Posted on 05/03/2020 8:45:25 AM PDT by Kaslin
Docuseries host and prop collector Dan Lanigan embarks on a road trip through cinema history, meeting stars and creators of such classics as 'Mary Poppins' and 'The Muppet Movie.'
Movie blockbusters arent what they used to be, and that doesnt just apply to recent months with theaters closed. (Streaming anything good lately?)
A few decades ago, when studios poured $50 to $100 million into films such as Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Tron, or Mary Poppins, the silver screen lit up with story ideas and visuals never before seen. Today, such budgets are most often reserved for paint-by-number remakes and tiring sequels; most sell enough tickets for audiences to get more next year.
A new release from Walt Disney Studios today, hardly a bastion of risk-taking film production hearkens back to the glory days of the Magic Factory when newly conceived practical effects were employed to tell wildly original stories. Exploring eight landmark films in half-hour episodes, binge-worthy docuseries Prop Culture lands today on Disney Plus in its entirety.
The beauty of it is the Disney Plus team completely understood what we were trying to do from the get-go, said series host Dan Lanigan, who spoke to reporters on a conference call from his California home. I have an obsession for movie-used art: props, costumes, wardrobes, set pieces, and all that. Prop Culture is [about] celebrating not just props, but these true artisans.
Coming across as the sort of nerd who has several Comic-Con cosplay options at the ready in his basement (and its true), Lanigan may seem an unlikely host to guide a multigenerational audience into an appreciation of yesteryears popcorn cinema. But his enthusiasm for every one of these eight films, and dozens more he references, is infectious.
I started collecting action figures as a kid, he said. Now, as an adult, collecting props is sort of my version of toys. So I come to this show from a fans perspective, not as an insider. I am geeking out as much as anyone!
A fast-paced celebration of cinema legacy, the series winds back time to when artists physically created elaborate sets, action scenes, and on-screen creatures, as opposed to today, when most elements are designed in computers and achieved through green screen. Narrative approaches in each Prop Culture episode are as varied as the films featured.
Revisiting forgotten 80s comedy Honey, I Shrunk the Kids, actor Rick Moranis emerges from retirement to reminisce about his on-screen role juggling fatherhood and far-out inventions. (In real life, he left Hollywood to care for his kids after his wife died of cancer.) Donning his iconic villains fedora from Who Framed Roger Rabbit, star Christopher Lloyd recalls his part in the innovative live action-animation hybrid flick.
Lanigan travels to the island of St. Vincent to scope out where Disneys first Pirates of the Caribbean film came to life, aided by award-winning costume designer Penny Rose, who shares the elaborate work her team accomplished. The same episode walks through a blacksmiths centuries-old process for shaping steel; he shows off a black-ebony blade forged in 1740 that served as a model for several on-screen swords.
The episode on Walt Disneys quintessential film Mary Poppins avoids retelling the same familiar behind-the-scenes anecdotes from past documentaries. Early reviews have noted a particular sequence featuring actress Karen Dotrice, today age 64, as emotionally moving.
More than 55 years prior, Dotrice had portrayed Jane Banks, one of two children the flying nanny watched over. Now Dotrice meets up with Lanigan at Griffith Park in Los Angeles, and the two ride a carousel that had inspired Walt to ultimately dream up Disneyland. Then Lanigan pulls out the actual costume Dotrice wore in Poppins and captures her reaction.
When she saw that jacket, it was an amazing moment it meant a lot to her, said Lanigan. I collect these artifacts because theyre important remembrances that these movies were actually filmed by people and by artists.
Prop Culture has more than mere nostalgia going for it. A closing scene in one episode has Lanigan sitting down with his daughter to share the experience of watching a classic together.
Family is very important to me, he said. I watched Mary Poppins with my father. Theres something about quality time you spend with your family that strengthens those bonds. Where I get my love for film is my mother and fathers encouragement of me, with all the crazy stuff I did.
As much as the movie experience is personal, so too is the craft behind it. Whether its costuming, automotive engineering, sculpting, painting, design, directing, or camera work, so many trades come together to produce a film, said Lanigan. By looking at these objects that are created for film, you see all the different skills that are applied to make it happen.
Lanigans personal treasure trove, with thousands of movie items, rivals many museums. Yet its only the series starting point. He has a working relationship with the Walt Disney Archives, having acquired artifacts for their collection. Now he invites viewers into his world: Hollywood-area warehouses of Disney props not open to the public, movie auction markets housing rarely seen items, and boutique shops such as the Jim Henson Studios.
He revels in the details, without losing sight of the larger purpose of storytelling. These artifacts are artworks in their own right, masterpieces in a lot of cases of all different types of trades to accomplish this fleeting moment on film, said Lanigan. [Props] allow the actors to live the characters, and thereby allow the audience to believe whats going on.
While laughs and discovery drive episodes, Prop Culture has an educational intent too. I hope families can learn interesting things about the movies they love, and maybe kids will be inspired to get into the movie industry, he said. Even if they dont, there is [much] you can learn from studying film because it requires so many different skill sets.
