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La Boîte à musique

Titre original : Make Mine Music
  • 1946
  • Approved
  • 1h 15m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,1/10
5,3 k
MA NOTE
La Boîte à musique (1946)
Animation done to contemporary popular music.
Liretrailer2 min 05 s
1 vidéo
99+ photos
Hand-Drawn AnimationAdventureAnimationComedyFamilyMusical

Ce long-métrage est une anthologie de dix courts-métrages musicaux. Chacune des séquences, dont le titre s'anime dans le plus pur style des devantures des cinémas et théâtres des années 40, ... Tout lireCe long-métrage est une anthologie de dix courts-métrages musicaux. Chacune des séquences, dont le titre s'anime dans le plus pur style des devantures des cinémas et théâtres des années 40, est chantée par un artiste de l'époque.Ce long-métrage est une anthologie de dix courts-métrages musicaux. Chacune des séquences, dont le titre s'anime dans le plus pur style des devantures des cinémas et théâtres des années 40, est chantée par un artiste de l'époque.

  • Directors
    • Robert Cormack
    • Clyde Geronimi
    • Jack Kinney
  • Writers
    • Homer Brightman
    • Dick Huemer
    • Dick Kinney
  • Stars
    • Nelson Eddy
    • Dinah Shore
    • Laverne Andrews
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    6,1/10
    5,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Directors
      • Robert Cormack
      • Clyde Geronimi
      • Jack Kinney
    • Writers
      • Homer Brightman
      • Dick Huemer
      • Dick Kinney
    • Stars
      • Nelson Eddy
      • Dinah Shore
      • Laverne Andrews
    • 44Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 19Commentaires de critiques
    • 60Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:05
    Trailer

    Photos101

    Voir l’affiche
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    Rôles principaux23

    Modifier
    Nelson Eddy
    Nelson Eddy
    • Narrator
    • (voice)
    • …
    Dinah Shore
    Dinah Shore
      Laverne Andrews
      Laverne Andrews
      • Andrews Sisters
      • (singing voice)
      • (as Andrews Sisters)
      Maxene Andrews
      Maxene Andrews
      • Andrews Sisters
      • (singing voice)
      • (as Andrews Sisters)
      Patty Andrews
      Patty Andrews
      • Andrews Sisters
      • (singing voice)
      • (as Andrews Sisters)
      Benny Goodman
      Benny Goodman
      • Bandleader
      • (credit only)
      Jerry Colonna
      Jerry Colonna
      • Narrator (segment "Casey at the Bat")
      • (voice)
      Andy Russell
      Andy Russell
        Sterling Holloway
        Sterling Holloway
        • Narrator (segment "Peter and the Wolf")
        • (voice)
        Tatiana Riabouchinska
        • Silhouetted Dancer
        • (as Riabouchinska)
        David Lichine
        • Silhouetted Dancer
        • (as Lichine)
        The Pied Pipers
          Ken Darby
          Ken Darby
          • The King's Men
          • (singing voice)
          • (as King's Men)
          • …
          Jon Dodson
          • The King's Men
          • (singing voice)
          • (as King's Men)
          Bud Linn
          • The King's Men
          • (singing voice)
          • (as King's Men)
          Rad Robinson
          • The King's Men
          • (singing voice)
          • (as King's Men)
          The Ken Darby Singers
            John Brown
            • Umpire
            • (voice)
            • (uncredited)
            • Directors
              • Robert Cormack
              • Clyde Geronimi
              • Jack Kinney
            • Writers
              • Homer Brightman
              • Dick Huemer
              • Dick Kinney
            • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
            • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

            Commentaires des utilisateurs44

            6,15.3K
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            Avis en vedette

            5Foux_du_Fafa

            Not bad, but better seen as individual segments

            Unable to initially return to making true animated features like "Pinocchio" and "Bambi" after the Second World War, Disney turned to making "package features". Like "Fantasia", these films strung together various shorts and featurettes into a feature-length anthology. Between their release in the 1940s and the DVD age, these films were rarely, if ever, shown in their entirety. Instead, the individual segments were re-released as stand-alone pieces, some of which became quite popular. It's understandable why this was done. Whereas the individual elements of "Fantasia" have a similar enough artistic vision to be kept intact as a single experience, the package features do seem like a line of random, individual shorts that have been strung together. As such, the films can seem quite uneven and somewhat unsatisfying collectively.

