestring.
@erikbihari36252 жыл бұрын
@@jordanjoestar-turniptruckAnd not just tieing their stories to easily digestable characters,themes, what have you. But actually letting the abstract beauty of animation breath for a moment!
@betsykeller4898 Жыл бұрын
Same
@davidfox53837 ай бұрын
I especially love The Three Caballeros as sort of a Latin Fantasia!
@adzukibean21902 жыл бұрын
The hippo and the crocodile are my favorite couple. I love how the croc doesn’t discriminate and he only wants to dance with his plus sized gf even if she crushes him. Best ship dynamic.
@erikbihari36252 жыл бұрын
So good that Daisy and Minnie brought them back for an ice skating competition in a movie nobody talks about! Asking it's fair?
@adzukibean21902 жыл бұрын
@@erikbihari3625 I actually saw that Christmas special. The cgi wasn’t that good though. Still love hippo and croc though!
@CarSVernon Жыл бұрын
it's cause the music is by far among the catchiest
@Destoroyah-u3u Жыл бұрын
Not only that, bigger ballerina dancers are still uncommon. It's a great animation excerize and the animators put alot of personalit into the hippos. It is great and I do love it. Also the ostriches with there tiny faces 😂 it's good.
@doritawithoutdoritos65332 жыл бұрын
I never watched Fantasia, but the last segment with dinosaurs gave me chills. It's kinda shocking how... brutal it is. I guess I will love Fantasia after the second part huh
@eggboy91262 жыл бұрын
just watch the movie
@janedoe5229 Жыл бұрын
Just watch it. It's animated music videos to classical music. And the skill of the animators is stellar. But it's more than "watching" the animation. It's like eating a delicious meal: you only savor it while you are experiencing it. You get lost in the gorgeousness of the music, AND the gorgeousness of images before your eyes.
@austinreed73436 ай бұрын
Easily one of the grittiest Disney movies.
@juliamavroidi86012 жыл бұрын
It's a shame that Disney chickened out of ending of Rite of Spring with the Dawn of Man, since it would have been a great paralellel to the ending of Act 2. It would have made the film more cohesive if Act 1 and 2 both ended with terror being conquered by hope, Act 1 showing the rational, scientific perspective, while Act 2 expressed the spiritual side. It might have helped more people realize your argument, that the film is not a series of shorts, but a holistic experience.
@janedoe5229 Жыл бұрын
He says "this may not be your personal favorite". Yes, it IS my personal favorite.
@hallieharvey407310 ай бұрын
My son sat mesmerized by this movie and it gave me a new appreciation for it. He is almost 4 and randomly asks to put it on while we play (he calls it the playing movie)
@QueenOfTheNorth65 Жыл бұрын
Fantasia was the first movie I ever saw in a theater. It was 1970 and I was 5. I loved it until “Night on Bald Mountain.” It scared me to death!
@elaineb70654 ай бұрын
Same here, though in my case I was at least a decade later. Must have been the 1980s sometime. I love everything, from the hellscapes of Night On Bald Mountain, through the silliness of the hippos & crocodiles, to the adorable pegasus family
@jinoratheairnomad97772 жыл бұрын
You’ve analyzed this movie way better than anyone I’ve seen, as you analyze as a movie, not a painting. Everyone praises it for the animation and how well it pairs with the music, and while those are incredible, Fantasia is more about how it makes you feel. There’s a reason that despite Chernabog having no defined personality, he is listed with the greats like Maleficent or Ursula because he makes you feel the presence of evil anytime he is seen. There is a reason that one of Mickey’s most iconic images is him battling the water. That’s why Fantasia is seen getting into the top 10 and even 5 of many Disney rankings, while the package era films are mostly forgotten. And while I can’t say it’s my favorite, or even in my top 5, it is definitely a masterpiece like no other.
