Sleeping Beauty
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Release date | Turkey |
---|---|
Directors | Clyde Geronimi |
Composers | George Bruns |
Story by | Brothers Grimm |
Charles Perrault | |
Bill Peet | |
Ted Sears | |
George Bruns | |
Reviews | www.imdb.com |
Theatrical region aware release date | 2022-01-25 09:47:26 |
Box offic | United States |
Budget | $6 million |
Adapted from | Sleeping Beauty |
Cast | Eleanor Audley |
Songs musicals | George Bruns |
List | 1Io Lo So2:58 · George Bruns |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 1445811 |
About Sleeping Beauty
A witch curses a newborn princess to die on her 16th birthday. However, a fairy alters the curse, allowing the princess to survive by going into a deep sleep that can be broken by true love's kiss.
The Lincolnshire village honoured in every Disney film since 2006
... A shooting star flies around Sleeping Beauty s castle to the soaring strings of When You Wish Upon a Star, as multi-coloured fireworks explode and a perfect arc of light is formed in the sky before disappearing...
Disney 100: Animation boss Jennifer Lee says strike could halt production
... Sleeping Beauty in 1959 is also awoken by a prince s embrace...
Maleficent: Dragon catches fire during Disneyland show in LA
... Maleficent is the main villain in Sleeping Beauty, and turns from " the mistress of all evil" to a dragon to fight Prince Phillip in Disney s 1959 film...
Moana: Another Disney remake but is it too soon?
... re-told the tale of Sleeping Beauty from the perspective of the villainess...
Middlesbrough mayor says banning ballet over Russian name wrong
... Sleeping Beauty is due to be performed in the town by the Russian National Ballet, but some have called for it to be stopped due to the Ukraine invasion...
Covid-19: The theatre understudies stepping up to save the show
... It was a complete surprise Holly Dack, 17, was making dinner when the call asking her to cover for the villain Carabosse in Sleeping Beauty at Ely s The Maltings came " completely out of the blue"...
Royal Albert Hall boss notes huge drop in sales since spread of Omicron
... " Elsewhere, Cabaret, featuring Eddie Redmayne and Jessie Buckley, has axed some shows at London s Playhouse Theatre, while the The National Theatre has cancelled certain performances of Hex, based on the classic fairy tale Sleeping Beauty, and The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time...
Musicals, plays and pantos cancel shows after Covid-19 outbreaks
... The play, based on Sleeping Beauty, has now postponed its press night from Wednesday to 21 December...
Moana: Another Disney remake but is it too soon?
By Paul GlynnEntertainment reporter
Actor Dwayne Johnson has announced that a Live Action remake of Disney's 2016 animated musical Moana is in The Works .
The US star, aka The Rock , revealed The Project in a video filmed on a beach on The Hawaiian island of O'ahu, alongside his daughters.
Johnson, who voiced gregarious demi-God Maui in The animation, tweeted he was " deeply humbled" to help reproduce The " beautiful story of Moana".
Original Moana actress Auliʻi Cravalho will also be involved.
on her Instagram account which says she and Johnson will serve as executive producers on The Project .
Set on The Polynesian island of Motunui, Moana follows The Story of an adventurous Teenage Girl , who sets sail on a daring mission to save her people, with The Help of Johnson's Maui.
Referencing his own family's heritage, The ex-wrestler added: " This story is my culture, and this story is emblematic of our people's grace, mana and warrior strength. "
Allow Twitter content?
This article contains content provided by Twitter. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read and before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue'.
The BBC is not responsible for The content of external sites.In The video, posted on Monday evening, Johnson went on explain how " The Spirit of my late grandfather, High Chief Peter Maivia" had " inspired" him to bring The part to life.
He Said how " honoured" he felt to now get The chance to work with Disney again to " tell Our Story through The Realm of music and dance, which at The Core is who We Are as Polynesian people. "
The original Moana animation was a Box Office hit, grossing More Than $645m (£520m) worldwide while earning an Oscar nomination for best animated movie.
