Disney Completes Dali Animation 313
jbottero writes "Wired News has an interesting piece on a Salvador Dali animation coming out of Disney Studios. It seems that in 1946, Walt Disney and Dali teamed up on a short film called Destino. The film was shelved for money reason, and now, 57 years later, Disney animators has finished what Dali started. The six minute film will be shown in theaters next year before a Disney feature film. The remnants of the aborted film include 150 storyboards, drawings and paintings, which have sat for the last half-century in the Disney vaults. Notably, some of the project was modeled on the animation program Maya. An interesting quote from the article, Dali describes Walt Disney as one of America's greatest surrealists."
disney does for dali (Score:5, Funny)
i can barely wait for the action figures...
Re:disney does for dali (Score:2, Funny)
Re:disney does for dali (Score:2, Interesting)
Don't care, I'm not doing business with any company which has fucked up US copyright law as badly as Disney has.
Re:disney does for dali (Score:5, Funny)
Re:disney does for dali (Score:2)
Dali Rocks!!! (Score:2, Interesting)
I hope they did large amounts of acid to try and get the same inspriation that Dali had.
Re:Dali Rocks!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Dali Rocks!!! (Score:5, Informative)
Salvador Dali
And he was right.
Turn it on, Salvador!
Re:Dali Rocks!!! (Score:3, Insightful)
And as far as the acid comment...
"I don't do drugs, I am drugs.
-Salvador Dali
Re:Dali Rocks!!! (Score:2)
Re:Dali Rocks!!! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Dali Rocks!!! (Score:3, Interesting)
Lysergic Acid Diethylamide did not exist until 1938- most of Disney's best stuff predates this, or came just after it (think Fantasia, 1940). I am of the opinion that Disney's animators were definitely fungally-enhanced when they did Fantasia. Dancing mushrooms?
Re:Dali Rocks!!! (Score:3, Interesting)
I wouldn't even go that far. Dali had a few unique paintings and drawings, then things slid downhill. A case study in dysfunctionality.
I wouldn't call him one of the "greatest". I would however call him one of the most famous. Famous should not be equated with greatness.
There's a couple of interesting books out about him.
The Great Dali Art Fraud and other Deceptions [amazon.com] Out of print, get it through a library. Covers art scams that he was involved in. Evidently he would hire himself out to sign blank sheets
Notable ? (Score:5, Interesting)
And this is notable, why ?
Maya has been a mainstay for movie production involving 3D elements for a long time now. Or is this supposed to conjure images of Maya-on-Linux and thus make it relevant to Slashdot somehow ?
This isn't any more notable than a CGI team doing shots for CSI using Bipeds from Character Studio ( 3ds max plugin ) for one of those tacky sticks-in-bullets-holes-tell-us-where-the-bullets
Effects houses will use the software that gets the job done, and hardly ever is the choice "notable".
Just my 2cts on -that- topic.
Disney completing a shelved project like this, for a 6-minute short, on the other hand, is more interesting.
Re:Notable ? (Score:5, Interesting)
Seriously, though, the fact that an unfinished project using 20th century technology was completed almost 60 years later using 21st century technology, and supposedly it's going to look completely seamless-- I'd call that remarkable.
(On a related note, is it just me, or does the phrase "20th century technology" still not evoke the feeling of "whoa, that's old" as it should?)
Don't do business with organizations that hurt you (Score:2, Offtopic)
Sadly, yes, they will even though it means doing business with the corporation that was a strong proponent of the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998 [wikipedia.org]. This bill became law and stifles our ability to build on Disney's work like Disney built on Buster Keaton's Steamboat Bill Jr. [wikipedia.org]. We can't share and preserve countles
None of the bits were done in 1946 (Score:3, Interesting)
It sounds to me like they basically just took the outline that had been created, and made a completely new animation. I don't think that anything on screen will be from the 40's, but the storyboards and whatnot will have guided the 00's animators.
Re:Notable ? (Score:5, Interesting)
If the film had been completed in the 1940s or '50s, it would've been more difficult (or at least time-consuming) to get the perspectives correct. As the article says:
perspective drawings in 40's animation (Score:2, Interesting)
Dali is great surrealist (Score:3, Informative)
Museum is a must visit. (Score:2, Informative)
I think they have somewhere > 200 of his works in total. They have historical information on him as well as some of his sketch books and sculptures as well as pictures of him.
