This is also one of the first two Disney animated films I have seen (the other is "Peter Pan"), and I didn't expect this to be such an early work at the time. Although the film did not fully reproduce the original work like the "Snow White" animation broadcast by CCTV that year (probably an animated version produced by GoodTimes), this kind of plot is exactly the same as the small painting I saw back then. The plot of the book matches, so I like the film more than I like it.
The picture of this film retains strong hand-painted traces, even if it is only compared with a few later Disney works, if you look at a static picture, it is almost no different from an art painting. I believe people who love hand-painted animation will like this feature. of. Compared with later works, this film feels that there are more places to "show off creativity", but if you watch more of Disney's early works, you can still get used to this.
I remember that I didn't see the end, but only saw the stepmother falling off the cliff. Now that I look back and watch it all over again, it's the end of my wish. But what surprised me was that I didn't expect Disney to play sensationalism in the end, and I didn't feel that way when I was reading books and listening to tapes. Alas, I can't afford this, and I have no reason to score a low score for this film. Plus, for the sake of the film's significance in the history of animation...
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