@jenniferh96127 ай бұрын
Fantasia was my favorite movie as an angsty teenager. I’d watch it after bad days, good days, even during studying. It’s my greatest comfort. My favorite part of the film is the trumpet solo of the white flower, it’s so beautiful and makes me hold my breath
@Ziffelzoovop2 жыл бұрын
I don't think of the little mushroom as vain at all. I always figured he was just a little kid, maybe 2 years old, and he's having fun with the older family members. They are letting him do the parts of a "traditional" family dance that are the simplest so he's still included. Idk, I grew up as the youngest in my family by quite a large age gap, as visually implied with the mushroom family, and there were many time when we were doing something that was too hard/complicated for little me to keep up with so they always found a way for me to still feel included. And I saw myself and my family in those dancing mushrooms from the first time I watched this movie at 4 years old. All in all, I loved this movie as a kid and still do. My family was big into classical music, the toccata and fugue was my first favorite song according to my parents that noticed I was absolutely memorized by it as an infant. Everytime I went to visit my grandparents I watched this movie. It was one of the Disney movies that definitely inspired me to become an artist and draw.
@JeremieFriez Жыл бұрын
This movie represents so much for me. It solidified my early love for classical music back in 1990 or 1991. It made me realize how important music was in general but also in movies. This one along with Goldsmith's Alien and Williams' scores to Indy, Hook and a lot of other masterpieces made me want to become a film composer. Yet this one, Fantasia, will always have a special place in my heart and life! (I just bought a second hand collector edition from 1990 with a booklet, two video tapes and two discs which are untouched. Neven been opened. Couldn't feel closer to a 90's Christmas morning than this morning). Happy to see that other people still love this movie so much. Thanks for this video essay!
@inSaxony6 ай бұрын
Excellent dive into this classic film. Fantasia has always been my fav. Disney - hardly surprising as I am a musician - so, in augmentation of your comments, I'd like to add something on the subject of "animators' musicality / visual detail enhancing musical detail", a propos of Sorcerer's Apprentice (you brought this on by showing a detail of the score, the trumpet solo as Mickey's/Walt's scream). In fact, Stokowski (whom I greatly admire for many reasons) was frequently criticised for his "touching up" of classic scores by changing instrumentation. Today it isn't tolerated, but when Stoki was being trained (he enrolled at the Royal College of Music in 1896) it was a wide spread practice. So, just to mention a detail, the axe splitting the broom in the original Dukas score (another moment you pointed out), was changed by the conductor; there are only 4 cymbal crashes there, as opposed to the 8 crashes in the film, punctuating each of Mickey's blows. The film's creators had a good reason for this, because it made the seemingly endless number of brooms more plausible. (In the original source material, Goethe's poem, the apprentice merely splits the broom in two, and two brooms march on until the sorcerer returns.) In any case, this little change in the score (if anyone wants to check, beginning at 7 bars after rehearsal number 41), was brilliant and entirely suited to the purposes of the film. An example of the wonderful collaboration between Stokowski and the animators. - I myself would have loved for Disney to follow his plan of bringing new segments in and re-releasing every years, a continual evolution of the format, and the experiment of bringing classical music to the masses; that is, IF it had been possible to maintain the incredible artistic standards set by Fantasia. - I also would like to remind everyone that the sound recording, made in 1939, was ages ahead of its time - SIX CHANNEL STEREO! - with loudspeakers placed in front as well as in back of the audience. So those few theatres who actually installed the "Fantasound" equipment presented something so acoustically immersive, people were (if the statements collected at the time from, for instance, Broadway Theater audiences are looked at) absolutely stunned. I give a lot of credit to Stokowski who had, after all, made his first experimental stereo recordings in 1931/32 (Scriabin and Mussorgsky). However, it is also important to remember that the inventor of modern stereophonic technology was Alan Blumlein at EMI, who originally developed it for - the movies! - Thanks again for your lovely analysis (both parts), and I would be interested in your take on other music- related movies (The Red Shoes, for instance).
@BadGuyRants2 жыл бұрын
Disney’s “Golden Age” aka their first 5 films put the modern company to shame.
