Why does fantasia talk like that




















He was in the show before Mickey Mouse Clubhouse came out. Log in. See Answer. Best Answer. Mickey never spoke a word. Study guides.

Q: Did Mickey Mouse talk in Fantasia? Write your answer Related questions. Does Mickey Mouse talk on Fantasia? In Fantasia what is Mickey Mouse's role? Why does Mickey Mouse have a blue sorcerer's hat? What movie was Mickey Mouse in with a broom that divided? Who played the sorcerer's apprentice in Fantasia? Who was the original Sorcerer's apprentice in Fantasia? Which film had played Mickey Mouse and 'the sorcerer's apprentice'?

Why does Mickey Mouse wear sorcerer cloths? Why does Mickey Mouse have stars and crescents on his hat? What do you do for Mickey Mouse? Why does Mickey Mouse wear a blue hat? Who did Mickey Mouse work for in fantasia? Name the mouse which talk on two legs?

How do you talk like Mickey Mouse? What is Mickey Mouse's name in German? What was the most popular movie that featured Mickey Mouse? Who plays the titicular character in the Sorcerer's apprentice in the segment part of Fantasia? Stokowski and his orchestra ended up scoring the entire movie and being shown in "Fantasia's" live-action segments. Disney sound engineers created an elaborate sound system called "Fantasound" for the film, recording the orchestra on a then-unprecedented nine-track polyphonic master, then mixed down to three tracks.

To play the soundtrack, theaters had to be equipped with a Fantasound system that included 90 speakers placed throughout the auditorium. That meant the film had to be booked as a touring road show, with Disney technicians mounting the speakers at a venue in each city ahead of the film's debut there. Originally, Disney animators made nine sequences for the film, including one set to Debussy's "Clair de Lune" featuring birds flying across a moonlit sky over the Florida Everglades.

The segment was cut for length, but it appeared a few years later in another Disney musical anthology film, 's " Make Mine Music ," scored to the song "Blue Bayou.

Disney envisioned "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" pictured , and later the "Fantasia" feature, as a comeback vehicle for Mickey Mouse -- his popularity had slumped in the late s. In fact, "Fantasia" rebooted him with a new look, the familiar pupil-eyed face we know today. The centaurettes in the segment scored to Beethoven's "Pastoral" symphony were the source of more than one controversy. The Hollywood Production Code office was worried about their toplessness, so the Disney animators were careful to hide the breasts with flowers.

After the film's release, some viewers objected to Sunflower, a centaurette with exaggerated black features, shown polishing the hooves of a white centaurette. Deemed a negative racial stereotype, Sunflower was cut from the film for the re-release and left out of future prints of "Fantasia. When the film was scheduled to premiere in New York on November 13, , the finale the "Ave Maria" sequence wasn't quite finished. That reel arrived at the theater with just four hours to spare and was spliced onto the rest of the movie.

The animators wanted to model Chernabog, the winged demon who dominates the segment set to Modest Mussorgsky's "Night on Bald Mountain," on horror icon Bela Lugosi. Maybe it's the people who find it insulting that have the problem. That THEY think of black people as inferior. The thing that I find the most amusing is that I have never heard little people complaining about their portrayals in these films, nor of people getting on a soapbox for them. I think that little people would have a much greater case about the slavery in Snow White than people of color would have about the slavery in Fantasia.

They go and slave in a mine all day, then they come home to find a woman has, in essence home invaded them, and is now forcing them to live by her rules of cleanliness and nutrition. Saying that since they are of diminutive stature that they are no smarter than children and have to be taken care of. Personally, their house didn't look that much dirtier than college frat house. I won't even go into The Wizard of Oz and it's portrayal of little people as singing, dancing cute little Munchkins.

Or it's use of evil flying monkey's which back them black people were still called. Throughout history there have been books written, films made, or art created that by today's standards are no longer politically correct, or if dissected could be looked at in a an entirely different way. The women depicted in the paintings of Peter Paul Rubens would be considered fat, unattractive, and very unhealthy by today's standards because being underweight is the new beautiful.

In Rubens time only servants, and the poor were underweight, so the supermodels of today would have been considered ugly, unintelligent, and lower class. In my humble opinion, the vast majority of this "politically correct" society come across as overly sensitive. Holding individuals from the first half of the 20th century to the standards of today in any form The leaps and bounds that have been made in just the last 20 years or so in computer technology alone should demonstrate that.

My first computer, purchased in , would be considered archaic by todays standards. And before anyone jumps up and starts screaming and waving their arms about, I understand that statement is a complete simplification of a point of view. But my primise still stands.

Context is no excuse. Of course the Disney cartoon can't change itself but your friend's grandmother can. She's old enough to know that times have changed. There's no excuse for her to keep using that language. It's like saying her grandmother could call you 'slave' because she comes from a different era. At what point do you say they're young enough to know better? Seems to me that political correctness is actually just considering the context and baseline assumptions that inform our attitudes.

The big thing is to learn to actually set aside our stuff while we listen to others and allow ourselves to admit the possibility that we might be mistaken in some of our thinking - not so that we can live driven by guilt, but so that we can all be that but free-er. Has anyone considered that calling another person's attitude about moral issues "wrong" is being ridiculous?

Our social mores are legitimate whether accepted by any other human. I apologize not at all for my attitide about the non-acceptability of homosexuality activity.

Has anyone noticed that evolutionists portray those creatures supposedly predating US as of a greatly darker skin color than we whites? Blacks as well as whites allow this to be perpetuated in our children's textbooks and pay for this politically incorrect inference with tax money. Has anyone noticed that in India, many wives are rejected because they have been described as of lighter skin than they are? Or that in our TV ads no black man has a wife or girl friend as dark as himself.

I don't intend to justify intentional words or actions with the intent to degrade others. It'just quite complex. I appreciate the discussions. Oh wait, that already happened. You are a racist. You've got racism up your ignorant ass.

You'll find it everywhere because you want to find it. These look like fakes, honestly. Perhaps the video now taken down is a well-done fake, but it looks fake.



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