RSS Feed

Monthly Archives: October 2013

October 31

October 31, 1927 – The Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Short Film All Wet is Released to Theaters

vlcsnap-2013-10-31-19h51m07s216

On October 31, 1927, the Oswald the Lucky Rabbit short film All Wet premiered in theaters. It was the fifth Oswald film released by the Disney Studio, and was directed by Ub Iwerks.

Oswald is selling hotdogs at the beach, and attaching two mice that keep sneaking by to steal from him. A customer arrives and buys one, but as the customer tries to eat, the hot dog starts barking, and the customer soon feels guilty enough to let the hot dog go free. As Oswald works, Fanny the Rabbit saunters by, and the two share flirtatious glances. As eh heads to a rowboat, Oswald closes up shop for the day and attempts to take her out in the boat, but she refuses. He then decides to get a job as a lifeguard, paying the current lifeguard to take his place. When Fanny sees him sporting the lifeguard badge, she immediately starts paying attention to him.

Oswald stands proudly with his lifeguard badge, while a nearby child nervously tries to ask him for help

Oswald stands proudly with his lifeguard badge, while a nearby child nervously tries to ask him for help

A child nervously approaches Oswald to get his attention, but Oswald ignores him, until the child is finally able to tell him his problem; Oswald quietly directs the child to the nearest bathroom. While he is distracted, Fanny comes up with a plan to get his attention: she decides to head out to sea in the rowboat herself, and pretends that she is drowning. Oswald hears her cries (although doesn’t realize she’s just floating in an inner tube) and race out after her. A large fish passes her and, thinking she’s food, grabs her foot and pulls her under. Oswald reaches her just in time, and a wave manages to carry them to shore. Fanny looks at Oswald as her hero, and gives him a huge kiss.

October 30

October 30, 2012 – The Soundtrack to Wreck-It Ralph is Released Through Walt Disney Records

WIR-theCover?!D

“Wreck it, Wreck-It Ralph, as fast as you can. You know you can do it with your colossal hands.”

On October 30, 2012, the soundtrack to Disney’s 52nd animated feature Wreck-It Ralph was released through Walt Disney Records. The score was composed by Henry Jackman; the soundtrack includes original songs by Owl City, Buckner & Garcia, and Skrillex. Japanese performing group AKB48 was asked to perform a song for the film entitled “Sugar Rush,” which is also the name of the film in Japan. Also featured in the album are the songs “Celebration” by Kool & the Gang, and “Shut Up and Drive” by Rihanna.

October 29

October 29, 2002 – Country Band Rascal Flatts Releases Their Second Album Melt Through Lyric Street Records

Melt

“Yeah, life throws you curves, but you learned to swerve; me, I swung and I missed.”

On October 29, 2002, the country band Rascal Flatts released their second album through Lyric Street Records, a label part of the Disney Music Group. Titled Melt, the album was successful for the band, peaking at number 1 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart, and 5 on the Billboard 200. The album also gave the band its first number 1 country hit single with the song “These Days.” The album has since been certified triple platinum.

October 28

October 28, 1933 – The Mickey Mouse Short Film The Pet Store is Released to Theaters

vlcsnap-2013-10-28-21h02m10s245

“Oh, hello Minnie! How do you like my zoo?”

On October 28, 1933, the Mickey Mouse short film The Pet Store was released to theaters. It was directed by Wilfred Jackson.

A sign hangs in the window of Tony’s Pet Store for a boy wanted to work in the shop. Mickey happens to come across it, and enters the store to apply for work, and Tony gladly offers him the job to sweep the shop while he goes out for lunch. Mickey takes to his job quickly, when Minnie strolls in. She is impressed with the pet shop, and begins to sing for the birds, who start chirping with her. An ostrich nearby starts eating the birdseed on the shelf, and develops a bad case of the hiccups. As Mickey takes Minnie to dance, she sets down her umbrella, which is soon eaten by the ostrich. Thanks to his hiccups, the umbrella opens in his throat with every hiccup.