I liked the pictures of his pet ocelot.
Sounds Like They Did It Right (Score:5, Interesting)
"teamed up" = Disney alone owns the copyright (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:"teamed up" = Disney alone owns the copyright (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, I'm one of those 14-year copyright wackos. Feel free to ignore.
Re:"teamed up" = Disney alone owns the copyright (Score:4, Insightful)
Disney Does Dali (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Disney Does Dali (Score:5, Interesting)
Of course this goes well with Disney's tradition of subtley showing phalluses to children.
Re:Disney Does Dali (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Disney Does Dali (Score:2, Interesting)
Im sure most people only knows the oil paintings he made like the clocks and elephants...
But most of his work was hand drawings and let me tell you, they where not for the faint of heart.
There was an exibition last summer here in finland with about 100 of them. 99 of them included atleast breasts or female geneterial (SP?)...
Re:Disney Does Dali (Score:3, Interesting)
Being that Disney owns Miramax (the company that makes films that generally use the word "fuck" more times than the word "the"), perhaps they will put Destino at the beginning of one of those films...
I've been to the Dali Museum [salvadordalimuseum.org] in St. Petersburg, FL, and while there are a lot of pieces where adult themes are tossed about, there are plenty of pieces that aren't... If you get to visit the St. Pete museum sometime in the fu
"one of America's greatest surrealists?" (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmmm, that's hardly much of an achievement. Can anyone name any good American surrealist? Dali was probably taking the piss.
Re:"one of America's greatest surrealists?" (Score:4, Interesting)
David Lynch (Score:2, Offtopic)
Wait a second... (Score:3, Funny)
Political statement? (Score:2, Funny)
Would the same still be true regarding disney's contemporary political positions?
One of Fantasia's Successors (Score:5, Informative)
So what happened originally you ask? Here's an excerpt from The Straight Dope [straightdope.com]:
For more related articles, here are some great links too:
http://www.boston.com/globe/magazine/1-30/feature
http://www.abstractdynamics.org/archives/2003/06/
http://www.animagic.hpg2.ig.com.br/destin1.htm [ig.com.br]
(This last one has images of conceptual art designs too!)
-Mr. Fusion
There's more on this in Wired Magazine (Score:5, Informative)
Do they slice a cow's eye open? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Do they slice a cow's eye open? (Score:4, Funny)
Did that in high school. Wasn't as cool as it was hyped to be.
Now, slicing open *a whole rat*, now that's entertainment!
Re:Do they slice a cow's eye open? (Score:2)
It screened at Telluride (Score:5, Informative)
Anyway, it's a surprisingly effective melding of Dali imagery and Disney animation. The animator at Disney who had done the original work is still alive and still working at Disney, and worked to finish the movie, and the original soundtrack was restored for it.
It's short, but if there's a screening, it's worth going just to see it. There's so much detail that the video transfer will be meaningfully less.
57 years?! (Score:2, Funny)
Some Kind of Record (Score:5, Funny)
That's like a minute per decade, almost.
Re:Some Kind of Record (Score:2, Funny)
Destino (Score:2, Interesting)
What could happen if the minds of genius like Walt Disney and Salvador Dali produced an amazing piece of art to be seen in the big screen? The answer is the never-completed animated short "Destino".
Work, in the form of original concept drawings, as well as 18 seconds of animation, done by Salvador Dali in 1946 at the Disney studio , is being dusted off by Disney vice chairman Roy E. Disney and will be completed as an art house cartoon by the Disney studio - well, at least according to the London
un chien andalou (Score:2, Interesting)
Most notable of those is Un Chien Andalou that he did with the somewhat famous director Luis Bunuel. It's only a few minutes long and it makes *NO* sense at all, but it's very fun to watch.
SOMEWHAT famous? (Score:2, Interesting)
The story makes no sense. The images make some sense. It was a critique/homage to Federico Garcia Lorca, a gay writer that was part of their group (the surrealists in Europe in the 1930's). Garcia Lorca was an Andalucian, Buuel called him the andalucian dog. He wrote a poem to Dali that was the inspiration for the eye-slashing scene. There is also a critique in that movie, to the writer Juan Ramon Jimenez: the rotten donkey on the piano is
Huh? (Score:2)
Copyright 2060(C) (Score:2, Interesting)
similiar: Tortoise and Hare by Harryhausen (Score:2, Interesting)
Some of the interviews with Harryhausen on (I think) the Jason and the Argonauts mention this as well. (But searching
Details: http://www.turnerclassicmovies.com/ThisMonth/Arti c le/0,,28065%7C28067%7C28069,00.html
Asprin and Tylonel Must have made a killing!!! (Score:2)
At least it wasnt escher!
