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Fantasia 2000  (1999)

James Algar a.o.
[animated]
Anamorphic widescreen
Dolby Digital 5.1
DTS
Trailer(s)
Featurette(s)
Documentary
Audio commentary
Deleted scenes
Concept art / storyboards
Multi-angle feature
Quote
[from the trailer:] It's a breathtaking celebration of sight! Sound! And Magic!...

Plot summary
A continuation of Disney's original idea for a 'concert feature' with continuous additions of new animated segments.

Film review
Disney had meant for Fantasia to be a yearly release, with new segments added each year and thus present a continuous platform for new animation forms and techniques. None of this occurred in his lifetime though, as Fantasia flopped at the box office and was never revisited until Walt's nephew Roy E. Disney took it upon himself to produce a continuation of the original concept sixty years onward. Work was started on Fantasia 2000 in 1992, and it was released early this year in an enormously successful exclusive Imax theater run, followed by a theatrical release. But although a huge amount of effort has clearly gone into this collection of recent high-end animation, it fails to leave all that much of an impression.

None of the animation comes across as particularly innovative: the heavy CGI effects in Pines of Rome and The Steadfast Tin Soldier may have been impressive five years ago - which is the time when they were actually produced! - but they fail to draw the viewer in or provoke much of an emotional response. The old Fantasia truly had its faults, but each of the segments is clearly designed to get a reaction on the part of the viewer. The new film plays it much safer: at its 71 minute running time, it is never dull, and the rich animation is always a pleasure to watch. None of the segments are as awful as worst parts of the original, and likewise none come close to the original's best work. The interstitials may not be as dull as the extended Deems Taylor moments from the original, but the parade of smug celebrity appearances is much more painful to have to sit through.

Surprisingly for a project designed to present innovations and experiments in animation, the most old-fashioned parts of Fantasia 2000 are the best: Gershwin's 'Rhapsody in Blue' is a manic foray into the designs of Al Hirschfeld. It looks and feels as though it were made in the 1950s, and it's great fun. The short comic intermezzo with a yo-yoing flamingo to Saint-Saëns' 'Carnival des Animaux' is like a frenetic Silly Symphony from way back when, and it also provides welcome light-hearted relief from the bombast of some of the longer sequences. Watching Donald Duck assist Noah getting all the animals in the ark to the 'graduation song' 'Pomp and Circumstance' has its moments, but it's a mistake to put him on right after the infinitely better repeat of 'The Sorcerer's Apprentice'. As Woody Allen remarked in Annie Hall: 'You don't put a comedian on after another comedian!' The final Firebird sequence stands out as the only part with real power and originality, marking an impressive finale for an otherwise somewhat lacklustre collection.
Version control
Fantasia 2000 is available for Region 1 as a single disc, or as part of the 3-disc set called the Fantasia Anthology. The Region 2 release has various language versions of the interstitials but is missing the audio commentaries and the documentary, as well as the DTS sound mix. The Oscar-winning short Toot, Whistle, Plonk and Boom and Roy E. Disney's introduction are the only extra features.

Picture and sound
The anamorphic widescreen image is framed at 1.78:1. Drawn directly from the digital master, the transfer is flawless and breathtaking at all times. There are no compression artifacts and there isn't a trace of visual noise. The 'Sorcerer's Apprentice' segment is windowboxed to 1.33:1, so widescreen TV sets will have black bars to the left and right of the image, while ordinary 4:3 sets will have black bars on all sides of the image.
The Dolby Digital 5.1 sound mix sounds full and delivers a rich sound for the movie.

Added value
The disc opens with an earnest introduction from producer Roy E. Disney. The disc also includes two animated shorts, both of which were efforts to carry on the Fantasia tradition of welding music and animation together in an informative and artful way. One of them was the first cartoon produced in 3-D (of course it's not 3-D on the DVD, but you get the idea while watching), and the other was the first cartoon produced in the 2.35:1 'scope format. Both are lots of fun to watch.The animated menus feature music from the film and incorporate the animated 'sails' from the interstitials. They are nicely designed though somewhat over-the-top. Like Fantasia, this DVD has one chapter stop per segment and one per interstitial. The disc doesn't allow switching between the audio channels by using the 'language' button.

Dan Hassler-Forest

Reviewed: 2001

Click here for IMDB info on Fantasia 2000 .

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