5 Biggest DISNEY MOVIE MISTAKES They Don't Want You To Find Description: Films produced by the Walt Disney Corporation have inspired generations of movie-goers. Walt Disney titles have spanned almost every genre, from trademark animation like Cinderella and Snow White to modern drama and even science fiction. However, almost no film oeuvre is free of embarrassing mistakes, anachronisms and directorial blunders. Disney movies are no exception. Here are 5 goofs from some of your favorite Disney productions that you may have overlooked. Let’s begin. #5 – The Glitches of TRON Steven Lisburger’s ground-breaking 1982 science-fiction classic TRON is a visually stunning trip through the bits and bytes inside a computer. But without aid of modern special effects, the making of TRON was fraught with technical problems, resulting in “glitches” of uneven light and shadow crackling across the animated landscape. Without time to replace hundreds of hours of cartoonist artwork, Lisburger found an ingenious solution, using digitized sound effects and clever editing to make the glitches seem like a natural and spooky part of the digital world itself. Combined with the haunting score of composer Wendy Carlos, the strange and futuristic vibe of TRON captured the imagination of geeks and film lovers everywhere. But few have noticed that the weird blinking lights of the TRON universe are a happy accident. #4 – The Dirty Poster in The Rescuers In 1999, Disney recalled over 3 million VHS copies of its 1977 animated classic The Rescuers, only a few days after the film’s second release on home video. Why? Because of a controversial image that sparked a firestorm after being captured in slow-motion.As the albatross Orville carries the film’s protagonists Bernard and Miss Bianca through Manhattan, briefly visible – in non-consecutive frames – is the image of a topless dancer directly in the background. Animators quickly edited out the offending nude image, and re-released the video later the same year. But Disney would pay for the mistake, as watchful trolls would eagerly seek out hidden sexual images in later Disney features such as Aladdin and The Little Mermaid. #3 – The Impossible Physics of Up In the 2009 Pixar feature Up, elderly Carl Frederickson lifts an entire house into the air with aid of several thousand helium balloons. However, the physics of the movie’s trademark image stretched all scientific plausibility – and the producers knew it. Up co-director Pete Docter admitted that the number of balloons depicted – around 15,000 on average – is less than one one-hundredth of the actual number needed to fly Carl’s house. The actual number it would take? Around 23 million! Worse, a lift-off propelled by millions of helium orbs would not lift Carl’s abode gently off the ground, but blast it into the outer atmosphere like a rocket. Perhaps Disney was wise to fudge the science – otherwise, the movie would have been titled Way, Way Up. #2 – The Logic-Defying Portrait of Beauty and the Beast Fantasy film-makers have a tough job. Tasked with creating drama and humor within a completely imagined universe, it is understandable when small plot holes and logic errors surface in their finished product. Han Solo’s misuse of the word “parsecs” in Star Wars, for example, or Marty McFly accelerating to 88 miles per hour in Back to the Future – while somehow taking almost 10 seconds to drive the DeLorean across a parking lot. But the error of the attic portrait in Beauty and the Beast is beyond the pale. The Prince is cursed with his beastly mug at age 11, and must break the spell by age 21 to regain his handsome face. Yet in the attic, there’s a portrait of an adult, human Prince. Screwy in the least. #1 – The Racetracks of Secretariat The 2010 drama Secretariat thrilled ticket-buyers with a stirring true tale of the legendary racehorse. But few fans noticed a gigantic glaring error – the horses were racing on modern synthetic surfaces that did not exist in the movie’s setting of 1972. Imagine a football film set in 1949, in which the gridiron is made of bright shiny AstroTurf. Or a golf drama set in the early 20th century – with Bobby Jones and Walter Hagen competing at night on a high-tech, artificially lit outdoor playground in Las Vegas. Yet that is exactly the mistake made by the producers of Secretariat – who forgot that a simple dirt racing track would be cheaper to re-create…and much more accurate to the sport’s history. Background Music: Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ For copyright matters please contact us: OfficialAmerikano@hotmail.com _________________________________________________________________ Thank you so much for watching! Smash that like button for more, make sure you share the video with your friends and dont forget to subscribe! Make sure to follow me here: https://twitter.com/Top5sFinest
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Duration: 4m 59s
Rating: 1517