So why so many Disney remakes?Since The 2010s, you'll have noticed Disney has remade a raft of Box Office -smashing, Old School animated classics, using Real Life actors.
Remakes of Alice in Wonderland, Beauty and The Beast, Aladdin and The Lion King all grossed More Than $1 billion.
And there are plenty more remakes in The pipeline too, including Hercules, Peter Pan & Wendy and Mufusa, a Lion King prequel.
Now though, with The likes of Moana and Lilo & Stitch, We Are starting to see The same model being applied to modern favourites, according to film critic Helen O'Hara.
" I think Moana was a great film, it was a Box Office hit and you have these two incredibly likeable stars who are still at The Right age and The Right look to come back and do their roles again, " she told Bbc News .
" So in that sense I get The Appeal of doing it now, but it is an unusual one because it's a much, much shorter window between animated film and Live Action remake than we've ever had before. "
O'Hara believes that most Live Action remakes don't really need to exist but says some of The better ones down The Years , such as Cinderella, The Jungle Book and Dumbo, have genuinely added Something to The original movies.
And while The primary motivation for The Business is undoubtedly money, she stresses, The creatives involved usually want to make The very best film they can.
" There are two different things going on: The People who make The decisions about what to greenlight are all about money, " she explains. " The People who make The Movies - The Directors , The Producers , The Writers , The Cast - are often aiming to create Something great, I think, every time they go out.
" They don't get a slice of what The studio does, for The Most part. So they want to make a great Live Action Moana or a great Live Action Lion King, or whatever it is.
" But The studio suits definitely do make decisions on The basis of money and those decisions are made on The basis of what is a familiar name to people, what will people go to The Cinema and see? And people will go to The Cinema to see The Rock and people will go to The Cinema to see Moana, so that's pretty much The extent of The maths that I think they're doing. "
As well as bringing in The big bucks, leaning towards re-makes, sequels and safer franchises allows Disney - a company which has been cutting staff after numbers on its Disney+ streaming site Fell - to be able to afford to take risks on other projects.
Some of The remakes have also enabled filmmakers to tell stories from different perspectives and in different ways for modern audiences too.
Maleficent, for example. re-told The Tale of Sleeping Beauty from The perspective of The Villainess . While Halle Bailey , The Star of The upcoming Little Mermaid remake, was left awestruck by people sharing videos of The joy on their children's faces on seeing The trailer for a film featuring a non-white Disney star who looked a little like them.
Despite widespread commercial success, Disney's remakes have not been without their critics though. Last Year The studio had to respond to criticism made by Game of Thrones actor Peter Dinklage about its forthcoming Live Action adaptation of Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs.
Dinklage, who has a form of dwarfism called achondroplasia, said The Remake of The 1937 animated film, based On Story from The Brothers Grimm , was " backward".
Disney said it was going to " avoid reinforcing stereotypes from The original animated film".
Now as The Walt Disney Company, to give it its full name, approaches its 100th birthday, some of its classic, earlier movies are nearing their Copyright expiration dates.
But The Company 's strategy around live-action remakes, O'Hara believes, has less to do with extending Copyright - Something which does not automatically renew by remaking Something with The Same Name anyway - and more to do with getting The Most out of each and every product.
" I think there was a discussion of that with Mickey Mouse , for example, because The Copyright of that is Coming Up , and obviously we've seen this year already What Happened when Winnie The Pooh Fell out of Copyright , " said The Film critic.
" But The Films that they currently have on The slate, things like The Little Mermaid or Hercules, only go back 20 or 30 years, So There 's No Question that those will come falling out of Copyright yet.
" And obviously Something like Moana or Lilo & Stitch, those have years and years to go, " she added.
" I don't think it's so much About That as it is with getting everything they can out of The ideas that they hold and The ideas that people know them for.
" Because if you do succeed with your Live Action remake, then you can have a sequel to The Live Action remake. So maybe it's good for two or three films and not just one. "
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com