Commemorating Walt Disney, 50 years after his death
Jochen Kürten db
December 14, 2016
The Walt Disney Studios are the most successful film studios in the world. Fifty years after his death, a new book takes a close look at genius cartoon artist and movie pioneer Walt Disney.
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Commemorating Walt Disney, 50 years after his death
The Walt Disney Studios are the most successful film studios in the world. Fifty years after his death, a new book takes a close look at genius cartoon artist and movie pioneer Walt Disney.
Image: 2016 Disney Enterprises, Inc.
Meet Walt
Walt Disney, born in 1901 in Chicago, was an ingenious cartoon artist - a fact lovingly documented in "The Walt Disney Film Archives. The Animated Movies 1921-1968." The coffee table book contains hundreds of sketches and drawings that give the reader an idea of how the most famous Disney movies were created.
Image: 2016 Disney Enterprises, Inc.
Animation meets the real world
In the 1920s, long before Mickey Mouse and Snow White, young Walt directed and produced the "Alice Comedies" series, where a real-life little girl named Alice and a cartoon cat have all sorts of adventures in a cartoon world. The scene pictured above shows Virginia Davis on the set of "Alice's Spooky Adventure."
Image: Walt Disney Archives Photo Library
Big hits
The new book with its more than 1,500 illustrations meticulously follows Disney's career from the early days to two years after his death on December 15, 1966. The focus is on the Disney motion pictures that amazed and drew crowds back then, and are still beloved today. The 1937 "Snow White and the Seven Dwarves" was Walt Disney's first long feature film - and was a huge box office hit.
Image: 2016 Disney Enterprises, Inc.
Legendary cartoon characters
The characters Disney dreamed up are known worldwide - for instance, Mickey Mouse. It's not certain, however, who the father of the famous mouse was. Walt Disney's art director Ub Iwerks is also credited with inventing the cartoon character. Disney stopped drawing in 1926, but - ever the perfectionist - he continued to pull the strings and no cartoon ever left the studios without his approval.
Image: 2016 Disney Enterprises, Inc.
Dreams are forever
"Pinocchio," "Dumbo," "Bambi," "Fantasia," "Cinderella," "Alice in Wonderland" and "Peter Pan" (pictured) were all released in the 1940s and 1950s. These full-length feature films were beautifully animated, whisking the audience away to dream worlds that seemed to be boundless.
Image: 2016 Disney Enterprises, Inc.
The making of a cartoon film
Many thousands of people were involved in the production of Disney feature films, mainly graphic artists and painters. Hundreds of sketches were made, one of many steps on the path to the final finished product. The films then flickered across movie screens worldwide, but under just one single name: Walt Disney. Pictured above is a sketch for the 1959 animated film "Sleeping Beauty."
Image: 2016 Disney Enterprises, Inc.
Family entertainment
Browsing through the magnificent 600-page illustrated book brings back childhood memories of going to the movies to see the most recent Disney film, or watching the beloved old movies with one's own children on video or DVD. "That's not a bird, that's a butterfly!" The tale of "Bambi" (1942) is a classic to this day.
Image: 2016 Disney Enterprises, Inc.
The Walt Disney Film Archives
"The Walt Disney Film Archives. The Animated Movies 1921-1968," published by Daniel Kothenschulte, was created in cooperation with the Walt Disney Archives and Libraries in the US. Numerous Disney experts give introductions into Disney's oeuvre and the individual films. The book is in English, with a German-language supplement.
Image: Copy: Taschen Verlag
Taschen
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The heavy coffee-table book released by the Cologne-based Taschen publishing house shortly before the 50th anniversary of Walt Disney's death gives readers an in-depth look at the famous American illustrator's beginnings.
"I can never stand still," Daniel Kothenschulte quotes Disney in the preface. "I must explore and experiment. I am never satisfied with my work. I resent the limitations of my own imagination," the cartoon illustrator once said about continual learning.
Learning played a role, and so did money, even though Disney is reported to have stated that he doesn't make pictures just to make money, "I make money to make more pictures."
Currently, the Disney Studios' the computer-animated musical film "Moana" is drawing audiences to movie theaters worldwide, soon to be followed by the Star Wars spin-off "Rogue One: A Star Wars Story."
'All our dreams can come true'
When the Disney Studios look back at 2016 in just a few weeks' time, they can be sure to have reached an all-time record with earnings of about $6 billion, a sum no other studio has earned in just 12 months. That's thanks to the animated films, the live-action "The Jungle Book" and a superhero adventure story from the Marvel universe, "The First Avenger: Civil War."
Sailing wasn't always smooth for the Disney Studios, however. It wasn't until Disney bought the successful Pixar animation studios in 2006, snapped up Marvel three years later, followed by Lucasfilm - the company behind Star Wars - in 2012 that a popular, productive enterprise became the world's most successful film studios.
Add to that a gigantic merchandising industry, amusement parks all over the world, comics, TV stations, travel agencies and much more.
With his signature dive into piles of gold coims, Scrooge McDuck for one would have been overjoyed at the company's good fortunes.