# UX410 - 2004 Disney-Pinocchio PC FDC
Pinocchio Premiers
Written in 1881 by Carlo Collodi, The Adventures of Pinocchio is a children’s book about the mishaps of a mischievous puppet that longs to become a human boy. It was published at a time when children’s books were relatively new, so it became popular around the world.
In September 1937, while working on Snow White, animator Norman Ferguson brought an English version of the book to Walt Disney. Walt loved it and planned to produce it as the company’s third movie. It was later moved up to become his second movie when production on Bambi proved troublesome.
The multi-plane camera revolutionized Disney’s animation, giving three-dimensional depth to one-dimensional pictures. Imagine a series of seven moveable panes of glass stacked underneath a camera. Now place drawings on each pane of glass. Put a drawing of a puppet on the pane of glass closest to the camera, a drawing of Honest John Foulfellow on the one beneath it, a picture of a dog crossing the street on the one after that, a building down the street on the next, and so on, spacing the drawings according to perspective. Now picture those layers of glass moving, some in unison with the movement of other panes, some moving independently of the other panes, as the camera moves forward and backward, filming through all seven panes of glass.
Understandably, this kind of photography was very expensive. A one-, two-, or three-second scene cost $25,000 to film – a staggering sum today, and even more so in 1939. Not surprisingly, Pinocchio was one of the most expensive features Disney ever made, costing $2,289,000. And to make matters worse for the studio, Disney’s European market evaporated just before Pinocchio’s release. Europe, in the throes of World War II, accounted for 45 percent of the company’s revenues, so Pinocchio was in financial trouble before it was released.
Pinocchio also received the Academy Award for Best Song (for “When You Wish Upon A Star”) and Best Scoring of a Musical Picture. The moving song, performed by the character Jiminy Cricket, went on to become the Walt Disney Company’s signature song.
Click here to see a neat advertisement announcing the movie’s premiere.
Pinocchio Premiers
Written in 1881 by Carlo Collodi, The Adventures of Pinocchio is a children’s book about the mishaps of a mischievous puppet that longs to become a human boy. It was published at a time when children’s books were relatively new, so it became popular around the world.
In September 1937, while working on Snow White, animator Norman Ferguson brought an English version of the book to Walt Disney. Walt loved it and planned to produce it as the company’s third movie. It was later moved up to become his second movie when production on Bambi proved troublesome.
The multi-plane camera revolutionized Disney’s animation, giving three-dimensional depth to one-dimensional pictures. Imagine a series of seven moveable panes of glass stacked underneath a camera. Now place drawings on each pane of glass. Put a drawing of a puppet on the pane of glass closest to the camera, a drawing of Honest John Foulfellow on the one beneath it, a picture of a dog crossing the street on the one after that, a building down the street on the next, and so on, spacing the drawings according to perspective. Now picture those layers of glass moving, some in unison with the movement of other panes, some moving independently of the other panes, as the camera moves forward and backward, filming through all seven panes of glass.
Understandably, this kind of photography was very expensive. A one-, two-, or three-second scene cost $25,000 to film – a staggering sum today, and even more so in 1939. Not surprisingly, Pinocchio was one of the most expensive features Disney ever made, costing $2,289,000. And to make matters worse for the studio, Disney’s European market evaporated just before Pinocchio’s release. Europe, in the throes of World War II, accounted for 45 percent of the company’s revenues, so Pinocchio was in financial trouble before it was released.
Pinocchio also received the Academy Award for Best Song (for “When You Wish Upon A Star”) and Best Scoring of a Musical Picture. The moving song, performed by the character Jiminy Cricket, went on to become the Walt Disney Company’s signature song.
Click here to see a neat advertisement announcing the movie’s premiere.