With 1937’s Snow White, Disney created an entirely new genre of film, as well as the blueprint for all of their iconic features to come. Support ScreenPrism on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=7792695
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00:04
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was
00:06
Disney’s first animated feature,
00:09
but not just that.
00:10
The 1937 film was also the first theatrically released
00:13
animated feature in history.
00:16
People tend to overlook how groundbreaking that is.
00:19
If you adjust for inflation, it also grossed
00:21
more money than Frozen.
00:22
But now that Disney’s got 56 animated features
00:25
under its belt, not counting Pixar,
00:27
it’s easy to watch Snow White now and think it’s bland or basic
00:31
compared to what we’ve seen since.
00:33
We shouldn’t forget just how much innovation Snow White represented,
00:36
both for Disney and for animation.
00:39
With this movie, Disney created an entirely new genre,
00:43
as well as the blueprint for all of their
00:45
iconic features to come.
00:47
Before we go on, be sure to hit subscribe
00:49
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00:57
To pull off a feature length cartoon,
01:00
Disney needed to create a brand new style that
01:02
married the Disney spirit with a form
01:04
that would appeal to a wide audience.
01:07
During production, executives called Snow White “Disney’s Folly.”
01:10
No one believed that anyone would pay to watch
01:13
a feature length cartoon in theaters.
01:15
That seems ridiculous to us now in a world full of
01:19
Disney franchises, theme parks, and merchandise.
01:21
But none of that would exist without the leap of faith
01:24
it took to make Snow White,
01:26
and the new style of visual storytelling that
01:28
came out of the movie.
01:30
Cartoons of the time, including Disney’s shorts,
01:32
were known for their “rubber hose” aesthetic,
01:35
meaning a very exaggerated type of motion,
01:37
usually against a static background.
01:40
We see this sensibility in the seven dwarfs.
01:42
Their personalities are communicated very visually,
01:45
and we see it in scenes where the animals provide visual humor
01:49
But Walt Disney thought that this style couldn’t keep
01:52
an audience’s attention going for a whole 90 minutes.
01:55
So he set out to create a new kind of animation.
01:57
In order to create the illusion of depth, Disney pioneered
02:01
a new, multiplane camera technique.
02:03
Rather than photographing one drawing, artists layered multiple sheets of drawings
02:08
and moved the camera through them.
02:10
Disney tested this technique in the Oscar-winning short “The Old Mill,”
02:14
and used it in Snow White to make the art more realistic
02:17
and more broadly appealing.
02:19
Aside from the dwarfs and animals, the characters in Snow White
02:22
look much more human than anything
02:24
Disney had produced up until this point.
02:27
Artists brought in live models to sketch,
02:29
another totally new concept in the animation world.
02:32
On the down side, this increased realism came with
02:34
less expressive facial features.
02:36
Snow White herself has fairly indistinct, blurry features,
02:40
presumably because Disney was trying to move away
02:42
from the cartoony faces they were known for.
02:45
The effects of this style decision can be traced
02:48
through almost every Disney film to date.
02:50
Disney has gotten criticism for having very diverse male faces,
02:54
but essentially one princess face.
02:57
In Snow White, it’s worth noting that the prince
02:59
also has this inoffensive, pretty face.
03:02
But the dwarfs don’t.
03:03
They’re expressive, with varying faces.
03:06
Over time, the range of looks has increased
03:08
for male Disney characters.
03:10
But unfortunately for the female characters,
03:12
beauty is still prioritized over expressiveness.
03:21
Walt Disney shaped the future of animation forever
03:24
when he decided to make his first film about a princess.
03:27
When we think Disney now, we immediately think Princess.
03:31
But Snow White, the original Disney Princess
03:33
has been largely forgotten about.
03:35
Snow White is kind, gentle, and motherly.
03:39
She sings, and animals flock to her.
03:41
We see these traits in all three original princesses,
03:45
Snow White, Cinderella and Aurora.
03:47
But the later two are more nuanced, interesting,
03:50
and likable than Snow White —
03:51
they have more personality, and that’s because they benefited from
03:54
what Disney learned from the Snow White experiment.
03:58
Disney himself has commented that looking back
04:00
they “weren’t ready” to develop a leading lady who could
04:03
sustain our interest for the length of a whole feature.
04:06
Cinderella is basically Snow White 2.0, new and improved.
04:11
Her personality is pretty much the same,
04:13
but we get to spend more time with her.
04:15
So we come to a clearer understanding of her motivations.
04:18
We know Snow White’s story because we’re told about it,
04:22
but we don’t really see much of it.
04:23
She doesn’t interact with the Evil Queen at all
04:25
until she eats the poison apple.
04:27
And none of her relationships with the dwarfs or animals
04:30
are ever made very specific.
