Song of the South
-
- AV Forum Member
- Posts: 1934
- Joined: October 22nd, 2004
I didn't say she has to watch it. Her rant reminds me of when a classmate at college said he didn't want to watch Pocahontas because he didn't like how it glorified the "white man" coming to America and taking the land from the natives. You can choose to not watch something but it doesn't help anybody to have completely twisted views on the matter.
- AV Forum Member
- Posts: 9095
- Joined: October 25th, 2004
- Location: Binghamton, NY
I just meant the Ku Klux thing like, rhetorically. Of course I don't think they should put one in the movie!
Anyway, I do agree that the movie has some value, and yeah I guess I should see it before I make up my mind. I did watch a clip in a classroom, since the professor was a Disney fanatic and had a tape with Disney songs that had Zip A Dee Do Da on it (hmmm, how do you write that anyway?) I realize their are great films that have subtle, if "positive" stereotypes because they are simply part of our culture. It doesn't make them bad or good. Case in Point: The Crows in Dumbo may be stereotypes but they are the ones who help Dumbo believe in himself.
It's also one of my favorite Disney films.
Historically, all films have value, so I guess this does too. I hope they make it available some day so I can get a better-formed opinion of it.
EDIT: I'm sorry if I came off sounding snide...Ben I can tell you really love this film and I'm sorry that I put it down.
Anyway, I do agree that the movie has some value, and yeah I guess I should see it before I make up my mind. I did watch a clip in a classroom, since the professor was a Disney fanatic and had a tape with Disney songs that had Zip A Dee Do Da on it (hmmm, how do you write that anyway?) I realize their are great films that have subtle, if "positive" stereotypes because they are simply part of our culture. It doesn't make them bad or good. Case in Point: The Crows in Dumbo may be stereotypes but they are the ones who help Dumbo believe in himself.
It's also one of my favorite Disney films.
Historically, all films have value, so I guess this does too. I hope they make it available some day so I can get a better-formed opinion of it.
EDIT: I'm sorry if I came off sounding snide...Ben I can tell you really love this film and I'm sorry that I put it down.
Last edited by ShyViolet on April 4th, 2006, 9:15 pm, edited 1 time in total.
You can’t just have your characters announce how they feel! That makes me feel angry!
- AV Forum Member
- Posts: 9095
- Joined: October 25th, 2004
- Location: Binghamton, NY
- AV Founder
- Posts: 25726
- Joined: October 22nd, 2004
- Location: London, UK
Nearly - it's "Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah".ShyViolet wrote:Zip A Dee Do Da (hmmm, how do you write that anyway?)
Uncle Remus in Song Of The South may be stereotyped but he is the one who helps Johnny believe in himself.ShyViolet wrote:Case in Point: The Crows in Dumbo may be stereotypes but they are the ones who help Dumbo believe in himself.
Put a film down all you like, Vi, it's no problem to me. But see it first.ShyViolet wrote:I'm sorry if I came off sounding snide...Ben I can tell you really love this film and I'm sorry that I put it down.
As Chris says...good point, though this would have given a more public showing that they weren't going to cover up the company heritage. I wonder just how much work on this had been done, considering that it would have been out in just six months time or so.ShyViolet wrote:He's still new to his post so maybe he doesn't want any publicity issues right now with something like this. In a year or so he might have a different opinion.
I'm still betting/hoping on a Blu-Ray release...
Last edited by Ben on April 4th, 2006, 10:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
-
- AV Forum Member
- Posts: 1934
- Joined: October 22nd, 2004
Yeah, I think it'll come out soon. They could still be working on the restoration even if there is no announced release date. Might be the perfect flagship 'classic' DVD for a new format.
Also, Lady and the Tramp missed its 50th anniversary by a year but the recent DVD release was still billed as a 50th anniversary edition.
Also, Lady and the Tramp missed its 50th anniversary by a year but the recent DVD release was still billed as a 50th anniversary edition.
- AV Forum Member
- Posts: 296
- Joined: February 12th, 2005
- Location: England
It's a shame that this film isn't been given the light of day that it deserves. Like Ben, I've managed to see Song of the South due to being a UK citizen. I fortunately managed to tape this off BBC2 a few years ago (sans commercials since the BBC in England is advert free), and when I finally get a DVD Recorder (hopefully this will be soon), I am going to transfer it to DVD pronto. The film itself is cute, with the animated sequences being lovely Mary Blair influenced pieces. Of course, it's not perfect (the Uncle Remus bits can run a bit long), yet few things in the world reach perfection, and the pros far outweigh the cons.
Song of the South is a landmark film in its own right (it was the first true live action Disney film, unless you count the documentary films The Reluctant Dragon and Victory Through Air Power), and although there's some "Uncle Tom's Cabin" stereotypes in the movie (for example, there's the mammy, the cheeky little black kid, the white trash), it's no Birth of a Nation at all, and as others have said, it's the stereotypes who triumph in their own way out of their negative image.
