Showing posts with label Animation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Animation. Show all posts

Monday, October 16, 2023

31Days of Horror Recommendations: The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad (1949)




Year: 1949

Country: U.S.

Subgenre: Ghost/Halloween/American Literature

Runtime: 68 minutes

Directors: Jim Sharpsteen, Jack Kinney, Clyde Geronimi & James Algar 






I grew up with this being an annual television event just before Halloween. It still holds a warm place in my heart around this time of year, even after all these years.  In reality, it is two Disney animated shorts woven together to make (barely) a feature length film.  The first is The Wind in the Willows based on a Kenneth Grahame story, narrated by Basil Rathbone. The second (always my favorite, of course) is The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, with Bing Crosby, based on the Washington Irving story.  Both of these were released on their own, for use with other Disney productions, around the same time as the feature was sent to theaters. The shorts were kept for use "in house," but the feature was a RKO release. And it was always this version that I saw as a kid; the fact that it that Mr. Toad story came first both annoyed and kinda of thrilled me, it was the appetizer for what I head truly tuned in for: the Headless Horseman and that fiery Jack-o-Lantern! I was not alone, kids older and younger than me did much the same. In fact, so much of that section of this film was a huge influence on Tim Burton's Sleepy Hollow of 1999; obvious that though Burton is quite a bit older than me, he had a similar experience as a kid with the Halloween rite of passage as all us other dark little souls out there (though, most of us never went on to work for Disney animation!). It's a trip down memory lane for many of us, a dark Halloween ride and just a lot of fun! Also, among the many animations that Disney released, this has received the most complaints from parents about it scaring the be-jeeezus out of their kids (and to think Disney fired an up and coming Tim Burton for making his Frankenweenie in 1984--a film that endeared kids, not scared them). Cue the headless horseman song!!! 🎃🐴




















Friday, October 21, 2022

31 Days of Horror Recommendations: Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island (1998)

 


Year: 1998

Country: U.S.

Subgenre: Zombies/Ghosts/Horror For Kids

Runtime:  77 minutes

Director: Jim Strensum




Again, yes, this is a serious suggestion. For a few years in the late 1990's/early 2000's a series of Scooby-Doo films with real monsters were produced. Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island was the first of these; it is also, by far, the scariest of them.  The film opens with the gang on a road tour for Daphne's television program, on the hunt for a real haunted house. It has a great little montage with a song about fake ghosts in the spirit of some of the old Scooby episodes from the 1970's that featured songs to further the action.  They soon find themselves in New Orleans (naturally!), and a cook from a swamp mansion on an island fittingly called "Moonscar" assures them that the house she works in is truly haunted.  They are all in and soon set out for the island via a ferry boat through a creepy bayou. Once there...well let's just say things get scary....VERY scary! I was one of the first generation Scooby kids, I LOVED the show so much more than any other Saturday morning cartoons that it was a bit nuts. So, like several other first generation Scooby kids, as adults we appreciated that the characters were thrust finally into stories with real monsters. It didn't last long though. Of the four films made, Zombie Island remains my favorite. Amongst the cast lending their voice talents are Mark Hamill (aka Luke Skywalker) and scream queen Adrienne Barbeau; and, of course, Frank Welker (!) the original Fred. This is technically horror for kids, but be aware it's not for very small children. It's that scary!