@MegaBecks19812 жыл бұрын
Seeing this video on my feed > Christmas morning
@elizabethb41682 жыл бұрын
The process they did for the snowflake sequence is so interesting! Thank you for the great video, I'm on to part two!
@SEELE-ONE2 жыл бұрын
I always wondered how such an effect was achieved! It looks spectacular!
@clown-cult962 жыл бұрын
Disney’s Rite of Spring absolutely paved the way for Land Before Time and Jurassic Park.
@DocKrazy10 ай бұрын
There's a scene in jurassic world I am convinced is a nigh shot for shot recreation of the pterasaus scene in fantasia
@al438110 ай бұрын
Don Bluth was a huge fan of Disney's golden era and wanted it to inspire his work, which is why he borrows from it both in story, aesthetic, and technique. Secret of NIMH uses techniques and pallets from Snow White and Pinocchio, Land before time borrows from Fantasia and Bambi, Thumbelina borrows the fairies from Fantasia, etc
@spritingk68795 ай бұрын
fantasia is one of spielberg's favourite films, so that aspect of inspiration should be clear
@phillyphakename12558 ай бұрын
"Fantasia is a work of art that demands to be examined closely". That pretty much sums up why I love it. I love most art where the creator put in enough effort to leave something for you to find when you dig deeply. That art where a high school or college English essay isnt wasted trying to find stuff that isnt there to find. There were a few bits of your video essay that were not my interpretation or maybe felt like a bit of a stretch, but overall, you nailed it. Disney clearly cares about this, so much more than any of the other similar music and animation works.
@gabrieldjatienza69712 жыл бұрын
In the Rites of Spring segment, the animation artists were instructed to avoid "anthropomorphic cuteness" for the dinosaurs....they have to behave like animals...they lay eggs, they hatch, they grow, they eat. And they die!
@ioannaioannidou42012 жыл бұрын
Trex fighting Timothee Chamelet was not something I expected to hear on this video 🤣🤣. Great job 👏🏽
@SamsonSilvo10 ай бұрын
Fantasia really is the definition of a film ahead of its time. Not just because it took multiple decades before it truly got the recognition it deserved but because even now, few films have had the balls to tell a subtle overarching story in the very unique way that it does. Hell, it can be argued that there truly is no other film like it, not even its own sequel (as much as I love that film as well on its own merits)!
@ThirdwingLTD2 жыл бұрын
I just was rehearsing a play TODAY about Walt Disney and his relationship to the new design of Mickey Mouse for Fantasia and how it fed into his sort of identity crisis when facing the animator's strike and Art Babbitt. Of course we mention the dancing mushrooms, which Babbitt animated. There's a part where Babbitt complains "It's not about dinosaurs, it's about women!" and I sent this to the actors so they can see this point clearly, because how you actually put the footage there. This is like the best timing for a video drop ever. Thank you for making this!!!
@therewillbefudd2 жыл бұрын
That play sounds fascinating! What's the name of it? I don't know if that's an actual Art Babbitt quote, but it suits him perfectly either way. Thanks for watching and sharing, and I hope it goes well when performance time comes!
@ThirdwingLTD2 жыл бұрын
@@therewillbefudd I''m so glad you say that about Art's line cause I did have to make it up, haha. It's called "A Venomous Color: Burbank." The first part, "The Fairest," is about the women who painted Snow White losing their minds cause of no air conditioning and mandatory overtime. Again, thank you for this inspiring resource
@therewillbefudd2 жыл бұрын
@@ThirdwingLTD Oh wow! Checking out your theater's page and your shows look really cool! So you can stream them? I may have to check them out!
@ThirdwingLTD2 жыл бұрын
@@therewillbefudd thank you, thank you!!! The Fairest is gonna be available in a couple weeks, in episodes (it's sort of like Golden Girls meets Black Swan). Burbank will be streaming again after the live show closes in NYC
@therewillbefudd2 жыл бұрын
@@ThirdwingLTD Wonderful! I'm way into Disney history and I'm hoping to start working more stories about specific artists into my videos, so this is definitely my kinda thing. I'll keep an eye out for em!