04:32
“Why, Grumpy.
04:35
You do care.”
04:39
When the Huntsman can’t bring himself to kill her
04:42
because she’s so pure and innocent,
04:44
we mostly have to take his word for it,
04:47
because we haven’t seen why she’s worthy of his mercy.
04:50
We witness Cinderella as kind,
04:52
“Cinderelly likes you, too.
04:54
She’s nice, very nice.
04:56
That’s better.”
04:57
but Snow White’s kindness is general and vague,
05:00
so it comes off as a little shallow and boring.
05:03
Disney didn’t make Cinderella until 1950 —
05:05
that’s 13 years after Snow White.
05:08
And the third princess movie, Sleeping Beauty,
05:10
was 9 years after that — 1959.
05:13
Disney himself didn’t really care about
05:14
continuing to make princess movies
05:16
He was interested in pushing his creative limits.
05:19
He considered his biggest visual achievement to be Pinocchio,
05:23
and his passion project was the experimental
05:25
and largely unsuccessful Fantasia.
05:28
So Disney didn’t make princess movies with any frequency until 1989,
05:33
with the release of The Little Mermaid.
05:35
The Little Mermaid marked the beginning
05:37
of the “Disney Renaissance.”
05:39
In this era the Disney brand was cemented,
05:42
and the princess story was cemented with it.
05:44
The princesses from then on become even stronger,
05:47
more specific and well-developed:
05:49
Ariel is curious and adventurous,
05:52
Belle is intellectual and stubborn,
05:54
And later, post-Disney Renaissance, in 2009,
05:56
Tiana is industrious and persevering.
06:00
But everything that followed improved on the
06:02
original princess model we got in Snow White.
06:05
So everything we think of as quintessential Disney now
06:08
is because the company made the choice
06:10
to return to Snow White’s style of storytelling,
06:13
and that wasn’t a given for many years.
06:20
Disney movies also tend to be known for their romance
06:23
between the princess and the handsome prince charming.
06:26
This is part of Snow White, but it’s by no means
06:29
the focus of the story.
06:30
The prince’s personality is far less developed
06:33
even than Snow White’s,
06:34
and he gets way less time with our heroine than the dwarfs.
06:37
He has very few lines and he doesn’t even get a name.
06:45
Snow White meets him at the very beginning of the movie,
06:47
and doesn’t mention him again until about an hour into the film.
06:51
He’s a plot device.
06:53
The same can be said of Disney’s next princess movie, Cinderella,
06:56
where the prince is also nameless, and used only
06:59
to give Cinderella the just ending she deserves.
07:01
But Disney has said,
07:03
“They wanted to sell Snow White as a romance,
07:06
because it had a prince and a princess in it.
07:08
I said, ‘I believe in selling a thing for what it is.
07:11
This has got dwarfs and a girl named Snow White in it,
07:14
and the title is going to be Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.’
07:17
So that’s the way it was billed and that’s the way
07:19
it was sold.”
07:20
The romantic plot doesn’t really become important
07:23
until Sleeping Beauty in 1959.
07:26
Starting with Aurora and Prince Philip, the romance
07:28
becomes the focus,
07:30
and the prince actually gets a personality.
07:33
This carried through the Disney Renaissance.
07:35
The most recent Disney movies, like Frozen,
07:38
and especially Zootopia and Moana,
07:40
are taking a step back from romantic plots.
07:43
What was originally something audiences desired
07:46
is now seen as tired and clichéd.
07:49
People want to see independent heroines.
07:51
It’s interesting to consider that this mentality aligns
07:54
with Walt Disney’s original vision —
07:56
he didn’t see Snow White as a romance,
07:58
even when everyone else wanted to.
08:05
Snow White also gave birth to the classic Disney villain.
08:08
The Evil Queen is Snow White’s stepmother,
08:11
and this idea of the “evil stepmother” is
08:13
a huge part of the Disney myth.
08:15
Funnily enough, there’s actually not an evil stepmother
08:18
in very many Disney movies.
08:20
Cinderella has one, and so does Rapunzel arguably
08:23
in the much later Tangled, but that’s pretty much it.
08:26
The only other Disney movie that has an evil stepmother is Enchanted,
08:30
which is a self-aware parody of Disney conventions.
08:33
So this aspect of Snow White has managed to
08:35
become thought of as a “Disney convention”
08:38
and has had a lasting effect on pop culture,
08:41
even though it wasn’t actually repeated in most future Disney.
08:44
That said, even if most classic Disney villains aren’t stepparents,
08:48
they do incorporate key aspects of the evil queen.
08:52
She’s jealous and vain, obsessed with her own beauty.
