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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=94TT0809>
<title>
Jun. 20, 1994: Cinema:The Mouse Roars
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Jun. 20, 1994 The War on Welfare Mothers
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ARTS & MEDIA/CINEMA, Page 58
The Mouse Roars
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Like Disney's other recent cartoon features, The Lion King
is winning and gorgeous; like Disney's animated classics, it
also touches primal emotions
</p>
<p>By Richard Corliss--Reported by Jeffrey Ressner/Los Angeles
</p>
<p> The modern Disney cartoon feature is an adventure of the
spirit--a guided tour through eruptive emotions. The Little
Mermaid plunged briskly into the growing pains of a creature
that felt as isolated from the shimmering haut monde as any
Afghan peasant or Harlem street kid. Beauty and the Beast took
a stroll in the woods with a fellow who needed lessons in the
civilizing power of love. The Aladdin carpet ride revealed a
whole grownup world of pleasures and perils to a young thief who
started out in search of only a quick spin with a pretty
princess.
</p>
<p> Out of these excursions came show-business magic. Disney's
handsome fantasies satisfied as master lessons in the
storytelling craft. They rekindled the art and emotion of the
studio's classic animation style; they showed Broadway what it
had forgotten about integrating popular music into a potent
story; and they reassembled the fragmented movie audience--these are pictures all races and ages enjoy. Fifty years from
now they will probably be enthralling the grandchildren of kids
who thrill to Dumbo and other Disney relics today.
</p>
<p> In the process they have made enough money to please even
Scrooge McDuck. Everybody from Disney renegades to Steven
Spielberg tries making cartoon epics; Disney alone consistently
succeeds. The studio, which issued (or reissued) only 12 of the
42 animated features that were released in the past five years,
has grabbed 83% of the North American box-office take for the
genre. (Aladdin has earned $1 billion from box-office income,
video sales and such ancillary baubles as Princess Jasmine
dresses and Genie cookie jars.)
</p>
<p> At heart, though, Aladdin and its kin were the merest,
dearest emotional travelogues. They alighted on a dream here,
a resentment there; they poked at a feeling until it sang a
perky or rhapsodic Alan Menken tune. Nothing was lacking in
these terrific movies, but something was missing: primal
anguish, the kind that made children wet the seats of movie
palaces more than a half-century ago as they watched Snow White
succumb to the poison apple or Bambi's mother die from a
hunter's shotgun blast. Disney cartoons were often the first
films kids saw and the first that forced them to confront the
loss of home, parent, life. These were horror movies with songs,
Greek tragedies with a cute chorus. They offered shock therapy
to four-year-olds, and that elemental jolt could last forever.
</p>
<p> Get out the Pampers, Mom. Get ready to explain to the kids
why a good father should die violently and why a child should
have to witness the death. And while you're at it, prepare to
be awed at the cunning of a G-rated medium that brings to
bright life emotions that can be at once convulsive, cathartic
and loads of fun. In The Lion King, premiering in New York City
and Los Angeles this week and opening around the U.S. on June
24, primal Disney returns with a growl.
</p>
<p> The studio's 32nd animated feature tells of a lion cub who
loses his birthright to an evil relative before regaining both
his pride and his, er, pride. The film has jolly moments,
delicious comic characters and five songs (by Elton John and Tim
Rice), all so simple and infectious that you could immediately
commit them to memory even if you weren't destined to hear them
on tie-in commercials this summer for Burger King, Nestle,
Kodak and General Mills. And yes, there's the hilariously
extravagant production number that climaxes with whirlwind
editing and a stupendous pyramid of pelts. With all this, The
Lion King is almost guaranteed to be one of the huge hits of
this bustling movie season.
</p>
<p> Directed by Roger Allers and Rob Minkoff, The Lion King is
a film of firsts for the studio. "It is our first cartoon
feature not based on a fable or a literary work," says Disney
movie boss Jeffrey Katzenberg, who has overseen the animation
unit since he joined the mouse factory in 1984. "It's the first
where there's no human character or human influence. Our
animators went back on all fours, and they'll tell you it's 10
times harder to make an animal talk and be expressive than it
is to do that with a human." Nor is it easy to study a 500-lb.
lion close up, as the directors and animators did ("The handlers
tell you not to wear cologne," says Minkoff, "and not to dress
like a zebra"). But the real challenge was to relate a moral
tale of aristocratic dignity, and to do this in a pop-cultural
era when feel-good facetiousness reigns. Comedy is easy these
days; majesty is hard.
</p>
<p> Not since Bambi has so much been at stake in a Disney
tale. There are kingdoms to be sundered, deaths to be atoned
for. The father of a prince is killed, and his conniving uncle
seizes the throne; driven from the kingdom, the lad leads a
carefree life until the father's ghost instructs him to seek
honorable revenge. Put it another way: a boy leaves home,
escapes responsibility with some genially irresponsible friends,
then returns to face society's obligations. The Lion King is a
mix of two masterpieces cribbed for cartoons and brought
ferociously up to date. On the grasslands of Africa, Huck Finn
meets Hamlet.
</p>
<p> The hero is Simba (voiced as a child by Home Improvement's
Jonathan Taylor Thomas and as an adult by Matthew Broderick).
