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Sleeping Beauty (Two-Disc Platinum Edition + Standard DVD and BD Live) [Blu-ray] Reviews
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Sleeping Beauty (Two-Disc Platinum Edition + Standard DVD and BD Live) [Blu-ray]
July 15, 2009 at 8:44 pm
Outraged about being omitted from the list of invited guests for the presentation of their newly born baby daughter, wicked sorceress Maleficent (Eleanor Audley) casts a spell on Princess Aurora (Mary Costa) that she will prick her finger on a spinning wheel before her sixteenth birthday and die. Unable to completely defeat the evil spell, the good fairy Merryweather (Barbara Luddy) alters the spell to one of everlasting sleep until awakened by true love’s first kiss. To further impede the possibility of the spell’s inevitable result, Merryweather together with her two friends Flora (Verna Felton) and Fauna (Barbara Jo Allen) take the princess deep into the forest to live as peasants until the danger is over and the young royal can be returned to her parents. On the day of her sixteenth birthday, however, the princess meets a young man (Bill Shirley) in the forest and falls in love with him, unaware that he’s Prince Philip, the man she’s been betrothed to since birth. Sadly for her, their meeting for that evening is interrupted when the fairies take her back to the palace to the arms of her eager parents. But Maleficent isn’t done with her spells, and she quickly takes action to see that her original pronouncement can come true.
There is no denying that the adaptation of the original Charles Perrault version of the fairy tale by Disney writer Erdman Penner has Disneyfication written all over it with the three fairies alternately doting (Flora), dotty (Fauna), and sassy (Merryweather), warring over things like the color of Aurora‘s ball gown and how the cottage should be cleaned, the achingly stupid henchmen of Maleficent who have no luck finding the princess despite their best efforts leaving the dirty work to the witch‘s toxic raven, and the ultimate confrontation between good and evil raising the excitement level of the piece to a spirited and even frightening crescendo. Still, those very elements give the film its unique enchantment, a combination of the mirthful and the macabre that have kept it a favorite despite its initial lukewarm reception by both critics and public.
The casting is superlative in all of the roles. The three fairies are played by actresses who either had experience in Disney features or adapted well to its demands, and their individual performances give Sleeping Beauty much of its most distinctive identity. Mary Costa’s operatic training acquits her well in handling the musical portions of the film for Princess Aurora with songs adapted from Peter Tchaikovsky’s ballet of the story, and she’s a believable innocent in the story portions, too, as she surrenders to the lure of first love. But the film’s pièce de résistance is Eleanor Audley’s magnificent performance as the malevolent Maleficent. Already acclaimed as the best wicked stepmother ever in Disney’s Cinderella, she takes her poisonous intentions to new heights as evil personified as the venomous sorceress. I remember vividly my terror in her final transformation at the film’s climax, and those moments are among the most intense in any Disney animated feature.
Sleeping Beauty’s peerless sophistication in animation with those stunning Eyvind Earle designed background paintings that give the film a stately brilliance and the classic music adapted by George Bruns make it one of the all-time classics, and it’s a thrill to finally see its magnificence captured forever in this stunning Blu-ray achievement.
Video Quality
Audio Quality
Special Features
For those who want to only listen and not have the lustrous picture quality spoiled by pop-ups, the audio commentary portion of the Cine-Explore experience may be selected instead.
Exclusive to Blu-ray is “Dragon Encounter,” a new 4 ¾ minute audio-visual first person interactive experience in the dungeon of Maleficent’s castle. Utilizing a stunning 1080p picture and DTS-HD MA sound that will rattle the rafters, it’s a fun little short.
“Grand Canyon” is Disney’s 29-minute Oscar-winning short subject using “The Grand Canyon Suite” to accompany stunning images of one of our country’s natural wonders. It’s also in 1080p and DTS-HD MA sound.
A music video by Disney Channel star Emily Osment singing “Once Upon a Dream” runs 3 ½ minutes.