@TheChgz Жыл бұрын
Fantasia was actually my favourite disney movie when I was growing up because it made me use my imagination. It was fun and fantastical. It felt like going on a journey as you watch it. I had all these questions that I wanted to know the answer to, like who are the characters and what happens to them outside of the movie. I kept watching it over and over again to learn more. I dreamt about and would imagine living in all of the worlds. I loved the entire experience
@davidfox53837 ай бұрын
This movie is 100% my favorite Disney. Since I was a child I always went back to see it on every release in the theater and I've owned every home theater copy of it.
@savebatsfromscratch Жыл бұрын
I absolutely love Fantasia, and have since I first watched it on the old VHS player at my grandma's house, thank you for making this!
@genehen6495 Жыл бұрын
Fantasia was always my favourite Disney movie, even as a kid. I decorated the VHS case with all my favourite stickers. There is alot in this movie that was frightening enough to hide behind the couch - but the one scene I couldn't handle due to how terrifying it was the earthquake and disaster scene after the dinosaurs died out. Horrifying.
@kelleyceccato7025 Жыл бұрын
I already love this movie pretty hard, but I'm totally here for the dissection. Something about these early Disney features stirs my soul. It isn't just that they're gorgeous to look at, although they are. The excitement of discovery, of innovation, comes through in the finished product. More recent Disney/Pixar films might have sharper screenplays, more complex themes, and more layered characters -- and I love them for that -- but the excitement, the energy of the early films isn't there. Plus, I miss the darkness. Fantasia and the other four Golden Age films weren't afraid to be terrifying at times, and I'm saying that like it's a good thing.
@AnneIllustrating2 жыл бұрын
I love your videos so much. It's so great to bask in Walt Disney's genius during his life compared to the sterilized (in comparison), prepackaged animations we get today. This is the foundation and backbone of his industry. I love Fantasia with all my heart as it was one of my gateways to become an artist today.
@gingerjak79282 жыл бұрын
❤️ What an inspirational comment.
@williammorris89 Жыл бұрын
You didn't need to make this masterpiece, but you did! I agree that Fantasia was already a masterpiece before people even realized it was a masterpiece. Same with Fantasia 2000 for me; both have always been my favorite movie combined! I especially agree about Toccata and Fugue; it was all abstract images sure, but I was able to detect a story from those abstract images as a child! I envisioned an enchanted musical community of magical instruments and shapes where everyone is happy. Children play volleyball and tag, the teens study in school or take their grandparents out to lunch, and the adults are boasting with parties, dances, and small get togethers, all thanks to a bumbling patrol of popsicle sticks. (And yes, I still do think they were popsicle sticks today.) All is well, until it becomes clear that there is a threat in the distance in the form of red lines. At first, the red lines manage to overthrow the popsicle stick patrol and plan a good day to destroy the town with their radioactive lasers. One problem: rockets! So the patrol hurries on a journey to find the rockets and, just before the red lines are about to commit their evil-doing, the rockets are released into space and spray a special gas that melts the red lines like ice cream cones. The enchanted boulder that controlled the red lines into their evil-doing is arrested and the town is happy again.
@lynnthomas84572 жыл бұрын
WELCOME BACK!!! I absolutely adored the fantasia movies as a kid. This marked Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy as my favorite classical piece ever, which holds through today, and I'd rewatch the Greek section over and over.
@abbieananas2 жыл бұрын
Return of the King (seriously tho, ur videos are amazing and worth the wait)
@keyaunna.2 жыл бұрын
this is one of my favourite movies of all time. it deserves another animated feature in modern time to introduce more classical music to a modern child audience.
@annae28372 жыл бұрын
Your analyses are so deep and so thought out. It's hard to find a KZbinr with this level of dedication to history and craft. I've enjoyed all of your videos and I look forward to the rest of them! Thank you.