Bah! (Score:2, Funny)
Disney is totaly sureal (Score:2)
57 years (Score:2)
When are they doing a version of jungle book?
Surreal Disney (Score:3, Interesting)
Disney is dead, watch your overcoat. [wikipedia.org]
It would have been finished (Score:2, Funny)
The movie would have been done on time, except the clocks kept melting. Thanks, I'll be here all week!
Salvador Dali and the tree knot (Score:2)
Salvador Dali drew all his tree knots like little anuses. Those of you that think this is a flame google +"Salvador Dali" +Anus. From what I remember, he seemed to think all tree knots looked like little anuses. I think this is strangly approperate for a disney production.
Still... his anus fixcation aside, definatly one of the great artists who's style seems to be under-rated in the 21st century. Eve
Wow! (Score:3, Funny)
MPAA (Score:2)
Spellbound (Score:3, Interesting)
Speechless (Score:3, Informative)
I AM SURREALISM.
As usual, he was right.
And my favorite quote of his (also my email sig):
The only difference between me
and a madman is that I am not mad.
Well, Hello Dali (Score:2, Funny)
Disney the surrealist (Score:2)
Dali describes Walt Disney as one of America's greatest surrealists...
Watch the dream sequence in the Winnie the Pooh movie if you don't believe this.
Money is the reason why... (Score:2)
Dali put in the contract that Disney did not own the works used to create Destino until it was made and released.
What are 22 original Salvidor Dali oils worth on todays market?
This may take them a few million to finish the project. They will make much more than that with the garage sale that follows.
As a
WOW (Score:2)
Why is her dress melting into a river??? I gotta go to sleep.
Re:Who? (Score:3, Informative)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Who? (Score:4, Informative)
He even made a cook book. Serously.
Here: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Agora/8013/dali/d
Raw creativity... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Who? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Who? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Who? (Score:3, Informative)
One of my favorite surrealist, even though he was overplayed as it were. I also enjoy Giger and Escher also.
Check out a gallery of his works at:
http://dali.karelia.ru/html/dali.htm
Re:Who? (Score:5, Funny)
the dude who painted the melting clocks.
If you ever have the urge to sum up an artist's work in one sentence again... don't.Re:Who? (Score:3, Insightful)
Give the guy a break. The melting clocks are probably the best known and most recognizable feature of Dali, and this *is*
And anyway, if you're going to criticize, at least get the quote right!
Re:Who? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Who? (Score:2, Funny)
You mean the dude that painted the soup cans?
Re:Who? (Score:3, Funny)
If you ever have the urge to sum up an artist's work in one sentence again... don't.
Yeah, but who was that dude who sketched all those fucked-up stairways?
Re:Who? (Score:5, Funny)
If you ever have the urge to sum up an artist's work in one sentence again... don't.
Pop-quiz!
The dude who splashed paint on canvas spread on the groud.
The dude who cut off his ear and painted sunflowers.
The dude who started off those dotty paintings.
The dude who made that picture of a pipe that says it isn't a pipe.
The dude who wrote Romeo & Juliet.
The dude who wrote those books where he was going on and on about all the stuff he was thinking and doing and you couldn't figure out what was fact and what was fiction the grammar didn't work out anyway pretty damn boring book that was.
The dude who cuts animals in half and suspends them in formaldehyde.
The gal who made an exposition out of her own dirty bed.
The dude who painted a can of soup.
The dude who composed the Ring.
No, not that other dude who wrote about the Ring.
The dude who wrote that book and then all those Arabs went medieval on him, only he hid.
The dude who wraps buildings up like a parcel (and his wife, too).
The dude who directed E.T.
The gal who made those nazi films that died the other day.
The dude who poured lighter fluid over his guitar and burnt it on stage.
The dude who wrote the book about killing lots of people while using lots of snobby eighties brands.
The dude who was in that black&white film where the front of a house falls over, but he's standing where the window comes down and there's no glass in it.
The gal who sings about wanting a Mercedes Benz.
Dude! (Score:2)
Boring, that's one of the best damn books I've ever read!
