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    Renegades of Animation: Pat Sullivan

    Pat Sullivan became famous worldwide for his creation of Felix the Cat. What most animation histories gloss over is Sullivan’s checkered past and longtime standing as a wildcat renegade. He didn’t follow the rules. And he made damn sure to fully protect his intellectual properties.

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    You WIll Need To Reset Your Password!!!

    We just moved hosts on this system, and this has caused a few updates. One is the way we encode and store the encoded passwords.

    Your old passwords will NOT work. You will need to reset your password. This is normal. Just click on reset password from the log in screen. Should be smooth as silk to do...

    Sorry for the hassle.

    Dave Koch
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    Are You Just Hanging Out?

    Just lurking? Join the club, we'd love to have you in the Big Cartoon Forum! Sign up is easy- just enter your name and password.... or join using your Facebook account!

    Membership has it's privileges... you can post and get your questions answered directly. But you can also join our community, and help other people with their questions, You can add to the discussion. And it's free! So join today!

    Dave Koch
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    Other Side Of Maleficent

    I have been looking forward to Maleficent with equal amounts of anticipation and dread. On one hand, she is easily my favorite Disney villain, so cold and so pure, and I want desperately to see more of her and her back-story. On the other hand, she is easily my favorite Disney villain, and I would hate to see her parodied, taken lightly or ultimately destroyed in a film that does not understand this great character. The good news is that this film almost gets it right; but that is also the bad news.

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    BCDB Hits 150K Entries

    It took a while, but we are finally here! The Big Cartoon DataBase hit the milestone of 150,000 entries earlier today with the addition of the cartoon The Polish Language. This film was added to BCDB on May 9th, 2014 at 4:23 PM.

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    Warner Brings Back Animated Stone-Age Family

    Funnyman Will Ferrell and partner Adam McKay are working on bringing back everyone’s favorite stone-age family. The duo’s production company Gary Sanchez Productions is in development on a new Flintstones animated feature.

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    Disney To Feast In France

    The follow up to Disney’s 2013 Academy Award Winning short Paperman has been announced, and it will premiere at France’s Annecy International Animated Film Festival. Titled The Feast, the short looks to be based on the same stylized CG techniques used on last years Paperman, a more natural and hand-drawn look to computer animation.

  8. Big Cartoon Forum

    Renegades of Animation: Pat Sullivan

    Pat Sullivan became famous worldwide for his creation of Felix the Cat. What most animation histories gloss over is Sullivan’s checkered past and longtime standing as a wildcat renegade. He didn’t follow the rules. And he made damn sure to fully protect his intellectual properties.

  9. Big Cartoon Forum

    You WIll Need To Reset Your Password!!!

    We just moved hosts on this system, and this has caused a few updates. One is the way we encode and store the encoded passwords.

    Your old passwords will NOT work. You will need to reset your password. This is normal. Just click on reset password from the log in screen. Should be smooth as silk to do...

    Sorry for the hassle.

    Dave Koch

Favorite disney movie??

Discussion in 'Disney / Pixar' started by Dave Koch, Nov 2, 2013.

  1. Dave Koch

    Dave Koch Cartoon Admin

    I should have mentioned Beauty and the Beast. One of the first Disney movies I remember seeing as a kid, and I don't understand what's up with most boys my age back then on hating princesses. This one was amazing.
  2. Hans Walther

    Hans Walther Newbie New Member

    I think mine will always be "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs". It was the first movie my parents took me to see in the cinema, and it made a huge impression. In that scene where all the Dwarfs play musical instruments and dance with Snow White, I wasn't a 5 year old kid sitting in the cinema, I was actually in the Dwarfs house with them! At least, that is what I remember...
    • Like Like x 1
  3. Humperdinck

    Humperdinck Apprentice Forum Member New Member

    I know this is probably an unpopular answer, one that may even cause me to be labeled as a hipster of the cartoon world, but I'll deal with it.
    My favorite Disney movie is Toy Story. Yes I'm aware that they had done decades of classics before it, and Alice in Wonderland is a close second, but Toy Story was one of the defining films of 1990s animation. Tom Hanks and Tim Allen are by no means professional voice actors, but they played the roles with strong conviction. Not to mention it was a humorous film, and as a young lad it was actually suspenseful when the toys are attempting to escape the clutches of Sid. It was a huge part of my childhood and remains my favorite
    • Like Like x 1
  4. oneuglybunny

    oneuglybunny Moderator Staff Member Forum Member

    ^ Not unpopular by me. Toy Story has oodles done right from the ground up. Tim Allen as the arrogant imbecile works, as does Tom Hanks as the golly-shucks sheriff suddenly marginalized by the new kid in town. We are given a toy's view of hell early on: the wanton destructiveness of Sid. Later, the story takes both Woody and Buzz into Sid's clutches through believable circumstances. Add to that, Woody's jealousy has made him a sullied turncoat among the toys, while Buzz's self-confidence gets shattered when he discovers that he is, in truth, a toy. A tarnished lawman and a broken hero must somehow dig themselves out of deepest pit of doom imaginable. Somebody at Pixar really knew what they were doing. I can also see why Walt Disney Pictures was so glad to pipeline this film through their huge theater distributorship network. At the time, Pixar could produce the films, but had no system for getting their films into movie theaters. That's why Disney gets their vanity plate on Pixar productions: Pixar makes them, Disney delivers them.
  5. chris bennett

