article

Song of the South is a feature film produced by Walt Disney Productions, released on November 15, 1946 by RKO Radio Pictures and based on the Uncle Remus cycle of stories by Joel Chandler Harris. It was one of Walt Disney's earliest feature films to combine live action footage with animation and was the first Disney feature film in which live actors were hired for lead roles. The live actors provide a sentimental frame-story, in which Uncle Remus relates the folk tales of the adventures of Brer Rabbit and his friends; these anthropomorphic animal characters appear in animation. The film is often the subject of controversy, because of content which is considered by some to be racially insensitive towards African-Americans. It has never been officially released on DVD or home video in the USA, and is thus subject to much rumor and speculation.

Plot


The setting is the Southern United States, in a "dream time" shortly after the American Civil War, which folklorist Patricia A. Turner characterizes as happening "during a surreal time when blacks lived on quarters on a plantation, worked diligently for no visible reward and considered Atlanta a viable place for an old black man to set out for."

The frame tale does not follow the original framing narrative by Harris. While Disney Studios tried to avoid the more offensive stereotypes of African Americans still common in the 1940s, Disney also tried to make sure that nothing in the film would be objected to by the white segregationists then in political and cultural control of the Southern United States. This resulted in the subservient relationships of the black children towards white child Johnny, played by child star Bobby Driscoll, in his Fauntleroy suit, that are particularly stilted and perhaps unintentionally revealing. Few recent critics found the results of this attempted balancing act successful, though it passed without comment in 1946, aside from a mild rebuke from the NAACP. Blacks are shown as subservient to whites, and singing contentedly about "home". The framing story has therefore been accused of idealizing the harsh lives of blacks on rural southern plantations in the Jim Crow era.

The hit song from the film was "Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah", which won the 1947 Academy Award for Best Song.

Controversy


Although the film has been re-released several times (most recently in 1986 in the US), the Disney corporation has avoided making it available on home video tape in the United States or DVD anywhere because the frame story was deemed controversial by studio management. Film critic Roger Ebert has supported this position, claiming that most Disney films become a part of the consciousness of American children, who take films more literally than do adults. * The film has been released on video in various European and Asian countries. In the U.S., only excerpts from the animated segments have ever appeared in Disney's DVDs and television shows, and the popular log-flume attraction Splash Mountain is based upon the same animated portions.

Despite rumors of a forthcoming DVD release, this exchange took place between a shareholder and Disney CEO Robert Iger on Friday, March 10, 2006 at a Disney Shareholder Meeting:

"My name is Howard Cromer. I live in Cypress, I'm a Disney shareholder. I'm actually delivering a message from my son, 10. He wants to know in recent years, in the midst of all your re-releases of your videos, why you haven't released Song of the South on your Disney Classics?" "And, he wonders why. Frank Wells told me many years ago that it would be coming out. Well obviously Frank Wells isn't around anymore, so we still wonder why. And by the way, Mr. Iger, he thinks it was a very good choice when they made you CEO of Disney." [Applause

Iger: "Thank you very much. You may change your mind when I answer your question, though. Um... we've discussed this a lot. We believe it's actually an opportunity from a financial perspective to put Song of the South out. I screened it fairly recently because I hadn't seen it since I was a child, and I have to tell you after I watched it, even considering the context that it was made, I had some concerns about it because of what it depicted. And thought it's quite possible that people wouldn't consider it in the context that it was made, and there were some... pause depictions that I mentioned earlier in the film that I think would be bothersome to a lot of people. And so, owing to the sensitivity that exists in our culture, balancing it with the desire to, uh, maybe increase our earnings a bit, but never putting that in front of what we thought were our ethics and our integrity, we made the decision not to re-release it. Not a decision that is made forever, I imagine this is gonna continue to come up, but for now we simply don't have plans to bring it back because of the sensitivities that I mentioned. Sorry." *

Thus, the Disney company will not be releasing the film in the U.S. in the near future. The Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah and Brer Rabbit tricking Br'er Fox into the trap scenes are found in the 1950 special "One Hour in Wonderland" included on the 2004 two-disc release of Alice in Wonderland.

Trivia


  • James Baskett, the leading black actor in the film, was reportedly unable to attend the premiere in Atlanta, Georgia as no hotel within reach of the theater would rent him a room. Baskett, the first live actor cast in a feature length film by the studio, won a special Oscar for his portrayal. Hattie McDaniel also appeared in an Aunt Jemima-like "mammy" role.
  • Buffs enjoy identifying in-joke references to Song of the South in Who Framed Roger Rabbit.
  • Songs include "Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah," "Song of the South," "Uncle Remus Said," "Ev'rybody's Got a Laughing Place," "How Do You Do?," "Sooner or Later," "Who Wants to Live Like That?," "Let the Rain Pour Down," and "All I Want." There is a song that doesn't appear in the movie called "Look at the Sun." However, it's marketed as one of the songs from the movie.
  • The exterior of the main plantation strongly resembles the plantation in Gone With the Wind.
  • The Splash Mountain attractions at Disneyland, Walt Disney World, and Tokyo Disneyland feature the animated characters and songs from this film. Most of the young attendees at the parks have never had an opportunity to view the film.
  • There are only five minutes of the movie without any music.
  • In one scene, Brer Rabbit is thrown into the Briar Patch. Because he is accustomed to being inside a briar patch (since it is his home), he doesn't get hurt by it. But to trick Br'er Fox and Brer Bear, he pretends to be by screaming cries of pain. One of his screams (his first one, to be exact) sounds remarkably like the Wilhelm scream.
  • During production of the "Laughing Place" scene, Johnny Lee, the voice of Brer Rabbit, had to leave on a USO tour, and James Baskett (the voice of Br'er Fox and Uncle Remus) filled in for him.
  • Ruth Warrick was the last living cast member of this film. She died in January 2005.
  • A TV Funhouse cartoon called "Journey to the Disney Vault" was aired on the April 15, 2006 episode of Saturday Night Live (SNL). The cartoon was a parody of many things related to Walt Disney and The Walt Disney Company. In the cartoon, two kids watch an "uncut" version of Song of the South showing Uncle Remus singing the lines "Negroes are inferior in every way" and "Whites are much cleaner, that's what I say." Actual footage from the movie was used. * In an earlier SNL episode, the film was lampooned by Tracy Morgan in a fake advertisement for "Uncle Jemima's Sour Mash Whiskey."
  • While most foreign releases of the film are direct translations of the English title (Canción del Sur in Spanish, Mélodie du Sud in French, Melodie Van Het Zuiden in Dutch, and A Canção do Sul in Portuguese), the German title Onkel Remus' Wunderland translates to "Uncle Remus' Wonderland", and the Italian title I Racconti Dello Zio Tom translates to "The Stories of Uncle Tom."

See also


External links


1946 films | Animated films | Best Song Academy Award nominees | Best Song Academy Award | Disney films | Live-action/animated films | Musical films | Films shot in Technicolor

Onkel Remus’ Wunderland | Mélodie du Sud

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Song of the South".

Home Pageartsbusinesscomputersgameshealthhospitalshomekids & teensnewsphysiciansrecreationreferenceregionalscienceshoppingsocietysportsworld