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Roy Disney Talks SONG OF THE SOUTH
By Rich Drees
April 8, 2007- A potential DVD release for the controversial
1946 Disney film Song Of The South got a voice of support
last night from Roy E. Disney, nephew of Walt Disney.
Speaking at the 16th Annual Philadelphia Film Festival, where he was
receiving the fest’s Inspiration Award, Disney stated that a home
video release of the film is overdue.
“I’ve got a bunch of cohorts working with me to convince the powers
that be that it’s the smart thing to do,” Disney told the crowd at
Philadelphia’s Prince Music Theatre.
Disney’s remarks comes on the heels of a statement made by current
Disney President and CEO Bob Iger at the company’s annual
shareholder’s meeting last month in New York City where he stated
that the company was reviewing the film for a possible release.
Song Of The South
has never seen an unofficial home video release in the United
States, despite the fact that it was one of Disney’s first films to
employ live action actors. Its song “Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah” won an
Academy Award for Best Original Song while star James Baskett was
awarded an honorary Oscar for his work as the kindly Uncle Remus.
The film has come under criticism for its alleged racist treatment
of Southern plantation African-Americans, though many of these
criticisms erroneously place the film’s setting pre-Civil War
instead of its actual post-Civil War, Reconstruction era. Although
Disney announced in a 1970 Variety article that they were
“retiring” the movie, it did receive additional theatrical
re-releases in 1972, 1981 and 1986. Currently, illegal bootlegs of a
1980s Japanese laserdisc release of the film converted to DVD
currently in circulation remain the only way that people can see the
film.
Disney’s father Roy O. Disney co-founded Disney Studios with his
more famous brother Walt. Roy E. Disney worked at the studio for
numerous years as an editor and producer and oversaw the studio’s
resurgence in animated feature films in the 1980s through the
release of such films as The Lion King and Aladdin.
“[Song Of The South] is a wonderful film that deserves to be
back out in the public,” stated Disney. “All it needs is context.
Some of that animation is stunning, even by today’s standards.” |