Movie news on your iPhone today!
Advertisement
Sign in
Username   Password         Forgot password?
Wanna join? Sign up
Find movies you'll love
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
  • 0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Rate this movie.

Rent it, watch it, find it

Advertisement
Synopsis
It was called "Disney's Folly." Who on earth would want to sit still for 90 minutes to watch an animated cartoon? And why pick a well-worn Grimm's Fairy Tale that every schoolkid knows? But Walt Disney seemed to thrive on projects which a lesser man might have written off as "stupid" or "impossible". Investing three years, $1,500,000, and the combined talents of 570 artists into Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Disney produced a film that was not only acknowledged a classic from the outset, but also earned 8,500,000 depression-era dollars in gross rentals. Bypassing early temptations to transform the heroine Snow White into a plump Betty Boop type or a woebegone ZaSu Pitts lookalike, the Disney staffers wisely made radical differentiations between the "straight" and "funny" characters in the story. Thus, Snow White and Prince Charming moved and were drawn realistically, while the Seven Dwarfs were rendered in the rounded, caricatured manner of Disney's short-subject characters. In this way, the serious elements of the story could be propelled forward in a believable enough manner to grab the adult viewers, while the dwarfs provided enough comic and musical hijinks to keep the kids happy. It is a tribute to the genius of the Disney formula that the dramatic and comic elements were strong enough to please both demographic groups. Like any showman, Disney knew the value of genuine horror in maintaining audience interest: accordingly, the Wicked Queen, whose jealousy of Snow White's beauty motivates the story, is a thoroughly fearsome creature even before she transforms herself into an ancient crone. Best of all, Snow White clicks in the three areas in which Disney had always proven superiority over his rivals: Solid story values (any sequence that threatened to slow down the plotline was ruthlessly jettisoned, no matter how much time and money had been spent), vivid etched characterizations (it would have been easier to have all the Dwarfs walk, talk and act alike: thank heaven that Disney never opted for "easy"), and instantly memorable songs (Frank Churchill, Leigh Harline, Paul J. Smith and the entire studio music department was Oscar-nominated for such standards-to-be as "Whistle While You Work" and "Some Day My Prince Will Come"). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide


Production Crew

Al Eugster Animator
Arthur Babbitt Animator
Bernard Barbutt Animator
Berny Wolf Animator
Bill Roberts Animator
Cy Young Animator
Dick Lundy Animator
Eric Larson Animator
Frank Thomas Animator
Frank Thomas Animator
Fred Moore Animator
Fred Spencer Animator
George Rowley Animator
Grim Natwick Animator
Hamilton Luske Animator
Jack Campbell Animator
James Algar Animator
James Culhane Animator
Joshua Meador Animator
Les Clark Animator
Marc Davis Animator
Marvin Woodward Animator
Milt Kahl Animator
Norman Ferguson Animator
Robert Martsch Animator
Robert Stokes Animator
Stan Quackenbush Animator
Ugo D'Orsi Animator
Vladimir Tytla Animator
Ward Kimball Animator
Wolfgang Reitherman Animator
Charles Philippi Art Director
Gustaf Tengren Art Director
Harold Miles Art Director
Hazel Sewell Art Director
Hugh Hennesy Art Director
Ken Anderson Art Director
Kendall O'Connor Art Director
McLaren Stewart Art Director
Terrell Stapp Art Director
Tom Codrick Art Director
Brice Mack Background Artist
Maurice Noble Background Artist
Maxwell Morgan Cinematographer
Frank Churchill Composer (Music Score)
Larry Morey Composer (Music Score)
Leigh Harline Composer (Music Score)
Paul J. Smith Composer (Music Score)
Albert Hunter Consultant/advisor
Joe Grant Consultant/advisor
Ben Sharpsteen Director
David Hand Director
Dick Richard Director
Dorothy Ann Blank Director
Larry Morey Director
Merrill de Maris Director
Perce Pearce Director
Richard Creedon Director
Walt Disney Director
Webb Smith Director
Wilfred Jackson Director
William Cottrell Director
Walt Disney Producer
Dick Richard Screenwriter
Dorothy Ann Blank Screenwriter
Earl Hurd Screenwriter
Merrill de Maris Screenwriter
Otto Englander Screenwriter
Richard Creedon Screenwriter
Ted Sears Screenwriter
Webb Smith Screenwriter
Brothers Grimm Short Story Author
Brothers Grimm Short Story Author
Year: 1937
Runtime: 83
Country: USA
MPAA Rating:
Category: Animated


Produced by
The Walt Disney Studios
Walt Disney Productions

Release
by RKO Radio Pictures

Awards
1937 - 10 Best Films - Film Daily
1937 - 10 Best Films - New York Times
1937 - Best Picture - New York Film Critics Circle
1938 - Best Picture - National Board of Review
1988 - U.S. National Film Registry - Library of Congress
1998 - 100 Greatest American Movies - American Film Institute
2007 - Film Presented - San Francisco International Film Festiv