I don't know if anyone else did this, but if you bought the Wall-E DVD, you could send in for a free tree seedling! I did, and my is sprouting!!! I guess it doesn't take much to make me happy.

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Are you sure you're not a "U" boat captain?Captain Schnemo wrote:Yay, I finally get to say something good about Disney.
Have you seen the new commercial for Earth? It sounds just like me rambling on about Walt creating the True Life Adventures and inventing the nature documentary.
It looks like it's going to follow the same story-telling method of the old TLAs, and even some of the shots looked like the ones from 50 years ago.
I really hope it's good. I would love to see a return of the entertaining nature documentary as G-rated theatrical releases that people talk about and learn from.
And if they tied them in to the Animal Kingdom or Adventureland, that would actually be synergy that wouldn't make me barf.
I didn't think anything could get my hopes up about Disney these days, but this is the first tiniest sliver of potential goodness I've seen in years, so I'm going to savor it while I can.
Once the movie comes out and the penguins leap out of the water and start singing Hannah Montana songs, I can crawl back into my hole of despair...but until then!!
Edit:
Did some more reading on this. Looks like it came out a couple years ago in Europe and Japan and got great reviews. It seems to be an overseas production (the BBC is involved) which gives me hope that it will not suck.
It's a bit troubling that they are replacing the Patrick Stewart narration with James Earl Jones. Jones has a great voice, no doubt, but it's not like we wouldn't understand Stewart, and when narration is changed for American audiences, it tends to get dumbed down.
The David Attenborough narration on Blue Planet and Planet Earth was far superior to the pointless American versions. Hell, they even got another Brit to do the Blue Planet retread, which means it has nothing to do with the accent.
Attenborough is one of the coolest guys around and certainly the world's most entertaining and respected (or at least famous) naturalists. Removing him from a project makes no sense at all. I'd pay money to watch that guy describe how he makes toast.
Anyway, even if they stupidify the script, the visuals should still be the same, so it is bound to be at least half good.
They seem to be going at this with the right spirit, and they've already got a number of movies ready to roll, so I really hope they don't screw this up.
Their web site gives Walt the respect he deserves and even has clips of the classic TLA series. I recommend clicking on the "History" section, then watching the "Secrets of Life" clip.
It's a good example of how they fabricated the stories, mostly by causing animal fights, which are always entertaining to watch. There's a fair bit of humor too.
You can also totally see them cheating...pretending different animals are the same one in order to make a story out of the footage they shoot. Well, they were still working out the bugs.
Here's a fun story from the site, although "legend" is hardly decent evidence, especially when it comes to Walt. But I will choose to believe this one:Alfred and Elma Milotte shot the fascinating footage that formed the beginning of the True-Life Adventure series. Walt had hired them to do some filming for him in Alaska, but as he studied the footage they sent back to the Studio, he zeroed in on the seal footage as having the most promise. So he asked them to emphasize the life cycle of the seals and not show any indication of man's presence.
The resulting film did not appeal to RKO, the Disney distributor, who felt that no one would want to sit in a theater for half an hour watching a nature film, so Walt had a friend of his, who ran the Crown Theater in Pasadena, run the film for a week in order to qualify for an Academy Award.
Sure enough, it won the award for Best Documentary. According to legend, Walt took the Oscar down to Roy Disney's office and said:
"Here, Roy, take this over to RKO and bang them over the head with it."
As one could expect, RKO was soon clamoring for more of the True-Life Adventures.
The only thing Disney sees is $$$$. If it makes money you will see them use it all over the place.Future Guy wrote:I'm really excited about this, too. It's quite surprising to see Disney trying to create (or re-create) a franchise that has nothing to do with Licensed Characters. And there's ample opportunity to create "synergistic" (how I hate that word!) attractions at Animal Kingdom, the Magic Kingdom, and even EPCOT. I really hope this movie is a hit, so Disney will realize that there's an audience for more than animated characters and manufactured teeny-bopper "sensations".
They mention it because they'd really be making a statement by not saying something about it, given the material they covered, but it's in a matter-of-fact "this is what's happening" tone. There is no call to arms or attempts to make anyone feel guilty. They were smart enough to let the images do the talking.Peerless83 wrote:as long as it doesnt go into a long boring rant about global warming..