@sailorcat9 ай бұрын
Wow, I love the connection between the apprentice and Walt himself!
@thatrandomredengine94302 ай бұрын
It took 3 films to get to Mickey Mouse actually being in the film. That’s some good restraint!
@SurrealKangaroo12 Жыл бұрын
This is my favorite Disney movie and might be my favorite movie of all time. It was my favorite since I was about five.
@mikaelagirard2 жыл бұрын
I already love both Fantasias but I enjoyed these videos anyway! Melody Time and Fun & Fancy Free are also very nostalgic. Great videos as always!
@joseguyersalles11142 жыл бұрын
This movie started my love for classical music. I loved it the first time I, at an early age , saw it!
@Senglishify Жыл бұрын
As a Disney connoisseur; your videos are fascinating! You have such a unique and interesting perspective on Walt and his work!
@paulinetrivago.754010 ай бұрын
I'm stopping watching this 10 minutes in because I loved Fantasia as a kid, so watching this is making me want to watch for the first time in decades, I've tried in the past but have yet to do it
@paulinetrivago.754010 ай бұрын
2 hours later and I'm back, it was very nice, especially near the end, the music nearly guided me to sleep and certainly calmed me down quite a bit
@jordanjoestar-turniptruck2 жыл бұрын
YES!! My fav (especially the rite of spring)!! The Schulheist notebook is a treasure of animation and SFX history. The way you describe the fusion of music and animation in The Sorcerer's Apprentice is reminiscent of YMS's analysis of the stampede scene in his Lion King review, and reinforces how powerful music is in film when applied correctly.
@stephaniec63072 жыл бұрын
This came out at the perfect time, I'd just finished rewatching Fantasia a few hours ago! Thanks for giving my all time favorite movie the thoughtful analysis it deserves, despite having watched it dozens of times since I was 3 you managed to draw out parallels I had not noticed before. Now to watch part 2 🙌
@paulw6057 Жыл бұрын
It's also my favorite movie of all time but I've only watched it no more than twice, at least all the way through. I tend to wait for the perfect moment to rewatch my favorite movies/TV lest I spoil the memory. That's unless someone else wishes to watch it with me. I must have watched it as a toddler as that's the only thing that explains certain memories and impressions I have.
@AllThePeppermint2 жыл бұрын
Fantasia is a fine wine that only gets better with age, regardless if you're considering the age of the viewer or the age of the film. Every time I watch Fantasia, I enjoy it more than the last time. In the last two years alone, I've probably watched it 4 times. Whereas in the previous 10 years I had probably only watched it twice.
@deceptive-sun2 жыл бұрын
amazing video!! i personally have a special place in my heart for fantasia, but it was interesting to listen and kinda "fell in love with it again" thanks to you!
@Tinkerbe112 жыл бұрын
Fantasia is one of my favourite Disney movies! The music and animation go together so well. I have heard many stories about how the special effects were created, but never the one about the snow flakes. Walt really put quality over efficiency, and it shows in every movie he has supervised, especially in Snow White and Fantasia. Thanks for your analysis and interpretation of the movie! It's interesting how others percieve the segments of the movie without an obvious story.
@bjbierlein55662 жыл бұрын
Wow. Impressed by your context, explanations and analysis, and haven’t seen videos like yours before, on to part 2.
@apeterson136 ай бұрын
The 40 people that disliked this video are of an evil worse than Chernabog
@les47672 жыл бұрын
You were preaching to the choir talking to me. "Fantasia" became my #1 animated film of all time the day I first saw it in the theater during a re-release in the 1980's. It hasn't been replaced, either. For my money, hand drawn painted cell animation has never been done better and the sheer imagination behind the individual sequences and the way they were executed were mind blowing to me. "Fantasia 2000" was a welcome continuation of the masterpiece that earned it's place in the series(I keep hoping they'll eventually do a third one(impossible since they scrapped their hand drawn animation department..I suppose they could do it CGI, but I think something would be missing if they did), and include a segment for Goofy, since Mickey and Donald got theirs. I can re-watch Fantasia at any time and immediately get enraptured with the experience. The violin bows that turn into swaying flying creatures...the elemental fairies creating dew and frost...the marching brooms...that terrifying T-Rex...the ballet with elephants, hippos, crocodiles and ostriches...the love story of two forlorn centaurs...the sheer evil of the Devil of Bald Mountain and the serenity of the pilgrimage through the woods....all immersed me in pure emotional...well...emotion! It was, is and will always be a masterpiece of the highest order.
