Bambi turns 80: one of the saddest Disney movies

Bambi turns 80: one of the saddest Disney movies

The one who suggested the idea of ​​translating Salten’s book to the cinema, according to some sources, was the notable German writer thomas mann who met waltdisney during his trip to the United States in July 1935 where they both received an honorary doctorate from Harvard University on the same day.

Mann was an admirer of Salten’s works, but it seems that he spoke of him with waltdisney Not just for artistic reasons. Salten was living in poor financial conditions, and the sale of the rights to the film adaptation of the novel would have helped him. After buying the copyright in 1937, Walt Disney gave screenwriters perce pearce Y Larry Morey the task of turning the novel into a screenplay.

Bambi: A Troubled Production

Work progressed slowly because at the same time Disney had put into production Pinocchio Y Fancy that started after bambi, but they had a much faster production and managed to be completed and distributed in theaters earlier. Pearce and Morey’s script is faithful to Salten’s work, written for an adult audience and therefore full of dramatic moments, with the anthropomorphism of animals reduced to a minimum, an aspect that will also remain in the film.

Production on the film began in late 1939, after several weeks of study in the woods of Vermont and Maine, to photograph deer, fawns, and the natural areas in which the film would take place. So, after four years from the initial idea, the making of the film seemed to have begun.

In the late spring of 1940, the animators who had worked on the preproduction of bambi they were hired to cheer him up permanently, but the problems were not over. The realization of Fancy Y Pinocchio had been particularly expensive and the box office receipts had not been gratifying, so the studios of Disney They had financial problems.

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In the spring of 1941 it was explained to the animators that the production costs of bambi they had to be cut in half and this led to numerous cuts. Then, the entry into the war of the United States slowed down even more the work of the film that was finally released in American theaters in the first days of August 1942 and would not reach Europe and Italy until 1948.

The story, drawn by Milt Kahl Y frank thomasis that of a young fawn who must learn to fend for himself after the death of his mother and will spend his childhood and early adulthood with his friends, the drummer rabbit and the skunk Fiore.

Despite receiving unfavorable reviews upon its first release, in December 2011 the film was added to the United States Library of Congress’s National Film Registry. In 2020 a live-action remake of bambi of which no major news has transpired.

Source: Ambito

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