This cub is the headstrong son of lion king Mufasa (James Earl
Jones) and nephew of the green-eyed Scar (Jeremy Irons), who
with oleaginous irony hides his intentions to kill Mufasa and
Simba and become a low-down, schemin', lyin' king. After Scar
engineers Mufasa's downfall in a wildebeest stampede, Simba
slinks into exile and away from duty, until at the urging of his
father's spirit and of his friend Nala (Moira Kelly), the young
lion returns home to challenge Scar and renew the circle of
dynastic life.
</p>
<p> Every Disney cartoon drama is laced with intoxicating
comedy, with harlequins and hellcats. From Pinocchio on, the
villain makes use of a sly sense of humor and a few goofy
abettors. Scar, whom Irons plays with wicked precision as the
purring offspring of Iago and Cruella De Vil, hires a pack of
hyenas as his goons: clever Shenzi (Whoopi Goldberg), giddy
Banzai (Cheech Marin) and idiotic Ed (Jim Cummings), who says
little but is happy to chew voraciously on his own leg. The
hero's helpers, who save Simba in the desert and teach him their
live-for-today philosophy, Hakuna matata--Swahili for "What,
me worry?"--are Timon (Nathan Lane), a streetwitty meerkat,
and the lumbering wart-hog Pumbaa (Ernie Sabella). They chew
beetles.
</p>
<p> Lane and Sabella, veterans of the Guys and Dolls revival
on Broadway, make up in dynamite comic camaraderie what they
may lack in marquee value. "I have no idea if they considered
major motion-picture stars for our parts," says Lane pensively.
"Do you suppose they were thinking of the Menendez brothers?"
Lane loved the work, which involved mainly "acting silly for
several hours and trying to make the directors laugh." Irons
also enjoyed the spontaneity of the process. In animation, words
come before pictures, so improvising actors help develop
characters and dialogue. "It's extraordinary," Irons says. "It's
as though the animators, the writers and the performers are all
creating at the same moment."
</p>
<p> The directors and animators, though, create for years.
That takes teamwork, discipline and sustained passion. "The
creative process is usually thought to be an individual
inspiration," says Michael Eisner, who runs the Disney empire.
"And that's true if you're sitting on Walden Pond writing an
essay or a poem or short story. But this is a different kind of
creative form, even more so than a regular movie. I can't point
to any one person and say, `If it were not for him, we wouldn't
have this movie.' But I can point to a series of people." Even
the stars and directors are treated differently in a Disney
animated feature, having traded huge salaries and profit
participation for a chance to create dazzling popular art.
</p>
<p> Eisner might have cited Katzenberg as the one man--the
modern Walt, who does not create the story or draw the pictures
but whose imprint is indelible in a million questions and
suggestions, in his noodging and kibitzing, in refusing to be
quickly pleased. Yet Katzenberg denies authorial status. "This
is not me having a humility attack," he says. "It's just that
the characterization isn't true. If you want, you can call me
the coach. When Pat Riley coaches a basketball team, they do
pretty good. Yet the absolute reality is that Riley did not put
one ball through one net for the Knicks this entire year."
</p>
<p> The Knicks reference is revealing. Katzenberg grew up in
Manhattan, and in the Disney cartoons he has brought one of its
institutions west. To state it bluntly: Broadway died and went
to Disney. Pop went sour, and Disney smartly sweetened it. With
Menken and lyricist Howard Ashman importing their Broadway savvy
for The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast (which
completed the circle by opening as a Broadway show this spring),
Disney reopened the franchise that Walt founded with Snow
White's dreamy Some Day My Prince Will Come. Last year the
Menken-Rice A Whole New World from Aladdin won the Oscar for
best song--the third time in four years that a Disney cartoon
theme has won the award.
</p>
<p> In The Lion King, Rice and John follow the Menken-Ashman
formula. Music dramatizes moods (the first-act "I Want" song,
when the young protagonist proclaims his or her dreams, is
Simba's bouncy, Michael Jacksonish I Just Can't Wait to Be King)
and prods the action (Hakuna Matata, which carries Simba from
boyhood to manhood). The album just couldn't wait to be a hit.
Two weeks before the movie opens nationwide, the soundtrack is
already No. 13 on Billboard's pop-music chart.
</p>
<p> Music can break hearts and make the Top 40. But a
cartoon's narrative imagination is first and finally in the
images. Animation is a supple form; it can be as free as free
verse, as fanciful as a Bosch landscape. The Lion King's bold
palette (blinding yellows and blooming greens to portray the
savannah and high grass) cues subtle or seismic shifts in tone
and character. Thanks to the devotion of nearly 400 artists,
each shot registers its beauty and simplicity.
</p>
<p> Seeming simplicity, that is. "When we do a film well,"
says Walt's nephew, company vice chairman Roy Disney, "we make
it look easy, like a good golf swing. People say, `I can do
that.'"
</p>
<p> Someday somebody will; Disney's way is not the only way.
Says Katzenberg: "On this planet today is another Walt Disney,
waiting for that moment when his or her genius is going to
produce something great, and competitive to us."
</p>
<p> Not as long as Disney monopolizes cartoon royalty with the
likes of Simba and his ingratiating menagerie. In the world of
feature cartoons, everybody else is a mere cat. Disney is the
lion king.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>