Five songs from the score of the film are given the singalong treatment using subtitles and taking the singer to the portions of the film where they occur.
The viewer may choose to watch the film with Princess Pop-Up Facts turned on, small bits of trivia which occur constantly during the film.
The BD-Live experience was not loading properly during the time I did this review. This is an aspect of the disc I will revisit when I get things working smoothly on the network end.
The majority of bonus items come on Disc Two.
The Sleeping Beauty Castle Walk Through recreates the popular walk through attraction from Disneyland which was closed down in 1977. The viewer can go through without stopping in 7 ½ minutes or use the viewer interactive buttons to pause and peruse the various exhibits in the walk through. It’s presented in 1080p.
The History of the Sleeping Beauty Castle Walk Through is a 9 ¾-minute history lesson on the exhibit’s origins and changes over its twenty years of operation. The discussion is presented in 1080i.
“Picture Perfect: The Making of Sleeping Beauty” is an exhaustive 43 ½-minute description of the years of effort which went into making this zenith of Disney’s traditional animation features. It’s offered in 1080i.
“Eyvind Earle: The Man and His Art” is a too-brief 7 ½-minute mini-biography of the great artist, not only about his work on Sleeping Beauty but also his career as a portrait painter and his difficult early years. It’s presented in 1080i.
“Sequence 8” gives valuable background information on the infamously expensive forest meeting of Aurora and Philip which took well over a year to animate going way over budget in the process. This 1080i featurette runs 5 ½ minutes.
The disc offers an alternate opening to the movie using vocal tracks and storyboards and featuring the original song “Holiday.” This is presented in 1080p.
Three deleted songs are offered for viewer selection, and they’re backed with storyboards and film clips for the sequences: “I Happened to Have a Picture,” “Riddle Diddle,” and “Go to Sleep.”
Two storyboard sequences are presented to contrast with the actual footage from the film: the “Put to Sleep” sequence and the “Capture the Prince” moment. Both are presented in 480i.
Three of the live action reference films are offered for viewing in 480i and running a total of 2 ¼ minutes.
Art Galleries are available for perusing on a number of different topics: Visual Design, Character Development, The Storybook, Background Layouts, Storyboards, Production Pictures, Live Actions Photographs, and Publicity.
“Restoring the Soundtrack” is an interesting featurette on the original recordings of the music and the restoration of the audio for its inclusion on the Blu-ray release. This informative feature runs 10 ¾ minutes in 1080p.
Three trailers are available for viewing in 480i. The original teaser trailer runs 1 ¾ minutes, while the theatrical trailer runs 3 minutes, and the reissue trailer runs 1 ½ minutes.
“The Peter Tchaikovsky Story” is the 49-minute episode of Walt Disney Presents which introduced excerpts from Sleeping Beauty to a national audience by presenting a rudimentary biography of the composer (played by Grant Williams) of the famous ballet which provided the basis of the movie’s musical score. Partially in color and presented in 1080p, the Blu-ray offers two versions of the program with slightly different introductions of the show from Walt Disney.
“4 Artists Paint 1 Tree” is an entertaining look at four of the studio's in-house artists: Eyvind Earle, Joshua Meador, Marc Davis, and Walt Peregoy as they paint the same oak tree with wildly different results. Presented in 1080p, this short runs 16 minutes.
Three additional children’s games are offered on the Blu-ray: a magical guessing game where Maleficent uses her glowing orb to read your mind, a combination dance game and waltz lesson, and a basic language activity for the very young.
The package also includes a standard edition of Sleeping Beauty on DVD.
In Conclusion
Matt Hough
Charlotte, NC
1 person found this review useful
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Home Theater Forum › HT Gear & Movies › DVD & Blu-ray › DVDs › Animation DVDs › Sleeping Beauty (Two-Disc Platinum Edition + Standard DVD and BD Live) [Blu-ray] › Sleeping Beauty (Two-Disc Platinum Edition + Standard DVD and BD Live) [Blu-ray] Reviews

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