VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,1/10
5334
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
La compilation di Walt Disney di 10 cortometraggi animati che utilizzano i talenti musicali di artisti come Benny Goodman.La compilation di Walt Disney di 10 cortometraggi animati che utilizzano i talenti musicali di artisti come Benny Goodman.La compilation di Walt Disney di 10 cortometraggi animati che utilizzano i talenti musicali di artisti come Benny Goodman.
- Premi
- 1 vittoria e 1 candidatura in totale
Nelson Eddy
- Narrator
- (voce)
- …
Laverne Andrews
- Andrews Sisters
- (voce (canto))
- (as Andrews Sisters)
Maxene Andrews
- Andrews Sisters
- (voce (canto))
- (as Andrews Sisters)
Patty Andrews
- Andrews Sisters
- (voce (canto))
- (as Andrews Sisters)
Benny Goodman
- Bandleader
- (solo nei titoli)
Tatiana Riabouchinska
- Silhouetted Dancer
- (as Riabouchinska)
David Lichine
- Silhouetted Dancer
- (as Lichine)
Ken Darby
- The King's Men
- (voce (canto))
- (as King's Men)
- …
Jon Dodson
- The King's Men
- (voce (canto))
- (as King's Men)
Bud Linn
- The King's Men
- (voce (canto))
- (as King's Men)
Rad Robinson
- The King's Men
- (voce (canto))
- (as King's Men)
John Brown
- Umpire
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Make Mine Music finds Walt Disney in the midst of the transitional period between his first five animated features (Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Pinocchio, Fantasia, Dumbo, Bambi) and the post-war revival begun with Cinderella (1950).
The idea of a casual variant of Fantasia featuring popular music was a good one. Even though the segments which comprise the film vary in quality, the film as a whole is a bright, colorful and amusing light entertainment which fit wartime needs ideally.
Highlights include two spirited Benny Goodman swing numbers ("All The Cats Join In" and "After You've Gone") and the unforgettable finale, "Willie the Operatic Whale", narrated and sung by Nelson Eddy. The animation is generally first-rate and the Technicolor film will dazzle any viewer not expecting a genuine masterwork.
Make Mine Music was successful enough to warrant a considerably better follow-up, Melody Time (1948).
The undistinguished but harmless "Martins and the Coys" segment, concerning the gun-feuding backwoods families of American folklore, has idiotically been removed from current editions, evidently for PC reasons. It's scary that Disney may start altering their classics to meet artificial modern standards. (If they had cut anything from Make Mine Music, it should have been the tasteless "Two Silhouettes" ballet, all doilies and valentines and icky fake sentiment.)
The idea of a casual variant of Fantasia featuring popular music was a good one. Even though the segments which comprise the film vary in quality, the film as a whole is a bright, colorful and amusing light entertainment which fit wartime needs ideally.
Highlights include two spirited Benny Goodman swing numbers ("All The Cats Join In" and "After You've Gone") and the unforgettable finale, "Willie the Operatic Whale", narrated and sung by Nelson Eddy. The animation is generally first-rate and the Technicolor film will dazzle any viewer not expecting a genuine masterwork.
Make Mine Music was successful enough to warrant a considerably better follow-up, Melody Time (1948).
The undistinguished but harmless "Martins and the Coys" segment, concerning the gun-feuding backwoods families of American folklore, has idiotically been removed from current editions, evidently for PC reasons. It's scary that Disney may start altering their classics to meet artificial modern standards. (If they had cut anything from Make Mine Music, it should have been the tasteless "Two Silhouettes" ballet, all doilies and valentines and icky fake sentiment.)
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.
One of Walt's early package films and not bad at that! Some segments are cloyingly hokey, of course, but most shorts are surprisingly playful and charming. The highlights: "The Martins and the Coys" is full of stereotyping and comic gunplay and simply fun to watch; "Casey at the Bat" is a whirlwind of poem recitation; the two Benny Goodman segments feature nice tunes and "Peter and the Wolf" and, particularly, "The Whale Who Wanted To Sing At the Met" are two of Disney's best cartoons.
Just skip the padding and enjoy this compilation!
7 out of 10 triple-voiced Nelson Eddys
Just skip the padding and enjoy this compilation!
7 out of 10 triple-voiced Nelson Eddys
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.
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.
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 ****
Lo sapevi?
- QuizPierino e il Lupo (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 Fuoco a oriente (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.
- BlooperWhen newspapers announcing the discovery of Willie the Whale are shown, one compares him to the "Lock Ness Monster." The correct spelling is "Loch".
- Versioni alternativeIn 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.
- ConnessioniEdited from Without You (1946)
- Colonne sonoreMake 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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- Make Mine Music
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- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 15min(75 min)
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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