@arnepianocanada2 жыл бұрын
Again EXTRAORDINARY. You could be giving University-level talks with your incomparable insights.
@erikbihari36252 жыл бұрын
You're quite right my impressively inquisitive sire!
@ProfCoolio3 ай бұрын
That title. It’s word for word what I’ve been telling every human, animal, plant and fungus for half of my life. Congratulations, you’ve earned yourself a devotee.
@andrewgarcia8337 Жыл бұрын
The Golden age of animation! ❤👏🏻 Fantasia is a real masterpiece. 🖼️🎵
@blondetapperware82892 жыл бұрын
He's back!
@Pomoscorzo4 ай бұрын
Now I'm waiting for your analysis of Fantasia 2000. 😊
@Ratigan2 Жыл бұрын
21:32 I love your modesty and self-awareness xD
@kittycatmeowmeow9632 жыл бұрын
When I was a little kid, my parents made me watch this movie every night, thinking it would bore me to sleep. Sadly for them, it didn't work because I thought the movie was too beautiful.
@catherineaustin2 Жыл бұрын
I already loved Fantasia, as deeply as I love any of the early Disney films. For me, it's right up there with Snow White, Bambi, Pinocchio, etc. I never needed any convincing of what a masterpiece it truly is, but I still come back to watch these essays from time to time, because they are just that good.
@araynajoy56082 жыл бұрын
Always so excited to see an upload from you! Sad to say I skipped Fantasia when I was little cause I thought it was boring but I am definitely going to check it out now. The process of these old animations is incredible I love hearing about it.
@Crraao3179 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely fantastic analysis- I’ve never seen the connection between all the pieces until now! They all mirror each other beautifully and the connecting elements between the pieces are much stronger than some of the collection films made later on in Disneys filmography (i.e. make mine music & melody time) - which I feel lots of people unfairly compare Fantasia to. Happily on my way to part two!
@blondetapperware82892 жыл бұрын
Great in depth analysis just as before! You deliver, man. That part about Mickey being Walt was something I never thought of before. Lovin your takes.
@IceOfPhoenix88 Жыл бұрын
As a 7 year old, this was hands down my favourite movie. I watched it on a weekly basis and I couldn't understand why my friends didn’t enjoy it as much as I did.
@aiyuk.szn.22957 ай бұрын
bcuz its so boring i despised this as a kid
@zhubajie69402 жыл бұрын
This has for more than a half-century and probably will remain my favorite Disney animation. I never understood the haters of this film or its initial commercial failure except that perhaps the 1960s when I saw it was a potently creative time not encumbered by the morass of conservatism across the American culture that existed before and after. Let's hope for a renaissance.
@ricardolima9411 Жыл бұрын
Your intro was EVERYTHING.
@mehlover2 жыл бұрын
God I love your videos! I love your writing! It's beautiful and especially when you tie everything back together in an ornate pretty looking bow (that looks like it was hard to make, but it's so beautiful looking, it's worth it). I never knew about the process for animating the snowflakes. It's wild how far they went to do it. I appreciate that scene so much more now (even though I hated it since I was a kid because I thought the music was boring and not exciting enough). Also I now picture you as that cat, even if you do a face reveal, I'm going to assume you just made your human do it lol
@michellesprague31632 жыл бұрын
Dont stop making your videos, they're amazing. Hope we really do go through all of the animated films.
