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Krystal 2022-09-11 08:40:41
Fantasia 2000 Fantasia
Undoubtedly, a feast of sight and hearing, whether for adults or children. Right, this is what I call art.
1. Beethoven: Symphony No. 5 (Destiny)
Surreal picture, geometrical light and shadow changes, opening.
2. Lespici: The
whale of Pines of Rome , freed from the shackles of reality, free and... -
Paris 2022-11-02 11:04:23
Fantasy Rhapsody - Fantasia 2000
By reading novels with fluent writing, we can rely on the author's description to create our own imagination of the novel's environment, background and characters.
Movies visualize these words, and the director uses his own interpretation of the words to visualize the characters, stories, and...
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Steve Martin: You know what's amazing is that many of these musicians are playing for the very first time, thanks to "Steve Martin's Two-week Master Musician Home-Study Course". More about that later. Hello and welcome to Fantasia 2000. It's been more than sixty years since Walt Disney and his artists teamed with maestro Leopold Stokowski to create a film they titled "The Concert Feature". I think we're all glad they changed the name to "Fantasia". You know, "Fantasia" was meant to be a perpetual work in progress. Every time you went to see it, you'd experience some new pieces, along with some old familiar favorites. But that idea fell by the wayside until now. So let me turn things over to the great Itzhak Perlman, who, I have just been informed, plays the violin. Well, so do I, big deal. Could I have my violin, please?
[is handed a violin]
Steve Martin: Ahh, thank you. All right, boys, let's...
[bow slips from his hands]
Steve Martin: Oh! Oh, sorry. Could I have another stick thingy, please? Oh, and camera back on me. Camera back on me. Ca... Am I done?
Itzhak Perlman: [introducing Pines of Rome] When you hear a title like "Pines of Rome", you may think of tree-lined streets and romantic ruins. But when the Disney animators heard this music, they thought of something completely different. Here is the Chicago Symphony Orchestra conducted by maestro James Levine, performing Ottorino Respighi's "Pines of Rome."
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James Earl Jones: [introducing the Carnival of the Animals] These drawing boards have been the birthplace of some of the most beloved animal characters of all time. So it's no surprise that they choose for our next segment, "The Carnival of the Animals" by Camille Saint-Saëns. Here the sensitive strains of impressionistic music combine with the subtle artistry of the animator to finally answer that age old question: "What is man's relationship to nature?"
[is handed a piece of paper]
James Earl Jones: Oh, sorry... That age old question: "What would happen if you gave a yo-yo to a flock of flamingos?"
[turns to look off-camera]
James Earl Jones: Who wrote this?