This series marks a welcome departure from what has become the norm on Disney Plus. Of their couple dozen original titles, longtime fans have raved over the Star Wars series, found some Disneyfied reality TV worthwhile, praised The Imagineering Story for its world-class storytelling and dismissed most other entries as low-quality Disney Channel fare.
Over its eight episodes, Prop Culture recalls a time when all-ages PG films were not just entries in never-ending franchises. Lanigan has ambitions to spotlight many more recent classics. When asked about potential titles for a second season, he ticked off several on Disney Plus: The Rocketeer, Willow, The Princess Bride, Flight of the Navigator, and Fantastic Mr. Fox.
But he offers a caveat before anyone gets too excited. Youve got to like the first season to get a second season! said Lanigan. So hopefully people watch, and [executives] in the Disney kingdom like what weve done with these episodes.
If this series sparks binge-watching of classic films on the family-friendly streaming service, perhaps Disney will crack its vault open wider and add more overlooked legacy titles. For Lanigan, who exudes the joy of a kid in a candy store as he handles decades-old artifacts and meets filmmakers, the real thrill is sharing with the world his love of great cinema.
These props mean a lot to people because these movies mean a lot, he said. We look back on these films as important to us, and important to the world.
Can I get a Zip-a-dee-doo-dah!
Not in this PC world!
All of Disney support Pedophiles.
A good analysis of Disney movies, which capture something I realized a long time ago, that Disney movies usually all have a common theme of child disobedience to their parents.
“When viewing Disney movies in which characters disobey their parents, children will most likely be unable to connect the act disobedience with the impact it has on the family, or any other negative aspect; instead, a child will view the disobedience very unrealistically, in the manner Disney presents it - adventurous and fun, always with positive outcomes.”
https://therhetoricofdisney.weebly.com/disobedience.html
someone is dating themselves (lol)
Docuseries host and prop collector Dan Lanigan embarks on a road trip through cinema history, meeting stars and creators of such classics as 'Mary Poppins' and 'The Muppet Movie.'
Why is that caption under a picture of Rick Moranis from what looks to be "Honey I Shrunk the Kids" and was in neither of those movies?
Decades ago a friend of mine pointed this out about films generally. Its not just DIsney. Because young people go (or used to anyway) to movies, many films portray the young as better and wiser than their elders. Ferris Buellers Day Off, War Games, the Goonies, E.T., Footloose, and many others exhibit this basic theme. None were made by DIsney.
Mary Poppins came out 56 years ago.
Somebody did a funny re-cut trailer making Mary Poppins into a horror movie, called “Scary Mary”. Only 1:06.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2T5_0AGdFic
(The best re-cut trailer had to be turning The Shining into a family romantic comedy.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KmkVWuP_sO0
SJW Liberalism killed Hollywood.
My daughter works for disney and is currently furloughed. Sent her Scary Poppins. She loves dark humor, sarcasm, and parody Thanx.
In almost every Disney movie ever, the kids are missing one or both parents to begin with. Bambi, Nemo, Cinderella, Snow White, Lion King, Beauty and Beast, Jungle Book, etc.
Current Disney, sure. But not old-school Disney, or heck, even the early years of Eisner’s reign. Let’s not forget, when one of Walt’s production staff tried to corrupt a minor at a pool, he promptly fired him.
Other than MAYBE The Little Mermaid (and that’s more of a gray area, as Ariel had to clean up her act big time by the ending of the movie), and maybe Aladdin (mostly on Jasmine’s end. Aladdin himself doesn’t count since he was explicitly an orphan so he didn’t have any parent TO disobey), definitely Pocahontas (Mulan’s more in the gray area, as Mulan mostly went to war in her father’s stead to save him from becoming a Red Shirt, and not because her father was incompetent, but because he previously suffered an injury that would make him a liability in combat), I don’t really recall Disney actually promoting disobedience as a good thing, especially towards their parents.
Certainly the classics didn’t deal with disobedience by any stretch (Snow White was very obedient to her stepmother, and if anything, it took the huntsman warning her of her stepmom’s infanticidal intentions to Snow for her to even ATTEMPT to flee the premises. Cinderella was obedient to her stepfamily, and her not going to the ball was thanks to the stepmom being a jerk, and Aurora doesn’t disobey her adopted family either, even going back to her castle DESPITE promising to meet that man in the woods, and clearly wasn’t happy about the whole situation. Bambi I don’t recall him disobeying anyone, and Mowgli had to REALLY get saved a few times, so I fail to see how that promoted disobedience, plus he was an orphan so he couldn’t disobey any parents). If anything, Disney PROMOTED child obedience to parents.
Besides, as another user pointed out, plenty of Hollywood movies that weren’t even CONNECTED to Disney at the time promoted child disobedience in a FAR more blatant manner. Like Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (though to be fair, that movie at least depicted the public school system in a bad light and also had a condemnation towards communism as well, so it’s all good).
Can I get a Zip-a-dee-doo-dah!
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