Beppo pries Minnie away from Mickey, acting as though he were King Kong

Beppo pries Minnie away from Mickey, acting as though he were King Kong

A gorilla named Beppo, who does imitations of movie actors (including one of Stan Laurel), decides to imitate King Kong and break out of his cage. After leaving his cage, he grabs Minnie from Mickey and throws Mickey aside, sending the mouse crashing into the birdcages, freeing all the birds. Beppo then climbs a tower of birdseed, in true King Kong fashion, and starts growling from his perch. All of the freed animals start throwing things around creating a huge mess in the pet shop as they try to stop Beppo. Finally, Beppo is captured in a cage, and Mickey takes Minnie to flee from the shop before Tony returns from lunch to find his shop in disarray.

October 27

October 27, 2007 – Walt Disney World Holds A Race for the Tower of Terror’s 13th Anniversary

07totracecoursemap

“We invite you if you dare to join us…for a running event that lies beyond the fifth dimension, beyond the deepest darkest corner of the imagination.”

On October 27, 2007, to celebrate the 13th anniversary of the Tower of Terror attraction, Walt Disney World hosted a 13K and a 6.5K race. The race was announced in April, with a background story to match the attraction’s Twilight Zone theme. The story is that a young movie actress named Shirley Malone and her husband checked into the Hollywood Tower Hotel in 1994, laced up their shoes to go on a 13K run, and disappeared. The race began at 9 p.m., with a post-race party being held from 9 to 1 a.m. The race began and ended at the Tower of Terror attraction, with guests running around Hollywood Studios and the Wide World of Sports Complex. Medals were available for those who completed the course, as well as glow-in-the-dark race shirts.

October 26

October 26, 1997 – The Made-for-Television Movie Tower of Terror Premieres on The Wonderful World of Disney

vlcsnap-2013-10-26-17h28m59s203

“It’s in his will: nobody touches nothing until somebody figures out what happened to Grandpa Dewey.”

On October 26, 1997, the made-for-television movie Tower of Terror premiered on ABC’s The Wonderful World of Disney. This film was one of the first attempts Disney had at creating a film based on a popular Disney attraction. An accurate replica of the attraction was built in a warehouse, as they were unable to film in the attraction. The film was written and directed by D. J. MacHale, and stars Steve Guttenberg as Buzzy, Kirsten Dunst as Anna, Nia Peeples as Jill, Michael McShane as Q, Amzie Strickland as Abigail, Melora Hardin as Carolyn, Alastair Duncan as Gilbert London, Lindsay Ridgeway as Sally Shine, John Franklin as Dewey, and Wendy Worthington as Miss Partridge.

The film begins in 1939, with a mysterious voice casting a spell while setting fire to an invitation for a party at the Hollywood Tower Hotel on Halloween night. The party is already in full swing as a storm approaches the building. A young child actress named Sally Shine is seen arriving at the hotel, while another little girl watches her jealously. As Sally boards the elevator with her governess, a young couple, and a bellhop, the elevator comes to a violent stop at the eleventh floor, and the power flickers on and off. Green lightning strikes the tower, and the inhabitants of the elevator shield their eyes from a bright light.

Buzzy, having lost credibility in the journalistic world, makes fake stories for tabloids with the help of his niece, Anna

Buzzy, having lost credibility in the journalistic world, makes fake stories for tabloids with the help of his niece, Anna

In present day, Buzzy Crocker is setting up a photo shoot with his niece, Anna, where Anna is dressed as an alien, with another actor acting as a doctor doing an autopsy. Buzzy left the world of real journalism behind years ago and takes fake photographs for tabloids. At the office of the Los Angeles Banner, managing editor Jill Perry tries to avoid Buzzy when he stops by, but finds that he’s already in her office. He tries to pitch her a story, but she brushes him off once again. The two used to date, but Jill isn’t sure if he misses her, or the rush of the newspaper game. Back at home, an old woman shows up at his apartment, asking for his help. Her name is Abigail Gregory, and she is a fan of his, believing that his insight into the supernatural is amazing. She offers him a story about the Hollywood Terror Hotel, where five people disappeared on Halloween night in 1939, including Sally Shine, as she was there that night. She reveals that it was her birthday that night, and that Sally’s governess Emeline Partridge was responsible for the disappearance, as she was a real witch. She claims that Miss Partridge hated Sally, and had set an evil trap for her charge.

