10 Trivia Facts You Didn't Know About Disney Movies
11/08/2017 04:11 pm EST
All Roads to Disney
Starting with the 1991 animated version of Beauty and the Beast:
A sign on the woodland road where Maurice and Felipe get lost contains the locations Anaheim and Valencia. The former is the home of Disneyland; the latter is the home of the California Institute of the Arts, where many Disney artists trained.
Two-for-One Evil
Both the 1950 Cinderella and 1959 Sleeping Beauty animated movies have iconic female antagonists, in the form of evil stepmother Lady Tremaine, and evil sorceress, Maleficent (respectively).
However, did you know that Lady Tremaine and Maleficent are the same person?
Actress Eleanor Audley (Green Acres, My Three Sons) voiced both Lady Tremaine and Maleficent - and Disney animators modeled both characters after her physical appearance. So, in both look and spirit, the two characters really are one.
Apple Work
Among the many innovations that Steve Jobs unveiled in the last two decades, Pixar has gone on to be one of the greatest. The computer animation studio has released films that have gone one to become cinematic classics (Toy Story, Finding Nemo), and brought magic and wonderment to younger and older viewers, alike.
In honor of Apple and Jobs, there are many Easter egg references to Apple and its products hidden in Pixar films - including in Monsters, Inc., with its "Scare Different" Apple ad on the back of a magazine.
Lions & Tigers - Oh My!
One of the biggest plot points of The Lion King involves Simba coming to maturity by letting out an epic lion's roar, like his father Mufasa before him. However, The Lion King's version of the king of the jungle's call is all a lie.
The Lion King filmmakers actually used tiger roar audio for the lion roars in the movie. Apparently, actual lion roars weren't loud enough.
Automotive Insights
The look of Disney's Cars characters was actually inspired by something from the company's creative history: the 1952 cartoon "Susie the Little Blue Coupe," which is a favorite of John Lasseter.
Long Time Wrecking
Wreck-It-Ralph is a hit Disney film now, but the video game-inspired villain-turned-hero story was being pitched ever since video games hit their heyday in the '80s. It began as "High Score" in the '80s; became "Joe Jump" in the '90s; "Fix-it Felix" in the 2000s, before becoming the hit 2012 film fans know and love.
95 Ways to Pixar
Pixar's Toy Story was released in 1995 - and the studio likes to commemorate that fact by dropping the number "95" into their films - most prominently on Cars lead character, Lightning McQueen.
Inside Anger
Inside Out was one of Pixar's latest (and greatest) success stories, but getting the tricky premise of personified emotions onto the screen required by spot-on voice casting for each emotion. One of the best character/casting combinations was ranting/raving comedian Lewis Black as anger - and as it turns out, he was also one of the first ideas about Inside Out to ever be put on the table.
Black voicing Anger was pitched to Pixar execs as part of the concept of what Inside Out could be; they apparently like the notion so much that the comedian was soon after offered the part.
Aladdin's Two Genies
In Aladdin, late comedian Robin Williams famously voices the Genie - but he also voiced another character in the film - the marketplace wares peddler, who sings the movie's opening number, "Arabian Nights."
In another version of the script, The Peddler was supposed to be revealed as The Genie, which is why Williams' voice was used for both characters.
Famous Inspirations
Disney has done some not-so-subtle "borrowing" of celebrity likenesses in order to create some of its most famous characters. Ariel from Little Mermaid is based on Alyssa Milano; Aladdin on Tom Cruise; Ursla the Sea Witch on Drag Queen Divine; The Jungle Book vulture on The Beatles - the list goes on.
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