Merveilles de la nature
- 1975
- Tous publics
- 1h 29min
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAnimals of all kinds are filmed in different moments of habitat.Animals of all kinds are filmed in different moments of habitat.Animals of all kinds are filmed in different moments of habitat.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
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Histoire
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Narrator: Throughout his long career as filmmaker, storyteller, innovator, educator, Walt Disney never forgot his love for animals. His early cartoons made a mouse world famous, he brought stardom to a certain Donald Duck. From those first cartoons to fairy tales was but a step, and Walt's fanciful fables always had animals in them. Snow White with her friendly forest companions, Dumbo, the little elephant who thought he could fly and actually could, and Bambi, the gentle fawn of innocent pastime. But Walt Disney was never satisfied with past achievements. He was a man of many parts, a man with an inquiring mind. There came a time when his great curiosity lead him from the world of fantasy to the realm of fact. He produced a film with the title "Seal Island", and since it was a true story, he decided to call it a "True-Life Adventure". It won an Academy Award, and with that, Walt was off into a whole new domain: the world of nature.
- ConnexionsEdited from La fanfare (1935)
In 1975 there was a compilation film documentary made showing scenes from all the films in the True Life Adventures series. It was called 'The Best of Disney's True Life Adventures'. It is an interesting and quite well made documentary, but it is a bit disjointed with not everything being necessary. And one might question the point of 'The Best of Disney's True Life Adventures' existence, when it is easy to see all fourteen films, feature length and short length, on their own.
Have no issues with the production values throughout, if more so in the footage than the segments tying them together. All the True Life Adventures films are beautifully shot and vivid in their atmosphere and one can see that even in compilation form. The music fits well tonally and doesn't feel over-bearing or over-used.
A vast majority of the footage is amazing, with the behaviours of the animals being a mix of cute, touching and not for the faint hearted. Really liked how varied the animals were in size and personality and how varied the locations are as well, locations that look spectacular. The one misfire of the featured footage is the lemmings sequence from 'White Wilderness', an understandably controversial scene that has always been manipulative and tasteless to me.
Narration entertains, moves and informs in the writing, with a lot learnt about the animals (familiar and unfamiliar, a nice mix of that too). Winston Hibler's delivery has never been a problem in the films for me, though that is not the case for all. A nice mix of good natured and deadpan without sounding bored.
Did feel that not everything felt necessary, with the opening containing the Walt Disney salute adding nothing and feeling rather out of place. It was affectionately done but would have worked better in a documentary of Disney itself, it didn't belong in a compilation documentary of animals. It is also better to see the films on their own as seeing them in clip form doesn't do them enough justice.
Concluding, interesting and quite well done if uneven. 7/10.
- TheLittleSongbird
- 6 mars 2022
- Permalien
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Best of Walt Disney's True-Life Adventures
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 29 minutes
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
- 2.35 : 1