            In particular, "Make Mine Music" stands out as being one of the most inconsistent package features. It consists of ten shorts, all relying heavily on music. Some of the shorts are fairly conventional, story-driven, while others are quite experimental. The real stand-out pieces are "Peter and the Wolf" (initially considered for a sequel/continuation of "Fantasia") and "The Whale Who Wanted to Sing at the Met". The stories are engaging, and they are absolutely charming, although "Peter and the Wolf" relies a bit too much on narration. It comes as no surprise that these two shorts became the film's most famous segments. Special mention should also be given to "Blue Bayou", which uses footage from a deleted segment of "Fantasia" that was to be set to Debussy's "Clair de Lune" (here, though, it's set to a love ballad).

            Other segments, however, vary. "The Martins and the Coys", which was rather stupidly removed from the American DVD, is not bad but hardly memorable. "After You've Gone", an interlude featuring anthropomorphised musical instruments, means well but falls quite flat, ultimately appearing as not much more than filler. "All the Cats Join In" and "Without You" equally seem like experimental filler, yet both are more successful. "Casey at the Bat", on the other hand, contains too many self-indulgent gags and overly caricatured animation to be of any real artistic or entertainment merit, a fact not helped by Jerry Colona's obnoxious narration. The two other segments, "Johnny Fedora and Alice Bluebonnet" and "Two Silhouettes", are so cutesy that they become nothing but pieces of unadulterated kitsch.

            Ultimately, the only people I would recommend "Make Mine Music" to would be the people who would only be interested in it - Disney fans and animation buffs. To everyone else, as with a good number of package films, it would probably be best seeing individual segments, which is how these films work best.
            6waha99

            Some great sequences, and some duds...

            An episodic musical tapestry a' la Fantasia, only this one utilizes the pop music of circa 1946. Some are worth viewing, and others are worth fast-forwarding through. My own personal favorites are the two Benny Goodman numbers, "All the Cats Join In" and "After You've Gone". I haven't seen the now-deleted "The Martins and the Coys" sequence, but I do oppose the tampering of classic films in the name of "PC". If I had known this was the case with "Make Mine Music", I would have never bought the VHS tape.
            Drewster58

            Some of my Dad's best work!

            Make Mine Music:

            What a great collection of stories! I watched it fairly recently with my Dad and some other family at his house in Pinon Hills. I still cry at the "Johnny Fedora" and "Willie The Whale" stories. I grew up watching these and so many Disney cartoons and movies on our old 16 millimeter projector. We still have it, but it needs a bulb. My nephew Kurt brought this cartoon up on DVD. It was great to see my Dad's "name up in lights," so to speak, at least for animation credits. He loved seeing it again, altho' his eyes aren't so good now at age 92. But he is still hanging in there.
            7utgard14

            "...because miracles never really die."

            Animated anthology movie from Disney. They made several of these during and after World War II. It's a fun movie with cartoons of varying quality but none are bad. Many of these cartoons were released later as theatrical shorts. There are ten segments. The most popular of them is probably "Casey at the Bat," a recitation by Jerry Colonna of the famous poem. It's a funny, wacky baseball cartoon that was one of my favorites as a kid (seen on a compilation video). Other well-known parts include the Disney version of "Peter and the Wolf," "The Martins and the Coys," which is now considered politically incorrect by those who make such determinations, and "The Whale Who Wanted to Sing at the Met," featuring Nelson Eddy. These are all fine cartoons, though the last one has a surprisingly downbeat ending. The 'worst' shorts are the ones that have no real story, just offer a few minutes of animation to some song, almost like a music video of sorts. "Blue Bayou," "Without You," and "Two Silhouettes," for example. They aren't bad shorts, just slight. They feel like time filler. My two favorite shorts in the whole movie are "All the Cats Join In" and "Johnnie Fedora and Alice Bluebonnet." 'Cats' is an energetic big band number with Benny Goodman music playing while a pencil draws the action as it happens. It's creative and cute with a surprisingly sexy part. You'll have to watch it to see what I mean. 'Fedora' is a sweet story about two hats (yes, hats) falling in love and becoming separated. This is narrated through song by the great Andrews Sisters. Overall, some nice little shorts that should please old-school Disney fans. Good animation and music. A very pleasant movie that will leave you with a smile on your face.
            5moonspinner55