I think that unless a Region 2/4 only release arrives (possible, since the BBC sometimes airs Song of the South in the UK and there was a video that only went out of print around four or so years ago, and I hear that it was also on the Australian Disney Channel a while ago), then a bootleg copy (or a download off a file sharing programme) is pretty much going to be the only option of getting Song of the South on a home video format, yet for those who don't yet know, part of the One Hour in Wonderland TV special on the personally recommended 2 disc edition of Alice in Wonderland is a whole animated scene from Song of the South, so you can see a chunk of the movie legally. Plus, the recent (though to some rather pointless due to the fact that most of the material is on DVD already in a better form) Mary Poppins Sing Along Songs DVD has "Ev'rybody's got a laughing place" number on it, even though it's only a 30 second snippet.
Song of the South is a landmark film in its own right (it was the first true live action Disney film, unless you count the documentary films The Reluctant Dragon and Victory Through Air Power), and although there's some "Uncle Tom's Cabin" stereotypes in the movie (for example, there's the mammy, the cheeky little black kid, the white trash), it's no Birth of a Nation at all, and as others have said, it's the stereotypes who triumph in their own way out of their negative image.
I think that unless a Region 2/4 only release arrives (possible, since the BBC sometimes airs Song of the South in the UK and there was a video that only went out of print around four or so years ago, and I hear that it was also on the Australian Disney Channel a while ago), then a bootleg copy (or a download off a file sharing programme) is pretty much going to be the only option of getting Song of the South on a home video format, yet for those who don't yet know, part of the One Hour in Wonderland TV special on the personally recommended 2 disc edition of Alice in Wonderland is a whole animated scene from Song of the South, so you can see a chunk of the movie legally. Plus, the recent (though to some rather pointless due to the fact that most of the material is on DVD already in a better form) Mary Poppins Sing Along Songs DVD has "Ev'rybody's got a laughing place" number on it, even though it's only a 30 second snippet.
-Joe
[i]GIRL: Do you know the way to the Magic Kingdom?
PETER PAN: Sure I do...but can you [b]fly?[/b][/i]
-Scary Disney World TV ad circa '71
[b][url=http://www.dvdaficionado.com/dvds.html?cat=1&sub=All&id=big_joe]My DVD List[/url][/b]
[i]GIRL: Do you know the way to the Magic Kingdom?
PETER PAN: Sure I do...but can you [b]fly?[/b][/i]
-Scary Disney World TV ad circa '71
[b][url=http://www.dvdaficionado.com/dvds.html?cat=1&sub=All&id=big_joe]My DVD List[/url][/b]
I've got the Japanese laserdisc version of SOTS, myself.
I haven't seen it since about 1997/1998, though, and probably will transfer it to a DVD after I get a DVD recorder or new computer.
It's mastered from a decent print of the film with subtitles appearing for the songs. I can't recall if there was a Japanese language track, though.
It's a fairly harmless film, honestly, and not the "Birth of a Nation" monstrosity some people who HAVEN'T SEEN THE FILM claim it is. There are far worse comedies airing on UPN, btw.
I haven't seen it since about 1997/1998, though, and probably will transfer it to a DVD after I get a DVD recorder or new computer.
It's mastered from a decent print of the film with subtitles appearing for the songs. I can't recall if there was a Japanese language track, though.
It's a fairly harmless film, honestly, and not the "Birth of a Nation" monstrosity some people who HAVEN'T SEEN THE FILM claim it is. There are far worse comedies airing on UPN, btw.
- AV Founder
- Posts: 25726
- Joined: October 22nd, 2004
- Location: London, UK
Was it shown on BBC America? Because that would be pretty cool. I know the Beeb have the TV rights to it here...possibly could end up on their US channel.
Yeah, George, I nearly sprung for the Jap LD back in the day but held off because of the song subtitles. There is a Japanese track on all the dialogue but the songs are in English (hence the subs).
I was looking for the Hong Kong edition for ages, which has no subtitles, just a Chinese dub (along with English of course), when I was able to get ahold of the broadcast tape, which was struck from Buena Vista's 1990s transfers and is a high-end NTSC-to-PAL conversion, so retains the right speed and pitch. Couldn't be happier with it, apart from being on disc!
There was a time when I was going to put together my own SE of this - I have a TON of supplememtal material that could be put to good use!
Yeah, George, I nearly sprung for the Jap LD back in the day but held off because of the song subtitles. There is a Japanese track on all the dialogue but the songs are in English (hence the subs).
I was looking for the Hong Kong edition for ages, which has no subtitles, just a Chinese dub (along with English of course), when I was able to get ahold of the broadcast tape, which was struck from Buena Vista's 1990s transfers and is a high-end NTSC-to-PAL conversion, so retains the right speed and pitch. Couldn't be happier with it, apart from being on disc!
There was a time when I was going to put together my own SE of this - I have a TON of supplememtal material that could be put to good use!
- AV Forum Member
- Posts: 260
- Joined: October 29th, 2004
- Location: UK
I have no idea why they cannot just issue it with heavily LM intro with lots of 'the world was a different place then' notations in a Disney Treasures tin! What a good way to get through this stupid censorship... I've seen the film twice on TV here in England and I own a VHS copy of it. I also have the uk release 'So Dear To My Heart' on official DVD release which some lovely extras! Some time ago disney were due to release a 'Gold Collection DVD' of the latter title - it got delayed and never rescheduled.