Disney Creative Group Packaging Design Manager with DPEP Merchandise, Movie Goer, Sports Freak & Pop Culture Nerd. Tweets not associated w/ the Disney Co.
WALL-E (2008) opens with nearly forty minutes of visual storytelling and barely any dialogue, yet somehow makes a lonely little trash compactor feel more human than most live-action protagonists. Pixar was operating on another level with this one.
The Golden Girls, but with today’s hair and styling.
From big 80s perms to sleek, fresh looks, Blanche is out here serving main character energy, Rose looks like your cool aunt who does Pilates, and Sophia and Dorothy still delivering one liners with the best of them.
Do you think the comedy would still hit the same today?
Moana saving Te Kā and restoring Te Fiti in Moana (2016) is still one of Disney’s most beautiful animated sequences. Moana realizing the monster was never meant to be destroyed in the first place. Pure emotional payoff.
Two households, both alike in dignity,
In fair Verona, where we lay our scene,
From ancient grudge break to new mutiny,
Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean.
It has been over 7,000 days since the Yeti on Expedition Everest stopped working and went to B mode. And it’s such a shame because this looks so good. 🏔️
This is some test footage prior to its opening in April of 2006.
The pilot of Lost (2004–2010) is one of those episodes that instantly makes you realize television just changed. The scale and atmosphere were so massive it felt closer to a blockbuster movie than a weekly series premiere.
A LITTLE PRINCESS was released 31 years ago today.
Though not a major box office success, the film later gained a strong reputation for its storytelling & visual beauty, with many considering it one of the most overlooked family films of the 90s.
Martin Short gave a very open, honest interview with CBS this morning that I believe you can access on Twitter. My biggest takeaway: Short has lived one hell of a life. He’s seen everything & he’s still smiling. Short’s attitude on life is an inspiration. Never retire please.
In 1990, Disney released a TV show celebrating Disneyland’s 35th anniversary. It’s the most unhinged thing they’ve ever produced. It was led by famed director John Landis and features the most insane Jungle Cruise ever. Could you imagine this being made today?!? Have you seen it?