    chris bennett Newbie New Member

    if you count Pixar movies, my vote's for Up!
  6. MrCleveland

    MrCleveland Key Animator Forum Member New Member

    My favorite Disney film is "The Three Caballeros".
  7. oneuglybunny

    oneuglybunny Moderator Staff Member Forum Member

    Okay, it has taken a rerun through my animated library, but I can finally single out favorites. However, since I'm drawing from the lineup of Walt Disney Pictures and from Pixar, these are narrow favorites, just barely ahead of the rest.

    Fave Disney production: Oliver & Company. Robert Loggia really brought the nasty and the menace to the Sykes villain, and development of the unwanted kitten who goes through Fate's wringer a few times and emerges in a loving home works for me. Yes, I'm a big softie for happy endings. I also very much like the aesop taught in this one: real friends will never hold you down, instead they will always pick you up. It's worth noting that when Jenny fell once more into Syke's clutches, Oliver was the very first one of Fagan's troop to make the insane leap between speeding vehicles to effect a rescue. That is some kinda kitten.

    Fave Pixar production: WALL●E. In theory, this premise shouldn't work: Earth has become uninhabitable, and can only be saved by two robots in love. Don Bluth's Titan A.E. had the Earth get blown up in the first act, which is major misstep for any feature that's not trying to be moribund. Its box office draw was equally dismal. And "robots in love" has shades of those ridiculously humanoid chromium-and-latex sex dolls from Japan going at it. Yet, WALL●E is this grungy, boxy trash compactor that develops a crush on a sleek, mag-lev ovoid probe dubbed EVE. And I was hooked; somehow, Pixar made this preposterous premise work.
  8. Furienna

    Furienna Intern Forum Member New Member

    It's not easy for me to answer this, but I guess I have to say "Aladdin".
  9. David

    David Newbie New Member

    My favourite movie is the jungle book
  10. Hans Walther

    Hans Walther Newbie New Member

    Hey guys, I see a lot of Pixar-films like "Toy Story" and "Up" mentioned. Those are NOT Disney-films...
  11. oneuglybunny

    oneuglybunny Moderator Staff Member Forum Member

    Well, that's a matter of semantics. Technically, yes, Walt Disney Pictures and Pixar Animation are two different production entities that share a theater distribution network. However, the two companies merged years ago, and now share administrators as well. By the same token, the early Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies were produced by Leon Schesinger's studios, which was its own entity, but with a contract to Warner Brothers Pictures. When Leon retired, his studios and talented staff were absorbed by Warner Brothers under Eddie Selzer. From that point on, those were "Warner Brothers" cartoons. Likewise for Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising having their own studios for making cartoons, with a contract to supply them to MGM Studios. When Harman-Ising couldn't meet demand, MGM set up their own animation department under Fred Quimby, who hired many of Harman-Ising's staffers and well as some from Van Beuren studios. This is how Bill Hanna came to meet Joe Barbera, and cartoon history would be made.
  12. Hans Walther

    Hans Walther Newbie New Member

    Pixar-films like "Toy Story" and "Up" were made long before Pixar and Disney merged, and even after they merged, we know that films like "Tangled" and "Frozen" are Disney, and "Brave" and "Monsters University" are Pixar...
  13. Ravi

    Ravi Intern Forum Member New Member

    Love The Motu Patlu Cartoon on Nick India now
  14. Ravi

    Ravi Intern Forum Member New Member

    Love The Motu Patlu Cartoon on Nick India now
  15. jpickens

    jpickens Apprentice Forum Member New Member

    Song of the South one the best mixture of live action and animation to be made.
  16. Furienna

    Furienna Intern Forum Member New Member

    That was a brave choice, as that movie has been accused of racism and Disney won't even release it for the public to see it anymore.
  17. jpickens

    jpickens Apprentice Forum Member New Member

    I had a VHS Japanese print I got from Shocking videos in the 90s.
  18. oneuglybunny

    oneuglybunny Moderator Staff Member Forum Member

    New favorite: Zootopia. The world-building as a whole is magnificent, the characters are both surrogate humans and civilized animals homogenized. It's a trope storm, certainly, but well-crafted nonetheless. The whole think tank sessions by the directors and the production staff really does hammer out the rough spots and raise the film-making game. Go, Disney!
  19. uli90

    uli90 Newbie New Member

    It will always be Robin Hood! :cool:
  20. RascalsFan84

    RascalsFan84 Inbetweener Forum Member New Member

    For me, my favorite Disney film is A Goofy Movie.

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