Unfortunately for Abigail, Buzzy doesn’t believe her. She gets terribly upset, as no one has ever believed her before, and believes that Buzzy is the only person who could get her story to the public. He further upsets her by admitting freely that all the stories he writes are lies. She then shows him proof with a key to the basement of the hotel, where Miss Partridge’s book must still be. He finally takes the bait, and decides to go see if she really is telling the truth. He arrives at the abandoned hotel, and hears a strange noise inside. The strange noise comes from the caretaker Q, who loves to play pranks on people that stop by. His great-grandfather built the place, and his grandfather, Dewey Todd, was the bellhop that disappeared in the elevator. Q reveals that once the mystery is solved, he inherits the hotel, which he believes will make him a lot of money.; however, Q refuses to enter the hotel with Buzzy, as he also believes it is haunted. Buzzy searches the hotel for any evidence of Abigail’s story, and heads down to the basement, where he finds the spell book. Buzzy then notices a few mysterious happenings, but decides to leave before anything else happens.

Anna and Buzzy have to beg Anna's mom's permission to let Anna assist Buzzy with this story

Anna and Buzzy have to beg Anna’s mom’s permission to let Anna assist Buzzy with this story

Buzzy decides to pursue the story, and enlists the help of Anna to play Sally Shine for his photographs. An actress arrives at the hotel named Claire Poulet, and while Buzzy is smitten with her, he thinks she’s too young to play the part. She leaves dejectedly, but Buzzy changes his mind, as he’ll doctor the photos later anyway. The three start to hear music, and Buzzy heads to the kitchen to investigate. In the kitchen, he hears the voices of kitchen staff, but no one is there. Anna joins him in the kitchen, and they carefully look around when they hear a voice singing a nursery rhyme. The dishes begin to rattle in the cabinets, and they see the ghost of a young girl skipping toward them surrounded by green raindrops. Behind them, a headless body makes its way over to them on a cart, holding a cleaver. Buzzy and Anna run out, screaming about how the place is haunted. Buzzy decides to bring Jill back tomorrow to prove that there are ghosts at the Hollywood Tower Hotel. When he heads back to the Banner to talk to her, she finally takes him up on his story, but is soon annoyed that this seems to be another one of his lame tabloid stories, and tells him to never come back to her office again. After he leaves, however, she decides to run a background check on Abigail Gregory, taking the story in her own hands.

Back at Buzzy’s apartment, Abigail goes through the book, and finds that the spell was supposed to send Sally to hell for eternal torture, but since there were no identifying items for the other victims on the elevator, the spell didn’t work, and sent all the inhabitants into a state of limbo. On Halloween night, Abigail says she could break the spell, once they get identifiers from all the other ghosts. Later that night, Anna asks why Buzzy is working so hard on this story, and he reveals he’s excited he can finally write about something he believes in. The next day, Q provides an identifier from his grandfather, and Anna goes inside to get an identifier for the other two guests, when Claire arrives, dressed as a governess. Buzzy decides to take pictures of Claire instead of searching, and Anna decides to go inside by herself. Buzzy reveals to Claire that he used to work for the Banner, when he got duped with a false tip and got fired. Meanwhile, the ghosts try to scare Anna away, but stops their attack once Anna says she wants to help them. The ghost of Sally Shine tells Anna she needs to fix the elevator, as they need to get to the party.

At the sanitarium, Jill discovers Abigail's shocking secret and anger against Sally Shine

At the sanitarium, Jill discovers Abigail’s shocking secret and anger against Sally Shine

Jill arrives at the nearby sanitarium, where Abigail is staying, and has been staying since 1940. She is let into Abigail’s room, and the manager reveals that Sally Shine was Abigail’s sister. As he leaves, Jill does some snooping, and finds that Abigail kept a secret compartment in her trunk, where she shows her true hatred and jealousy for her sister Sally, including a decapitated doll. Back at the hotel, Anna finds the suitcase of Carolyn Crosson, and grabs an identifier from her jewelry box. Pulling out a locket, she realizes that Claire is actually Carolyn. The ghost of Gilbert London appears, and Anna and Buzzy watch as the ghosts argue amongst themselves. Carolyn then appears in a grand fashion, and apologizes for the ruse, but she needed to see if she could trust them. Anna explains to the group why they didn’t arrive at the party, but Miss Partridge arrives and debunks their theory. Outside, Abigail laughs, as she believes she can get rid of Sally once and for all. Miss Partridge reveals that if they could get to the party, the curse would be over. Buzzy then decides to fix the elevator, using Q’s help. Unfortunately, Q feels that he is unable to help, as he considers himself useless. Jill arrives at Buzzy’s apartment and drops the bombshell that Abigail is Sally’s sister, and deranged at that. Jill gives Buzzy the opportunity to write a story and have it published in the Banner, and Buzzy gets so exicted he forgets about the ghosts. Anna reminds him of his promise, but Buzzy tells her he’s waited so long for his chance. Anna angrily decides to go help them herself after Buzzy takes off. Abigail, who has been hiding in Buzzy’s closet, steps out and takes the remaining identifiers after everyone leaves, laughing maniacally.