If you thought the grammar was difficult in that one, you should read that book by the same dude about all the details of every thought that passes through his dream and half of the words aren't real but make sense
Re:Dude! (Score:2)
No, I think that dude was refering or the dude who wrote his books about twenty to thirty years before that big bad Bill dude, but then again I could have the wrong dude.
BTW, I agree that the book where the guy flashes back and forth between the US and Morocco while doing all that smack and bug spray while sometimes hangin' out with the "On the Road" dude and his bigamist buddy isn't all that, but it was much
Re:Who? (Score:2)
--Good Morning, Vietnam
Re:Who? (Score:2, Informative)
Pollack,Van Gogh :)
Seurat,Ummm... not sure but google for "Ceci n'est pas une pipe" and I could get it
Shakespeare
Faulkner
most likely Somebody funded by the NEA in the past 20 years
Ummm... Madonna?
Andy Warhol
???
Tolkein
Salmon Rushdie (rather apt name eh?)
I know and it's on the tip of my tongue... he did the Reichstag and some carribean islands... oh got it: Christo. Can't remember the first name, if any.
Spielburg
???
Jimi Hendrix
???
Buster Keaton?
Janis Joplin.
That was a fun quiz, and as you can tell, I didn'
Answers - don't peek! *** SPOILER *** (Score:2, Informative)
*** SPOILER ***
Answers below
*** SPOILER ***
Jackson Pollock
Vincent Van Gogh
Georges-Pierre Seurat
Rene (Francois Ghislain) Magritte
William Shakespear (although his existance as an historical figure is questioned, like Homer)
James (Augustine Aloysius) Joyce
Damien Hirst
Tracey Emin (won the Turner prize with her soiled bed)
Andy Warhol
(Wilhelm) Richard Wagner (also notable for contributing to the Apocalypse Now soundtrack)
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien
Salman Rushdie
Christo (Javachef
Re:Who? (Score:2)
> Seurat,Ummm... not sure but google for "Ceci n'est pas une pipe" and I could get it
>Shakespeare
> Faulkner
> most likely Somebody funded by the NEA in the past 20 years
Actually, he's some british guy whose name I can't remember, but he's cut from the same cloth, yeah.
> Ummm... Madonna?
*This* is probably the one with the NEA grant.
> Andy Warhol
> ???
Wagner
> Tolkein
> Salmon Rushdie (rather apt name eh?)
> I know and it's on the tip of my tongue... he did the
last few (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Who? (Score:2, Informative)
Jackson Pollock
The dude who cut off his ear and painted sunflowers.
Vincent VanGogh
The dude who started off those dotty paintings.
The dude who made that picture of a pipe that says it isn't a pipe.
The dude who wrote Romeo & Juliet.
Shakespeare
The dude who wrote those books where he was going on and on about all the stuff he was thinking and doing and you couldn't figure out what was fact and what was fiction the grammar didn't work out anyway pre
Rene Magritte (Score:2)
Re:Salvador Dali's Dream of Venus (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Salvador Dali's Dream of Venus (Score:2)
And mods keep modding you up. This is a spammer, people, a subtle one, but one nevertheless.
Don't click that link, you give him money out of it.
Re:Disney animators has finished? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Disney animators has finished? (Score:2)
Don't forget.... (Score:2)
steve
Re:Double standard (Score:2)
Re:Double standard (Score:2)
It's funny (Score:2)
because it's also true.
You deserve the -1 though. After all, this is a US centric messageboard, and you are offending your hosts.
Re:You wanna be an American? (Score:2)
Re:umm - /. + accents, spelling and pronunciation (Score:3, Informative)
Dali was not Spanish, he was actually Catalan, from a place called Port Lligat (Yigat) in northern Catalunya.
I've just noticed that /. doesn't seem to let you use accented characters, neither can you use the XHTML character entities [computertorture.com], such as Ampersand+iacute;
Anyway, for those that don't know, or can't tell in /., The 'i' in Dali's name has an accent on it, which is important as it completely changes how you pronounce his name, Da-li, not Dah-lee, with the stress on the the 'li' rather than the 'Da'.
Re:umm (Score:2)
wbs.
Re:umm (Score:2)
Oh. You're kidding. Right?
More like Blockbuster (Score:2)
I'll hafta buy it when it's released on video too
Rent it instead. That way, you still see the movie, but less of your money goes toward reforming copyrights in the entertainment industry's favor.