


It was supposed to be an ever-changing experience, in which old shorts would make way for new ones as a new version of Fantasia would come out every certain number of years. He was hoping to keep creating new shorts inspired and set to the music of classical pieces that would then be incorporated into the movie.
#Flamingo dance fantasia yo yo movie
One of Walt Disney’s original ideas when making Fantasia(1940) was that the movie would become a sort of evolving roadshow. But before all of that happened, there was one last movie, one that is virtually forgotten today, that represents some of the best, and definitely the most ambitious aspects, of the Disney Renaissance. Tarzan was the last big financial success for the company, which would go on to try many different ways to stay relevant in the first decade of the new millennium, most of which failed (at least when compared to the success they experienced in the early nineties). This was, of course, only a period for Walt Disney Animation Studios. This was a period of time in which the studio, whose animated movies had lost quality and popularity ever since the death of Walt Disney to the point that people thought of it primarily for the theme parks and not for movie production, somehow managed to recover the magic and become more popular than ever with a series of movies that pushed the technological envelope, harkened back to the company’s classics of the 40s and 50s and embraced a more modern sensibility. Like I said on the previous Disney Canon entry, the popular and accepted belief is that Tarzanis the last movie of the much talked-about Disney Renaissance of the 1990s.
