Sunday, March 25, 2012

Oswald, The Lucky Rabbit Is Back!








In this animation drawing released by Disney, an image from the 1928 Oswald the Lucky Rabbit short, "Sky Scrappers," is shown. The film was the 22nd Oswald short cartoon produced, and was part of Walt Disney’s early career success. Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, the wacky predecessor to Mickey Mouse, was brought out of the Disney archive this week and showcased at an event unveiling "Disney Epic Mickey 2," an upcoming video game that allows players to control Mickey and Oswald. AP Photo/Disney. Derrik J. Lang, AP Entertainment Writer


More Information: http://www.artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=54367&int_modo=1[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.org
In this animation drawing released by Disney, an image from the 1928 Oswald the Lucky Rabbit short, "Sky Scrappers," is shown. The film was the 22nd Oswald short cartoon produced, and was part of Walt Disney’s early career success. Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, the wacky predecessor to Mickey Mouse, was brought out of the Disney archive this week and showcased at an event unveiling "Disney Epic Mickey 2," an upcoming video game that allows players to control Mickey and Oswald. AP Photo/Disney. Derrik J. Lang, AP Entertainment Writer


More Information: http://www.artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=54367&int_modo=1[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.org
In this animation drawing released by Disney, an image from the 1928 Oswald the Lucky Rabbit short, "Sky Scrappers," is shown. The film was the 22nd Oswald short cartoon produced, and was part of Walt Disney’s early career success. Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, the wacky predecessor to Mickey Mouse, was brought out of the Disney archive this week and showcased at an event unveiling "Disney Epic Mickey 2," an upcoming video game that allows players to control Mickey and Oswald. AP Photo/Disney. Derrik J. Lang, AP Entertainment Writer


More Information: http://www.artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=54367&int_modo=1[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.org

In this animation drawing released by Disney, an image from the 1928 Oswald the Lucky Rabbit short, "Sky Scrappers," is shown. The film was the 22nd Oswald short cartoon produced, and was part of Walt Disney’s early career success.



Derrik J. Lang, AP Entertainment Writer
LOS ANGELES


One of Walt Disney's oldest drawings is seeing the light of day after being locked away for nearly 40 years. A rough 1928 image of Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, the wacky predecessor to Mickey Mouse, was brought out of the Walt Disney Co. archive this week and showcased at an event unveiling "Disney Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two," an upcoming action-adventure game for the Wii, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 that allows players to control both Mickey and Oswald.

The mischievous Oswald was co-created by Disney before Mickey, but he was lost in a 1928 contract dispute with Universal Studios. Oswald hopped back to Disney in 2006 when CEO Bob Iger brokered a deal that sent sportscaster Al Michaels to Universal-NBC. Oswald's first appearance since his return came in 2010's "Epic Mickey" as the ruler of a forgotten realm. 








"We've always known about the character and loved him and wished that we could do things with him, but he wasn't a character that belonged to us," said Walt Disney Co. archive director Becky Cline. "In 2006, we were over the moon when Bob Iger made (the deal)."


Cline noted that most of the drawings from Disney's early Oswald cartoons were destroyed, likely because there was a lack of storage when his studio moved to a new facility in Burbank, Calif., in 1939. She said the image of Oswald comes from a box of drawings that was found in the 1970s and has been preserved in the Disney archives for the past 40 years. 








The image, drawn on paper in graphite, comes from the 1928 animated short film "Sky Scrappers." It shows Oswald shielding himself from falling bricks with an umbrella. Warren Spector, the creative director at "Epic Mickey 2" developer Junction Point Studios in Austin, Texas, said he's aiming to include the image of Oswald somewhere within the sequel. 






 



"It's amazing," said Spector. "Everybody at Disney is so proud that he's back. I'm no different. It's just so exciting to be a part of bringing that character back into the world and to see people respond so affectionately toward him. Now, to have Mickey and Oswald brothers united to save the world, it's unbelievable. I feel really privileged." 







NOTEObviously, it's great to have Oswald back and following yesterday's exhaustions and last week's labors, this is a nice story to wake up to. I was unaware that Disney had recaptured the rights to Oswald (who I've always liked much better than Mickey Mouse) and I must say that it was a bit of ingenious dealmaking that they did.  I only hope they don't blow the opportunity presented here by poor execution of new material, but they probably will.  Unfortunately, that seems to be the way of the current animation world.  Overly cute, overly fancy non-triumphs of mediocre style over non-substance, usually with a little bit of smut gratuitously thrown in.  Still, hope springs eternal when it comes to cartoons, i.e, the “real world.”












6 comments:

  1. I have a vague memory of Oswald the Rabbit- I'll be interested to see what Disney does with/to him.

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  2. My memories of Oswald are also vague, but fond. I like the cartoon that's linked. I think I remember him especially because I liked (and like) the name Oswald. I'm afraid that Disney will just junk it up and turn the character into another sort of double-entendre speaking contemporary character aimed at the lower parts of adults' and kids' imaginations. But maybe we'll be pleasantly surprised. I hope so. I can still get lost in cartoons endlessly. Curtis

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  3. There are Studio Ghibli and some maybe even more authentic makers of animation from Japan. The Ghibli films have moments of great calm.

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  4. I will definitely investigate Studio Ghibli. When I worked at CBS/FOX Video, we had the pleasure and honor of distributing Nick Park's Wallace & Gromit features in the US and Canada and I thought they were a great breath of fresh air. Some of the other Aardman Animation shows were also terrific. But there's such a lot of junk. We were affiliated with the US CBS television network and every year I got a chance to see the new animated shows they were considering. It got to a point where the crude witlessness became terribly depressing. Oh well. Curtis

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  5. Hi, here is a site about Disney animated shorts, creators & rarities : Secrets of productions, unmade Disney, original documents... : http://facebook.com/tresorsdisney

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