Anna and Q arrive back at the hotel after the power has been turned back on. Q reluctantly enters the hotel, and finally meets his grandfather, who begs Q for his help. Q agrees, wanting to help his grandfather. Meanwhile, Buzzy is struggling to write the story, as he wants to keep his promise to Anna. He finally leaves and goes to the hotel, with Jill following him. Abigail arrives at the hotel and makes her way unnoticed to the basement to create the spell. Q struggles with the elevator, as the circuits keep blowing up on him. When Buzzy goes back to his apartment to get the book, he realizes that Abigail had lied the entire time – she was the witch that casted the spell, damning her sister. In the basement, Abigail begins the spell again, and the storm returns. Anna hears the voice of Abigail, and follows her to the conjuring table. Q finally gets the elevator to work, and the guests are excited as they race for the elevator. Anna stops Abigail, but it’s already too late, as the spell has been cast, and the elevator will crash as it should have sixty years ago. Anna runs to the elevator, and accidentally boards the elevator while Sally steps off. Buzzy tries to stop her, but realizes that she’s about to die along with the others. Sally follows Buzzy, Jill, and Q to the basement to stop Abigail, but she protests that she’s waited her entire life for revenge. Abigail explains that everyone loved Sally, and no one cared about her. Halloween was her birthday, and no one even cared. Driven mad by jealousy, she casts the spell to kill her sister. Sally appears, and asks Abigail if she knows her sister. Buzzy asks Sally that if she could talk to Abigail, what would she say, and Sally apologizes for not making it to her surprise birthday party. Sally considered Abigail her best friend, and had a birthday present of a charm bracelet for her.

Buzzy tries to help Anna escape from the soon-to-crash elevator using the safety hatch on the elevators

Buzzy tries to help Anna escape from the soon-to-crash elevator using the safety hatch on the elevators

The elevator is stuck on the eleventh floor again, and Buzzy convinces Abigail to do something to reverse the spell. Abigail apologizes to Sally for her mistake, and Buzzy realizes that “a spell of passion can be countered by its contrary,” but Abigail doesn’t know what that means. The group takes the service elevator to try and save Anna, while Abigail and Sally stand around uncomfortably. Abigail asks Sally if she’ll ever forgive her, and Sally hands her the bracelet. The spell begins its work, and both elevators start plummeting. Sally says that she forgives Abby, and the two turn into bright lights and stop the elevators from crashing to the ground. Jill realizes that Sally’s love for Abigail broke the spell, and the ghosts invite the group to the party; the group agrees, and decide to take the stairs, just to be safe. Everyone reaches the party, safe and sound. As everyone finally accomplishes what they dreamed – Dewey reunites with his father, Carolyn gets to sing, Gilbert proposes to Carolyn, Miss Partridge gets Sally back to her parents, and Sally is reunited with her entire family – they are finally able to set their souls to rest and disappear. Jill gives Buzzy a kiss, giving him a second-chance at the paper, and at their relationship. Q finally gets his hotel, and opens it with a swanky shindig. The story ends with Buzzy making the front page once again with the story on the hotel.

