Director : Marc Davis, Ollie Johnston, Milt Kahl, John Lounsbery, Frank Thomas
Producer : Walt Disney
Screenwriter : Milt Banta, Winston Hibler, Bill Peet, Erdman Penner, Joe Rinaldi, Ted Sears, Ralph Wright
Starring : Mary Costa, Bill Shirley, Eleanor Audley, Verna Felton, Barbara Luddy, Barbara Jo Allen
It's a shame that Sleeping Beauty is saddled with such a sissy title. It's
really quite the adventure, with a horse-riding hero, a spell-flinging evil
fairy, and even a freakin' dragon! This is also the movie that the
now-ubiquitous Magic Kingdom is taken from, it's where our titular heroine, aka
Aurora hails from. But when that evil wench Maleficent (like the evil queen
from Snow White but with horns) casts a spell that ensures she'll die from
being pricked from a spinning wheel, three good fairies take Aurora into the
woods, dub her Briar Rose, and try to keep her from harm. By the movie's
midpoint, Rose has grown up to her teens, met the love of her life, and has
finally been pricked by that wheel, and only through the good magic of the
fairies does she stay alive, trapped in an unending slumber. And so our hero
Prince Phillip rides into Maleficent's castle, showing down her evil minions
and finally Maleficent herself (who takes the form of that dragon I mentioned).
Awesome!
Beauty remains one of Disney's finest works. It was unequivocally the best
animated film of its era up until arguably The Jungle Book (1967) or even
Disney's comeback with The Little Mermaid (1989), depending on your point of
view. It succeeds thanks to its awesome score -- borrowed from Tchaikovsky's
waltzes -- as well as unprecedentedly detailed animation (dig the backgrounds)
and its insanely over-the-top villain ("Me, the mistress of all evil!").
There's no freakin' singing animals or easy solution to the problem -- the
prince has to hack his way through a wall of thorns then beat down a dragon in
order to get his lady back! Young kids may not really dig the non-caricatured
imagery and the lack of child-friendly messages; this isn't exactly the kind of
movie you sing along to. (Poor Tchaikovsky missed the Mickey Mouse Club era by
about a century.)
The story is unfortunately a little drawn out (lots of cake-making and such
before we get to the meat of the story) and not terribly surprising, but such
are the typical constraints of animation. The new Disney DVD adds a number of
extras, but not much of them are worth watching. An Oscar-winning short from
1958 can be found on disc two, and there's an exhaustively informative (but
deathly snoozy) commentary track on the remastered feature disc.
Definitely one to own, even if that second DVD never comes out of the box.
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" Excellent "
Rating: G, 1959