            Pop and jazz second-cousin to "Fantasia"

            Chocolate-box potpourri of Disney-animated shorts became Walt Disney's eighth animated theatrical feature, one that plays like a middling excuse to allow the studio's animators to blow off some creative steam. Divvied up into separate musical suites (utilizing pop, jazz, Big Band, and the Russian classical piece "Peter and the Wolf"), "Make Mine Music" is musically of its time, featuring the talents of Benny Goodman, Dinah Shore, Nelson Eddy, etc. In that regard, it dates far worse than "Fantasia", and comes to a virtual halt in the middle of an overstretched slapstick baseball satire, but there are incidental pleasures. The popular "Peter and the Wolf" segment, which was later serialized on Disney's TV program and found a large following, is the only segment that feels fully thought-out (and has involving animation), while "The Whale Who Wanted To Sing At The Met" is an interesting idea (with beautiful flourishes) in search of a narrative (the hero actually ends up in Heaven...complete with angel's wings!). Followed by "Melody Time", which featured more storytelling and less abstract whimsy. ** from ****

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            Histoire

            Modifier

            Le saviez-vous

            Modifier
            • Anecdotes
              Peter and the Wolf (1946) has an explicitly Russian setting and Russian characters who are portrayed sympathetically. It is an example of the period it was produced. For much of World War II, the United States and the Soviet Union were allies. Pro-Russian/Soviet works such as the film The North Star (1943) were regularly produced by American creators. By 1946, when "Make Mine Music" came out, the War had recently ended and the two countries were still nominally allied. The tensions that would lead to the Cold War were already present, but major actions of hostility did not take place until 1947. It was only then than Anti-Soviet sentiment became the norm in the United States.
            • Gaffes
              In All the Cats Join In (1946), when the blonde teenage boy and brunette teenage girl in their car pick up their first passenger, a brown haired teenage hitchhiker boy, their car is speeding so fast that his shoes fall off when he is picked up. Yet in the next shot of the car, the hitchhiker boy can be seen in the back seat of the car with his feet propped up and his shoes are back on his feet.
            • Citations

              Narrator: Peter, don't just stand that way!

              [the wolf leans Peter downward]

              Narrator: And don't stand that way either.

            • Autres versions
              In 2000 Disney cut the entire "Martins & Coys" sequence from the film due to the comic gunplay which they feared could be confused with reality by children.
            • Connexions
              Edited from Without You (1946)
            • Bandes originales
              Make Mine Music
              (1946) (uncredited)

              Music and Lyrics by Ken Darby and Eliot Daniel

              Sung by an offscreen chorus during the opening credits

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            FAQ16

            • How long is Make Mine Music?Propulsé par Alexa

            Détails

            Modifier
            • Date de sortie
              • 14 juin 1946 (Canada)
            • Pays d’origine
              • United States
            • Site officiel
              • Official site
            • Langue
              • English
            • Aussi connu sous le nom de
              • Make Mine Music
            • Lieux de tournage
              • Walt Disney Feature Animation - 500 S. Buena Vista Street, Burbank, Californie, États-Unis
            • sociétés de production
              • Walt Disney Animation Studios
              • Walt Disney Productions
            • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

            Spécifications techniques

            Modifier
            • Durée
              1 heure 15 minutes
            • Rapport de forme
              • 1.37 : 1

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