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Disney Tidbits: When you wish upon a shuttle
Disneylicious
Disney released a photo taken by them yesterday showing Nasa's Space Shuttle blast off at night behind the Disney World's castle.

Space shuttle Discovery is seen April 5, 2010 lifting off over Cinderella Castle at the Magic Kingdom in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. The pre-dawn launch with the crew of STS-131 occurred at 6:21 a.m. EDT in nearby Cape Canaveral, Fla.

Photo by Kent Phillips
Credit: Disney
Thanks to Mike Roda

Posted by Disneylicious on Tuesday, April 06, 2010 (418 reads)
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Disney Tidbits: About Mary Poppins' New Cover
Disneylicious
With the recent re-release of Mary Poppins on DVD the guys at Disney Home Entertainment had to come up with a brand new cover to present this new anniversary edition of the film.

In our tidbit corner today we would like to show our readers the two production stills from which the main images of Mary Poppins 2009 DVD have been taken. As you can see the guys at Disney did a great work to re-work these old images and make them look shiny and new. Click on images below to enlarge.

Posted by Disneylicious on Sunday, April 26, 2009 (2732 reads)
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Disney Tidbits: a Look at Disney's Recycled Animation
Disneylicious

An interesting article about "recycled" Disney animation was publised yesterday on London's free press paper Metro. It's explains a little about the so called rotoscoping tecnique and why it was used so much into Disney's 1973 animated classic Robin Hood.

Click on the image below to enlarge.

 

 

Posted by Disneylicious on Tuesday, April 21, 2009 (5609 reads)
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Disney Tidbits: Allen v. Walt Disney
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
If you think about the music of Snow White there is just "one song" that quicky comes to mind... no, not Heigh Ho, that other one!

"Someday My Prince Will Come", written by lyricist Larry Morey and musician Frank Churchill is such an iconic song that was included at #19 on the American Film Institute list of the 100 greatest songs in movie history of all times (Pinocchio's "When You Wish Upon A Star" is the first Disney song in the list at #18). It is such a timeless and contemporary composition that covers of it are still being produced today in every possible music style and everybody knows how to hum it, but what most people are unaware of is that at the time of original release this unique torch song has been at the center of an intricate court case of musical plagiarism.

Publisher Thornton Allen claimed composer Frank Churchill deliberately lifted the chorus part of "Someday My Prince Will Come" from " Old Eli", a song written by Wadsworth Doster in 1909 but only published in a music book for the first time in 1936, a year prior the cinematic release of "Snow White" (1937). Allen was indeed the copyright owner of "Old Eli", a composition that Doster wrote while he was student at Yale University and that received minor exposure in private local events. The music of "Some Day My Prince Will Come" was written by Churchill on the romatic lyrics given by Larry Morey in November 1934 and copyrighted as an original composition in January 1935. On the other hand even if "Old Eli" was written in the early years of 1900 it was not registered as a copyrighted composition until 1936, a year after Churchill registered "prince", Allen insisted Disney and Churchill heard it as he has sent manuscripted copies of the song to the studio in 1932. Churchill testified that he had no recollection of ever having heard "Old Eli" and the judge accepted his statement as true.

In the end Judge Conger ruled that "the complainant has failed to make out a case" as playing the song in private gatherings and sending manuscripts to studios was not the same as publishing a song and further more the similarity between the two composition is not so great to suspect Churchill copied "Prince" from "Old Eli". The case ended in favour of Churchill and Disney as the complaint was dismissed and "judgment entered in favor of the respondents".

To read more about the case “Allen v. Walt Disney” please visit the site of the UCLA Law School about the most interesting U.S. copyright infringement cases from the mid-ninteenth century on by clicking HERE

Thanks to our visitor Peter for sending us a link to the UCLA Law School article.

Posted by Disneylicious on Tuesday, March 24, 2009 (447 reads)
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