08:56
And although she’s supposed to be “fairest in the land”
08:59
besides our princess, she’s pretty severe-looking.
09:02
Not to mention, most of her screen-time is spent
09:04
disguised as a hideous old woman.
09:06
This uncanny combo of glamour and ugliness
09:10
can be seen in many Disney villains.
09:12
They tend to possess a heightened, drag-queen-esque femininity,
09:16
and facial features that might be objectively pretty,
09:19
but are considered a little unsettling
09:20
because they’re so exaggerated.
09:23
As a result, the villain’s beauty serves as a foil for
09:26
the innocent beauty of the heroine.
09:29
Of course, the Evil Queen isn’t the visual opposite of Snow White,
09:32
the way a hulking male ogre might be.
09:34
But her vanity and artificial glamour emphasize
09:38
Snow White’s natural, effortless beauty.
09:41
The curated “look” makes us subconsciously aware
09:43
that she’s covering up the evil inside her.
09:46
And that concealed evil is scarier than an ugly monster,
09:50
which is why this archetype is so successful.
09:57
The lovable sidekick is the secret sauce to every Disney movie,
10:00
probably every animated movie,
10:02
and this trend was also started by Snow White,
10:05
whose sidekicks are arguably more successful
10:08
than the film itself.
10:10
However little attention Snow White as a princess might get,
10:13
everyone still loves the seven dwarfs.
10:15
They represent Disney’s roots —
10:17
the Mickey Mouse sensibility of very visual,
10:20
wacky, over-the-top characters.
10:22
And that spirit that comes from Disney’s very first cartoons
10:26
shows in the sidekicks in almost every Disney movie that followed.
10:30
No matter how painterly and beautiful the movies become,
10:33
there’s always a sidekick to remind us that
10:36
all of this started with a fun and personable mouse.
10:42
And of course, Disney is known for their musical numbers,
10:45
a tradition that started with Snow White.
10:48
“Hi Ho,”
10:51
“Whistle While You Work,”
10:56
“Someday My Prince Will Come”
11:05
all became standards of the time.
11:07
Snow White introduced the idea that a song
11:10
from an animated movie could be a hit,
11:12
paving the way for global phenomenons
11:15
like Frozen’s “Let it Go.”
11:20
But Snow White actually has a lot more songs
11:22
than we tend to remember.
11:24
A lot of people might be able to name every song
11:26
in Beauty and the Beast or The Little Mermaid,
11:29
but most of Snow White’s songs have been forgotten.
11:32
A number are sung in that very stylized, 1930s soprano voice,
11:39
so they haven’t aged well given our current pop sensibilities.
11:43
But even at the time of release, those three songs
11:46
“Hi Ho,” “Whistle While You Work” and
11:47
“Someday My Prince Will Come”
11:49
stood apart from the rest.
11:51
So clearly after Snow White, Disney realized that
11:54
they could make every song in the movie stand on its own.
11:58
“In the most delightful way.”
12:02
They learned from the three hits of Snow White that
12:04
there are two key reasons why Disney songs last.
12:07
In the case of “Hi Ho” or “Whistle While You Work,”
12:10
the appeal came from the catchy hook.
12:12
And this led to favorites like:
12:14
“Hakuna Matata,”
12:15
“Be our guest, be our guest, be our guest.”
12:16
“Mister I’ll make a man out of you.”
12:25
“Under the sea.”
12:30
Meanwhile, “Someday My Prince Will Come” is
12:35
a heartfelt expression of Snow White’s desire.
12:38
So if a song doesn’t rely on a memorable hook,
12:41
it can get its power by relating to something
12:44
central about the conflict or character’s inner world.
12:47
This is why the “I want” song has become such a staple
12:50
in many Disney movies.
12:52
“I wanna be where the people are.”
12:58
“I just can’t wait to be king.”
13:04
“Will my reflection show who I am inside?”
13:11
In later movies, almost all of the songs fit into
13:14
one of these two categories,
13:16
which explains why they remain so hummable decades later.
13:20
All in all, Snow White doesn’t have the most original plot,
13:23
or the most interesting characters.
13:25
Few people probably rank it as their favorite Disney movie.
13:28
But without Snow White, we wouldn’t have
13:30
our other Disney favorites,
13:32
and the world of animation might be entirely different.
13:35
So Snow White changed the course of film history
13:38
in a very real and tangible way,
13:41
and its fingerprints can be seen on every Disney movie since.
13:46
“I don’t know what I had or what would happen or anything
13:54
we had the family fortune, we had everything
13:56
all wrapped up in Snow White.”
13:58
It’s Debra.
13:59
And Susannah.
14:00
You’re watching ScreenPrism.
14:01
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14:03
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14:06
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14:09
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This post was previously published on Youtube.
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