October 25

October 25, 1904 – Animator and Disney Legend Bill Tytla is Born

vlcsnap-2013-10-25-19h19m42s136

“Whatever [Bill Tytla] animated had the inner feelings of his characters expressed through very strong acting. He did not just get inside Stromboli, he was Stromboli and he lived that part.” – The Disney Villain

On October 25, 1904, Vladimir Peter Tytla was born in Yonkers, New York, the son of Ukranian immigrants. Having shown a talent for art at an early age, it was after seeing a filmstrip of Gertie the Dinosaur by famed cartoonist and animator Winsor McCay that he was inspired to go into animation. At the age of 16, Tytla was hired by the Paramount Animation Studio to letter cards. He later worked at Paul Terry’s animation studio, then enrolled in the Art Students League; in 1929, he traveled to Paris to study painting. On his return, he continued working for Terry Studios, but when his friend Art Babbitt moved to California to work for Disney, he followed his friend soon after and joined the studio in 1934 on a trial basis. Tytla soon showed his great animation skills on three shorts: The Cookie Carnival (gingerbread boy and girl, as well as the angel food cake and devil’s food cake rivalry), Mickey’s Fire Brigade (Clarabelle Cow), and Cock o’ the Walk (the rooster, his first “heavy” role at the studio). Seeing great potential in Tytla and Babbitt, Walt Disney gave them more responsibility, and a greater salary, making the two the highest paid artists in the studio. For the first full-length feature Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Tytla worked with Fred Moore to create the personality of each of the dwarfs. After the success of Snow White, Tytla was given the role of Stromboli in the second film Pinocchio. His skill with animation and understanding characters made Stromboli one of the most powerful and frightening villains in Disney films. However, Tytla’s best and most-known role was that of Chernabog in Fantasia, which was said to have been based on Bela Lugosi, although Wilfred Jackson was the live-action reference for the character that Tytla actually used. He would also animate Yen Sid in The Sorcerer’s Apprentice sequence of the same film.

Tytla wished for a change in his roles, and requested the title role in the upcoming film, Dumbo. He got the job, and based the character on his infant son, Peter. Around the same time, a strike was brewing at the Studio, and Tytla, along with Art Babbitt, joined the strike, feeling sympathy for those assistant and production crew members being paid low salaries. Fortunately, he finished his scenes in the film before he joined the picket line. After the strike ended, he rejoined the studio, but the atmosphere had changed significantly. In 1943, due to several factors – including a bout of tuberculosis and a desire to live with his family back on his Connecticut farm – Tytla resigned from the studio, a decision he regretted for the rest of his life. He continued to work in animation for the Terry Studio, and Tempo Productions, but always tried to rejoin the studio. Tytla passed away on December 30, 1968, at age 64. He was named as a Disney Legend in 1998.

October 24

October 24, 1994 – The Animated Series Gargoyles Premieres in Disney Afternoon

gargoyles

“One thousand years ago, superstition and the sword rules. It was a time of darkness. It was a world of fear. It was the age of gargoyles.”

On October 24, 1994, the animated series Gargoyles premiered on television in the Disney Afternoon programming block. The series was about a clan of nocturnal creatures known as gargoyles, who turn to stone during the day. After being betrayed, members of the clan are cursed to stay in stone until the castle “rises above the clouds.” In present day, the gargoyles are reawakened when the castle they live is taken to New York and reconstructed atop a billionaire’s skyscraper. The six remaining gargoyles try to adjust to life in modern New York, aided by NYPD detective Elisa Maza, and come into conflict with David Xanatos. 3 seasons, with 78 episodes, aired overall, with the first two seasons airing in the Disney Afternoon, and the third and final season airing on ABC’s One Saturday Morning. The cast included Keith David as Goliath, Edward Asner as Hudson, Salli Richardson as Elisa Maza, Jonathan Frakes as David Xanatos, Marina Sirtis as Demona, and Bill Fagerbakke as Broadway.

October 23

October 23, 1953 – The Donald Duck Short Film Rugged Bear is Released to Theaters

vlcsnap-2013-10-23-18h21m34s193

“This is Bear Country: a quiet, peaceful part of the forest reserved exclusively for Mr. Bear.”

On October 23, 1953, the Donald Duck short film Rugged Bear was released to theaters. This marked the second appearance of Humphrey the Bear overall, and the second of five appearances in Donald Duck short films. The short was directed by Jack Hannah, with story by Al Bertino and Dave Detiege.

