Monday, September 24, 2018
#38 Fantasia 2000
Walt Disney had always intended Fantasia to be more than just a singular film. It was supposed to be an evolving project, consistently rereleased with new segments that married music to animation. While this vision never came to fruition, the idea of creating a new Fantasia lingered on in the minds at Disney. Sixty years after the original, the follow-up materialized, and Fantasia 2000 was released at the dawn of the new millennium.
If there are criticisms to be made of Fantasia 2000, one of the first is of the framing segments. In the original, Deems Taylor provided consistent introduction and commentary for each piece; here, the segments are introduced by a revolving cast of celebrities. While Angela Lansbury and James Earl Jones fit the program just fine (both possessing a level of dignity and class befitting of the relatively highbrow tone of Fantasia), there's also turns from Steve Martin, Bette Midler, and Penn and Teller. Their presence unfortunately detracts from the enchantment and spectacle of the animated segments, breaking up the flow and tying the film a bit too much to the time of its release, depriving it of the timeless quality of the original.
The animated segments themselves are all enjoyable, the best of them clearly illustrating how far the animation medium evolved over sixty years. Respighi's "Pines of Rome" soundtracks a vision of blue whales that starts off a bit too cute (with a baby whale more than a bit reminiscent of Dumbo) but ends in a pod of whales ascending into the sky as the music reaches fever pitch, creating an incredible sense of scale and grandeur. "Rhapsody in Blue" is the clear standout, drawn in the style of illustrator Al Hirschfeld and possessing a sense of character and nonstop kinetic energy that ranks it among the very best of Disney's shorts. "The Steadfast Tin Soldier" is a straight telling of the Hans Christian Anderson tale, though without Anderson's characteristically depressing ending. "The Carnival of the Animals" gives us a flamingo with a yo-yo breaking from the routine of the other flamingos; it's amusing enough, but so brief that it scarcely has time to leave an impression. "Pomp and Circumstance" is used to tell the story of Noah's Ark, with Donald and Daisy Duck along for the ride; Elgar's dignified piece fits quite aptly with the throngs of animals marching along. Finally, "Firebird Suite" closes with some of the film's most stunning imagery and animation, presenting an enormous Firebird and a life-giving Sprite as primal forces of destruction and creation.
Though not the revolutionary experiment that Fantasia was, Fantasia 2000 nonetheless earns its place as an underappreciated entry in Disney's canon. It's a bit regrettable that it still wasn't able to turn Fantasia into the annual or semi-annual venture that Walt Disney envisioned, even if only to serve as a showcase for top-tier animated shorts, a format that has become largely ignored by the mainstream over time. As it is, Fantasia 2000 and Fantasia will always stand as a view of the most imaginative and beautiful shorts from two eras of animation history.
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