Toon Talk: Mickey Mouse in Living Color Volume 2 DVD - May 3, 2004

Toon Talk: Mickey Mouse in Living Color Volume 2 DVD
Page 3 of 3


Orphan's Benefit
(c) Disney

Behind the Shorts - Tidbits and Trivia:
  • Several of the shorts included on Volume Two are preceded by Maltin introductions that help modern audiences put such dated concepts as dialect humor and now questionable material into historical perspective.
  • Mickey’s updated look (supervised by animator Fred Moore), including a flesh-colored face and round eyes with pupils, was first done for 1940’s Fantasia, but audiences got their first look at the new mouse a year earlier in The Pointer.
  • The Sorcerer’s Apprentice (based on the music by Paul Dukas) was originally conceived as a stand-alone short by Walt and composer Leopold Stokowski, but when it proved to costly, it was combined with other segments to become Fantasia. It was also the only segment of the original film to appear in the sequel, Fantasia 2000.
  • The Little Whirlwind (1941) was the last time Mickey wore his famous red-buttoned shorts on the big screen until 1995’s Runaway Brain. This was also the first time Mickey’s ears were given a shaded, concave appearance, a look that (thankfully) didn’t last long.
  • The Nifty Nineties (1941) included an actual period song (“Father Dear Father�?) and caricatures of famous Disney animators Ward Kimball and Fred Moore.
  • 1941’s Orphan’s Benefit (featuring Donald’s classic attempts at reciting “Little Boy Blue�?) is actually a remake of the 1934 black and white short of the same name.
  • Mickey’s Birthday Party (1942) was re-released for Mickey’s 25th anniversary in 1953.
  • New animation with Ludwig Von Drake was created to replace the Edgar Bergen footage in Mickey and the Beanstalk when the short aired on the Disney television program in the 1960s. It’s a shame that that version was not included on this set.
  • Mickey’s Delayed Date (1947) was the first Mickey short with production credits.
  • 1951’s Plutopia, which actually opens as a Pluto short, is officially classified as a “Mickey and Pluto short�?, and appears on both of their filmographies.
  • MIA, for better or worse: Mickey Mouse Disco, a 1980 short that consisted of existing footage of Mickey and the gang, set to the title track of the infamous record album of the same name.
  • Mickey’s Christmas Carol was originally released in a double bill with a reissue of The Rescuers in 1983. Besides the leading players (which also included Daisy Duck, Pegleg Pete and a silent Minnie Mouse), various characters from Three Little Pigs, The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad and Robin Hood can be seen in the background. This was the first Mickey short to credit the voice talent.
  • The Prince and the Pauper debuted with The Rescuers Down Under in 1990. In a grand Disney tradition, it begins with a storybook, which opens up to tell the tale.
  • In Runaway Brain, Toy Story 2’s Kelsey Grammer voiced Dr. Frankenollie, named after famed Disney animators Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnson. The short, which has become a cult favorite for its wild take on Mickey, was originally released in 1995 with A Kid in King Arthur’s Court.
  • The Pointer, Mickey and the Seal, Mickey’s Christmas Carol and Runaway Brain were all nominated for the Best Animated Short Academy Award.

Easter Egg Hunt:

There are at least two Easter Eggs (‘hidden’ DVD extras) found on disc one of this collection:

  • From the main menu, highlight the cane underneath Mickey’s suitcase to see extremely rare footage of Walt voicing Mickey, along with Billy Bletcher as Pete, for Mr. Mouse Takes a Trip.
  • From the bonus feature menu, highlight the musical note to the right to see another rarity: a promotional film produced for the Standard Oil Company titled Standard Parade for 1939. Similar to the Parade of the Award Nominees short seen on Volume One, this short features the Fab Five, along with the Seven Dwarfs, the Three Little Pigs, the Big Bad Wolf and Toby Tortoise touting an upcoming advertising agreement between the oil company and the Disney Studios … who knew that corporate sponsorship went back so far?
The Toon Talk Top 10 - Mouse Works:

Through the years, Mickey has amassed quite the resume of interesting jobs, both in film and on television:

  1. Steamboat captain (Steamboat Willie, 1928).
  2. Bandleader (The Band Concert, 1935)/Orchestra conductor (Symphony Hour, 1942).
  3. Clock cleaner (Clock Cleaners, 1937).
  4. Ghost-buster (Lonesome Ghosts, 1937).
  5. Taylor (Brave Little Taylor, 1938).
  6. Sorcerer’s apprentice (Fantasia, 1940).
  7. Farmer (Fun and Fancy Free, 1947).
  8. Club founder (The Mickey Mouse Club, 1955-1959).
  9. Counting house clerk (Mickey’s Christmas Carol, 1983).
  10. Nightclub owner and emcee (House of Mouse, 2001- 2002).

Coming Soon in Toon Talk:

  • Parts 2 through 4 of the long awaited ‘third wave’ of Walt Disney Treasures DVDs, available May 18th: The Chronological Donald Volume 1 (35 shorts from 1934 to 1941), Tomorrowland: Disney in Space and Beyond (six nostalgic episodes featuring vintage Ward Kimball animation and Walt’s introduction of EPCOT) and, last but certainly not least, Walt Disney: On the Frontlines, a collection of rarely seen shorts from the infamous ‘war years’, including the Oscar-winning Der Fuehrer’s Face and the full-length feature Victory Through Air Power.
  • Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy and Cameron Diaz are joined by John Cleese, Julie Andrews and Antonio Banderas as Puss in Boots in DreamWorks’ Shrek 2, the sequel to the blockbuster Oscar-winner, opening May 21st.
  • Return for another trip Around the World in 80 Days, the latest re-telling of the Jules Verne classic, starring Ella Enchanted’s Steve Coogan, Shanghai Knights’ Jackie Chan and Iris’ Jim Broadbent, June 16th.

And Coming Soon from Buena Vista Home Video:

  • May 11th: Jackie Chan wrote, directed and stars in Dragon Lord, while Anna Faris and Charlie Sheen spoof such contemporary horror classics as The Ring and Signs in Scary Movie 3.
  • Also available May 18th, the special edition two disc DVD release of this year’s hockey crowd-pleaser Miracle, starring Disney Legend Kurt Russell.
  • June 1st: From the vaults, such Disney favorites as Candleshoe (starring Jodie Foster and David Niven), A Far Off Place (Reese Witherspoon and Maximilian Schell), Flight of the Navigator (Joey Cramer and Sarah Jessica Parker), the original Freaky Friday (Jodie Foster and Barbara Harris) and the classic Sherman Brothers musical The Happiest Millionaire (Fred MacMurray, Tommy Steele, Leslie Ann Warren, John Davidson, Greer Garson and Geraldine Page), as well as a Freaky Friday two-pack DVD set (including both the original and the remake) and the Herbie the Love Bug Collection, a five disc set including the Love Bug Special Edition and it’s three theatrical sequels. Also available: Ernest Goes to School (Jim Varney), A Saintly Switch (Vivica A. Fox), Power Rangers: Dinothunder and special edition sets for Miramax’s Flirting with Disaster (Ben Stiller), Cop Land (Sylvester Stallone) and the contemporary classic Trainspotting (Ewan McGregor).

Discuss It

Related Links

-- Kirby C. Holt
-- Logo by
William C Searcy, Magic Bear Graphics

Kirby is a lifelong Disney fan and film buff. He is also an avid list maker and chronic ellipsis user ...

Took Talk: Disney Film & Video Reviews by Kirby C. Holt is posted whenever there's something new to review.

The opinions expressed by our Kirby C. Holt, and all of our columnists, do not necessarily represent the feelings of LaughingPlace.com or any of its employees or advertisers. All speculation and rumors about the future plans of the Walt Disney Company are just that - speculation and rumors - and should be treated as such.

-- Posted May 2, 2004

Next >