@@ryandalton2834 th-cam.com/video/XsiJzFx-61M/w-d-xo.htmlsi=-mEwlR3ydtcbZd1Y It’s on two playlists: Season 4 and “Disneyland on Television” which can be found on my homepage.
The very first movie I ever watched. This might sound wacko, but I’m hardly that enthusiastic about it. There’s a part of me that feels like the people that have contributed to your first film are burned into your DNA. Bambi somehow left much more of an indelible impact on me than Dumbo could. From a historical perspective, both films were produced simultaneously and had different crew members. There’s only an obscure overlap of people that worked on both pictures. Rant over, whew. Don’t get me wrong, I do have some favorites who were part of the Dumbo unit. 😊
Personally, I don't see anything wrong with the crows speaking in jive accents. As long as it's not a white guy pretending to be black, it should be fine. The only reason the crows were controversial is because their leader was named Jim Crow, plus said crow was voiced by a white guy pretending to be black. And it's not just them. The crows from Freddie As F.R.O.7, Buzzy Crow, every single crow on Fritz The Cat, and black chickens from Looney Tunes all suffered the same problem: Black birds with African American accents being considered "controversial" for some reason.
@@evancredeur7498 Cliff Edwards was the only white person to voice a crow, Dandy Crow…changed from Jim Crow in the 1950s by Disney after realizing the mistake. The rest of the crows were voiced by members of the Hall Johnson choir, most notably Nick Stewart and James Baskett.
@@judith_thordarson Yes. And every single black person was a crow for some reason. Like, Harlem was literally overrun with crows. Every time you see a crow in that movie, he or she is an African American. What's up with that?
My favorite Disney movie!!!!!! Thank you!
Wow, Walt looks so sharp! Good on you for uploading the better version! Thanks!
love itt!!
When you think about it, crows and storks are the only birds you ever see in this movie.
Do you have “An Adventure in the Magic Kingdom”, the one where Tinkerbell was the hostess?
@@ryandalton2834 th-cam.com/video/XsiJzFx-61M/w-d-xo.htmlsi=-mEwlR3ydtcbZd1Y
It’s on two playlists: Season 4 and “Disneyland on Television” which can be found on my homepage.
The very first movie I ever watched. This might sound wacko, but I’m hardly that enthusiastic about it. There’s a part of me that feels like the people that have contributed to your first film are burned into your DNA. Bambi somehow left much more of an indelible impact on me than Dumbo could. From a historical perspective, both films were produced simultaneously and had different crew members. There’s only an obscure overlap of people that worked on both pictures.
Rant over, whew.
Don’t get me wrong, I do have some favorites who were part of the Dumbo unit. 😊
Personally, I don't see anything wrong with the crows speaking in jive accents. As long as it's not a white guy pretending to be black, it should be fine. The only reason the crows were controversial is because their leader was named Jim Crow, plus said crow was voiced by a white guy pretending to be black. And it's not just them. The crows from Freddie As F.R.O.7, Buzzy Crow, every single crow on Fritz The Cat, and black chickens from Looney Tunes all suffered the same problem: Black birds with African American accents being considered "controversial" for some reason.
@@evancredeur7498 Cliff Edwards was the only white person to voice a crow, Dandy Crow…changed from Jim Crow in the 1950s by Disney after realizing the mistake. The rest of the crows were voiced by members of the Hall Johnson choir, most notably Nick Stewart and James Baskett.
@@keepingwaltindisney
Hey, wait....Buzzy was voiced by Jackson Beck, and he was a white guy.
Fritz the Cat? Wasn't that an X-rated cartoon from the 70s?
@@judith_thordarson
Yes. And every single black person was a crow for some reason. Like, Harlem was literally overrun with crows. Every time you see a crow in that movie, he or she is an African American. What's up with that?
@ I don't know, because I never saw "Fritz the Cat".
But what does that movie have to do with "Dumbo"?