The short begins at a section of the forest for Bear Country, with dozens of bears sleeping soundly. The bears are alerted by the narrator that hunting season has begun, and while they all flee to their cave, Humphrey the Bear continues to sleep. He is soon woken up by flying bullets, and is locked out of the cave when all the other bears seal themselves inside. Humphrey runs crazily around the woods, dodging hunters, and comes across a house in the woods. Once inside, he realizes he’s in a hunting cabin, with guns and stuffed bear heads on the walls. As he tries to escape, he sees Donald walking to the house, holding a shot gun. He frantically tries to hide, and disguises himself as a bearskin rug.

Donald pretends to shoot his bearskin rug, making his "rug" rather nervous

Donald pretends to shoot his bearskin rug, making his “rug” rather nervous

Donald wipes his feet on the nervous bear’s back, and as he sits to clean his shotgun, he pretends to shoot the rug, which causes Humphrey to nearly panic. As Donald decides to light a fire in the fireplace, he uses Humphrey’s nose to light his match. Humphrey barely suppresses a yelp, and when he looks behind him to see where Donald (and, more importantly, the gun) is, he gets his nose stuck in the barrel and has to quietly follow Donald through the house. He manages to free himself when the kitchen door is slammed in his face, and when he tries to sneak away, he finds that hunting season is still occurring, and has to stay inside to stay safe.

Donald returns from getting his snack, and sits on Humphrey’s back in front of the fire. After swallowing a stray bit of Donald’s popcorn, Humphrey gets the hiccups; fortunately, Donald thinks he has the hiccups instead of his rug. After getting a drink of water, Donald returns and decides to take a nap on his rug. A stray spark from the fire jumps out and lands on Humphrey’s back, and he catches on fire, but he masks his scream by turning up the radio, waking Donald, who quickly puts the fire out. Seeing the mess this caused, Donald throws Humphrey into the washing machine. Poor Humphrey emerges after the dry cycle as a giant fur ball, which Donald remedies by cutting off his hair with a yard trimmer. Donald then curls himself up in the rug to fall asleep, much to Humphrey’s dismay.

Humphrey is relieved that Donald has left for the season

Humphrey is relieved that Donald has left for the season

Hunting season soon ends, and the bears clean up the mess the hunters left behind. Donald leaves his hunting cabin, and Humphrey, looking more than a little worse for wear, is relieved that he can finally escape. He hears a strange knocking from the wood box near the fireplace, and is surprised to find that the bear rug he’d rolled up and replaced at the beginning of the season was, in fact, another live bear, who thanks Humphrey for hiding him and taking his place. Humphrey looks at the camera with bloodshot eyes, a look of disbelief on his face.

October 22

October 22, 1908 – Imagineer and Disney Legend Roger Broggie is Born

Roger Broggie

“He epitomized the essence of Disney Imagineering – the blending of creative imagination and technical know-how.”

On October 22, 1908, Roger E. Broggie was born in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. After graduating from high school in 1927, he moved to Los Angeles, California, working for several technical companies that included Technicolor and General Services Studios. In 1939, he was hired by the Disney Studios as a precision machinist after receiving an invitation to join the studio by a friend. One of Broggie’s first assignments was work with the multiplane camera on the Burbank lot. Broggie would work closely with Ub Iwerks on many technical innovations, including rear-screen special effects and camera cranes. In 1950, Broggie became the head of the Studio Machine Shop, and helped create a variety of technical effects for screen and for Disneyland; one new technique developed under his direction was the Circle-Vision 360, a motion picture viewing experience where the screens completely surround the guests. In 1951, Broggie was assigned to work with Imagineer Wathel Rogers, and together they created the first prototype of the Audio-Animatronic figure, which only stood about nine inches tall. This prototype led the way to the creation of the life-sized figure of Abraham Lincoln, which was first on display at the 1964-1965 World’s Fair in New York. In 1973, Broggie worked on plans for the EPCOT Center in Walt Disney World, Florida. In 1975, he retired from the company after working at Disney for over 35 years. A lover of miniature trains, having assisted Walt with creating his backyard miniature train set in 1949 and vocal in the creation of the Disneyland and Santa Fe Railroad in Anaheim, the Walt Disney World engine No. 3 was named after him in his honor for all his years of service. He was awarded as a Disney Legend in 1990. On November 4, 1991, Broggie passed away at the age of 83.