Commentary &Frame Grabs 21 Jan 2009 08:46 am

“Dreamy” & “Jiminy”

- Back in 1959 Sleeping Beauty wasn’t the only animated feature to hit theaters. Universal had adapted The Snow Queen, a 1957 Soyuzmultfilm production, adding the voices of Tommy Kirk, Sandra Dee and Patty McCormick to the English language version. (Dave Fleischer got credit for “Technical Director” whatever that was.) A new score by the excellent composer Frank Skinner was added including a couple of key songs.

The original Russian film was directed by Lev Atamanov
a significant figure in the history of Russian animation. Several of his films
had been adapted and distributed to American television, including
The Golden Antelope which had received an award of merit at Cannes.


The odd bit about The Snow Queen is that it included an introduction
by a narrator which was voiced by Paul Frees in the English version.
This narrator, calld “Dreamy,” walks around a statue of Hans Christian Andersen
and is flanked by a number of books.


He tells of two umbrellas he used to give Andersen his tales via dreams.


If “Dreamy” waves a black umbrella, Andersen doesn’t dream; if he waves
a colorful umbrella, the dreams are big ones.


This leads us into the very big dream, “The Snow Queen.”


The overall feel of the lethargic and talky piece is that it is very similar
to Jiminy Cricket’s appearance in Pinocchio.

a href=”http://www.michaelspornanimation.com/splog/wp-content/Q/26pan.jpg”>


The animation of “Dreamy” was very slow and, I guess, “dreamy.”
You can feel Paul Frees trying to mouth the character’s limited mouth actions
and get all the words into the time allotted. It couldn’t make for a good performance.


Comparing this to the excellent reading of Cliff Edwards, who mouthed Jiminy Cricket,
the acting in Pinocchio had to, and did, come off better.


Yet, in saying all this, I have to admit a fondness for “Dremy.” I think it
may be that the film hit me at a very susceptible period in my young life.


Animated features I saw in this period – I was 12ish – stuck with me.


Sleeping Beauty, 1001 Arabian Nights with Mr. Magoo, 101 Dalmatians. They all mean a lot to me and have deeply affected my tastes.


Somehow, even “Dreamy” comes off in a good light.


Perhaps he used the colorful umbrella on me.

Now let’s take a look at Jiminy’s entrance in Pinocchio.


The masters at Disney, by the time they’d made Pinocchio, knew what they had to do.


A beautiful song, a great voice with a perfect performance
even though he only had one umbrella.


A real character introduced up front in all his glory.


They knew how to keep things . . .


. . . short . . .


. . . sweet . . .


. . . “dreamy.”

6 Responses to ““Dreamy” & “Jiminy””

  1. on 21 Jan 2009 at 11:24 am 1.bill said …

    Another TV staple from my youth. I saw it dozens of times as a kid, and since to me back then anything that was animated was great, I loved it. Even though even as kid, it’s flaws were obvious.

  2. on 21 Jan 2009 at 11:59 am 2.Dan Caylor said …

    Wow Dreamy looks a lot like White (or the other way around) from 8 Crazy Nights…Anyone?

    :P

  3. on 21 Jan 2009 at 12:53 pm 3.Michael said …

    I can’t disagree with you about “White”, but I assume it’s a coincidence. Why would anyone purposefully copy “Dreamy”?

  4. on 21 Jan 2009 at 5:13 pm 4.Alexey Kobelev said …

    “The Snow Queen” is one of Hayao Miyazaki’s favorite animated features and it is one of his inspirations to work in animation. I suppose adapted version (I had not chance to see it) was heavily edited since I see no flaws in this Russian masterpiece.

  5. on 21 Jan 2009 at 5:32 pm 5.Michael said …

    I believe the only editing done for the US version was to make the film longer. Songs were added filling them in with montages of reused material, and a live action introduction was added. This featured Art Linklater and a group of children gathered around a Christmas Tree. They ended by watching the animation on a tv set. Roughly 20 mins. were added to the show.

  6. on 12 Mar 2009 at 1:30 pm 6.bronz döküm said …

    I admire to your writing

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