Walt Disney Research Paper

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When it comes to animation, the first person that comes to mind is Walt Disney. When I was a kid, I was easily entertained by most of Disney’s films whether it was a fantasy film such as Cinderella or a touching film like Bambi for example. During that time, I didn’t know who Walt Disney was, but it didn’t matter because most of his films had a spark of imagination and creativity. Even to this day, the Disney movies made today still seem the same, just as Walt would have wanted them to be.
Disney was born December 5, 1901 in Chicago Illinois. When he was a kid, he would draw cartoon strips and submit his comics to the newspapers. When he was ten years old, Disney took Saturday art classes at Kansas City Art Institute. When he went to high school, …show more content…

After the success of the short, Disney hired Carl Stalling, a professional composer/arranger. Disney then went on to create a new series of shorts called, “Silly Symphony” which introduced Technicolor and multiplane motion picture camera innovations, and also introduced Donald Duck. The distribution of the shorts were through Cinephone, a company created by Pat Powers who came from Universal Studios. Disney created a process where Iwerks would draw key scenes and lower paid animators would fill in by drawing the scenes in between. Powers refused to pay more and hired Iwerks. Stalling then leaves believing Disney cannot be successful without Iwerks. In October 1931, Disney had a break down and went on vacation to recover. Once he returned, he signed with Columbia Pictures to be the distributor for Mickey Mouse. In 1932, the Silly Symphony, “Flowers and Trees” became the first short film to use Technicolor’s three strip process until August 1935. It shuts out other animators including Iwerks. After that, future Silly Symphony shorts were in color. While making the shorts, Disney negotiated rights to be the only user of the process. At the 1932 Academy Awards, Flowers and Trees won its first Oscar for Best Animated Short Film and Disney received an honorary award for the creation of Mickey Mouse. Disney’s next short film, Three Little Pigs, won an Oscar a year later. Adrian Danks, a media historian, called I the most …show more content…

Der Fueher’s Face was centered around Donald Duck dreaming about working at a bayonet point where he is assigned to tighten the fuses on artillery shells on a conveyor belt. Throughout the short, there are continuous symbols of Nazi’s such as swastikas and references to Hitler. For example, every time a picture of Hitler showed up on the conveyor belt, Donald would have to say, “Hail Hitler!” As the dream keeps going on, it slowly turns into a nightmare up to the point where Donald can’t take it any more. He then awakes in his bed in the United States proud to be an American. The short film ends with a tomato being thrown at Hitler. The short film went on to win an Academy Award for Best Short Subject in 1943 along with “Victory Through Air”. To generate more income, Disney created live-action nature films. His short film, “Seal Island”, won an Academy Award in 1949. After World War II, Disney grew politically conservative, switching from Democrat to Republican. He even testified during the Red Scare that those who led strike at Disney were part of a communist effort in

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