@erikbihari36252 жыл бұрын
Or at the very least, walt's original six outlined in the pinocchio video. For that, is when Disney was Disney's!
@MossyMozart2 жыл бұрын
I am very pleasantly surprised to discover how some of the scenes were created. I always naïvely thought that the snowflakes and 'Ave Maria' scenes were just drawn frame by frame. I had no idea how much work and layering, "multi-planed" techniques were required to make them SEEM like they were effortless drawings. [Also, I never knew that Walt Disney himself was the voice of Mickey Mouse.] ...................... As you point out in "Fantasia" II, 'The Dance of the Hours' DOES act like a palate-cleanser, one i enjoyed immensely. It made me laugh out loud, especially when the hippo diva reclines on her couch and primly pulls her completely inadequate tutu over her zaftig haunches, to no avail. Sparkling visual gags throughout this segmant.
@Deannac_art2 жыл бұрын
I absolutely love your videos, and they've honestly inspired me to rewatch all the old Disney movies! As a kid I never noticed little things in the animation, but now that I'm older it's incredible to see the tricks these animators had to pull in order to achieve certain effects
@MaggieMay39222 жыл бұрын
You literally have the best video essays! Keep up the amazing work
@agentcallisto2 жыл бұрын
Haven’t watched yet, but man oh man am I on board with the title of this video. Ha. Fantasia is one of my top five Disney movies.
@agentcallisto2 жыл бұрын
Okay, I watched and loved it! I don’t know if the conclusions you draw about the plot of Fantasia were on purpose, but even if it was a coincidence it was an interesting premise. Thank you for showing love to some of the less current Disney movies (which happen to be most of my favorites)!
@jameszimmerschied92002 жыл бұрын
Quite a piece of work to be tackled and done quite well. All the work to weave the video sequences with the discussion. Quite amazing Mr. Amazing.
@matheus52302 жыл бұрын
KZbin didn't notify me! I'm gonna watch these videos now!
@DocKrazy10 ай бұрын
I am so fucking happy there are people who love fantasia as much as I do. I was genuinely and unironucally too young when I first watched it (it's probably the first movie I ever say. I was legit no years old) and I can point out everything that scared me so fucking bad. I legit had waking nightmares as a toddler about this movie. But this movie is probably the reason why I loved playing in the orchestra, because orchestral music is the shit!
@eleanorcook35152 жыл бұрын
I swear this is becoming my favourite youtube channel
@sarasamaletdin45742 жыл бұрын
Sometimes I want to start a KZbin channel discussing Disney films and some other things. But how good you are at educating and giving your interpretations makes me feel somewhat like the Sorcerer’s apprentice getting swept away.
@therewillbefudd2 жыл бұрын
No you should! That's the opposite of what I want to achieve. I want to see your videos!
@TheBlueRobin262 жыл бұрын
I LOVE this movie! Put it on in the background sometimes, but soon find myself stopping what I'm doing at a given segment and watching the whole thing as I become invested in the beauty of these two amazing art forms combined.
@jamesmoyner7499 Жыл бұрын
I'll be heading over to part two now, but first I would like to say this helped open my eyes to ideas regarding the film I didn't know were there before. I have always enjoyed the film, but your explanation gave me new appreciation for it.
@NicholasTobolski9 ай бұрын
Fantasia is daring. It’s bold. It’s super turbo forward thinking. It. Is. Glorious. It, and Fantasia 2000 (my beloved), are my de facto favorite Disney movies, and some of my favorite films ever made. Other faves include Atlantis: The Lost Empire, The Lion King 1 and 1 1/2, TRON and TRON: Legacy, and hopefully, Treasure Planet (once I finally watch it). You could probably throw in The Aristocats (Everybody, Everybody, Everybody wants to be a cat!) and The Tigger Movie too, but I haven’t watched them in a LONG while.
@heinskaal2 жыл бұрын
This movie deserves all of the love of this world and I will defend it until the end times.
@vicenteortegarubilar94182 жыл бұрын
Glad to see you again, I am in the right mood for this, wich Is always if we are talking about Fantasia
@incoref2 жыл бұрын
I never thought much of Fantasia, maybe because I had seen Opéra Imaginaire first and it became my all-time favorite, but now I definitely appreciate Fantasia much more, thank you!
@ethos832 жыл бұрын
Gonna watch this now... Been a long time. Great job Kevin! Uh... I mean Bill... Can't wait for part deux!
@therewillbefudd2 жыл бұрын
Thanks stranger!
@TheloniousCube11 ай бұрын
The "walking piece of fudge" in the Bach piece is, to my eyes, clearly a coffin
@rachelneuendorf44432 жыл бұрын
For the algorithm! Because your videos are amazing, and they deserve to be on the front page of KZbin!
@once4608Ай бұрын
This video somehow rerouted my brain, cuz now when I watch the movie I often think about different points you make and how much it all clicks together. Great work 💜
@Ana-ld9js2 жыл бұрын
YES! YOU'RE BACK!!
@Mmizzle222 жыл бұрын
So glad to have another Fudd video out, and such a wonderful exploration of a really underrated film. Thank you!
@Amaruuno2 жыл бұрын
As a chlid I watched Fantasia more than any other disney film.
@erikbihari36252 жыл бұрын
Then Disney done he's job!☺️👏
@EmilynWood2 жыл бұрын
I got Fantasia from the library once as a kid, not knowing what it was about, thinking it was all going to be about Mickey because of the cover. So I was really confused by all the short films, and I think I may have even either fallen asleep for some of it or fast-forwarded because I was bored. I never tried watching it again after that. Thank you for this two-parter. It is definitely raising my appreciation of the film.
@shellbeeyourshells11 ай бұрын
I’m so glad you found the parallels between all the scenes! So beautiful! Thank you for shedding a new light on an old favorite!
@eggboy91262 жыл бұрын
This is probably my favorite Disney film, its up there with Hunchback and Beauty and the Beast. I've watched it hundreds of times since I was a kid.
@redwardsfowler Жыл бұрын
I have only just found your channel and absolutely loving all of your video essays so far. And thank you so much for addressing the ominous "walking piece of fudge." That thing (I interpreted it as a rock) has haunted me since childhood! What is it? Where is it going? I don't know, but I have always been so creeped out by it.
@DanTheMan27 Жыл бұрын
The one thing I hate about Disney’s remastered versions of their old films is that they changed the colors of everything, which is especially prevalent in the Toccata and Fugue sequence. That’s why I still have a copy of the early 90s VHS release of Fantasia
@menijna2 жыл бұрын
Fecking aye my favourite Disney movie that made me the most cultured-up binch on the block
@erikbihari36252 жыл бұрын
Is culture not, about how someone cunducts themselves in society? Bragging isn't exactly an inherently appealing trait to have.
@deckofcards87 Жыл бұрын
Sorcerer's Apprentice and Night On Bald Mountain are MASTERFUL. These are an important landmark not only for animation but how film can surpass dialogue in place of music and image. I know that both Federico Fellini and Stanley Kubrick loved Fantasia and were influenced by it; films such as '2001 A Space Odyssey' and '8 1/2' and of course every music video ever made.
@mariapapira2 жыл бұрын
Oh, there he is again! 🤗 I am so excited for this one. I love Fantasia! This will a great evening...🤩
@menijna2 жыл бұрын
And yet another great videoessay. You are my favourite
@erikbihari36252 жыл бұрын
I hope if there's a chane he'll make nothing else, at least finish the six starters.
@4ndro2 жыл бұрын
I can't say I love Fantasia (I respect it even though I find it boring) but I do love your videos! I wish you could cover all the Classics in a reasonable time 😂
@gingerjak79282 жыл бұрын
Wow another amazing video! You go deep and I am here for it. 👍💐
@xolotte2 жыл бұрын
What a great video! Super informative! Fantasia isn't a movie I've ever really thought about, but I definitely appreciate it more now