Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937)
Genre:
Animation / Family / Musical / Fantasy / Drama (more)
Tagline: Still the fairest of them all! (more)
Plot Outline: Snow White, pursued by a jealous queen, hides with the Dwarfs; the queen feeds her a poison apple, but Prince Charming awakens her with a kiss. (more)
User Comments:
"A fine bunch of washers you lot turned out to be!"
(more)
User Rating:
        
7.7/10 (17,143 votes)
Runtime:
83 min
Country:
USA
Language:
English
Color:
Color (Technicolor)
Sound Mix:
Dolby (re-release) / Mono (RCA Sound Recording)
Certification:
Denmark:7 (video re-release) / Denmark:A (video premiere) / Denmark:7 (DVD release) / Argentina:Atp / Australia:G / Canada:G / Chile:TE / Finland:S / Germany:o.Al. / Norway:A / Peru:PT / Singapore:G / Spain:T / Sweden:Btl / UK:A (original rating) / UK:U (re-rating) (1987) / USA:Approved (PCA #3870) (original rating) / USA:G (re-rating) (1975) / Brazil:Livre
Trivia:
Sergei M. Eisenstein, director of Bronenosets Potyomkin (1925), called it the "Greatest film ever made."
(more)
Goofs:
Continuity: When the birds are putting yellow flowers in the vase, right before they put the final one in that sticks up a bit in the middle, a flower that ends up right behind it appears out of nowhere.
(more)
Quotes:
Queen:
Slave in the magic mirror, come from the farthest space, through wind and darkness I summon thee. Speak! Let me see thy face.
Magic Mirror:
What wouldst thou know, my Queen?
Queen:
Magic mirror on the wall, who is the fairest one of all?
Magic Mirror:
Famed is thy beauty, Majesty. But hold, a lovely maid I see. Rags cannot hide her gentle grace. Alas, she is more fair than thee.
Queen:
Alas for her! Reveal her name.
Magic Mirror:
Lips red as the rose. Hair black as ebony. Skin white as snow.
Queen:
Snow White!
(more)
Awards:
Nominated for Oscar.
Another 9 wins
&
2 nominations
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User Comments:
3 out of 5 people found the following comment useful:-
"A fine bunch of washers you lot turned out to be!", 4 April 2004
Author:
RichardCat from Coventry, England
I feel ashamed that I only watched Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs in order
so that my hard, cynical heart could launch itself into an anti-Disney rant.
The most sentimental of the major cartoon studios, I was determined to
ravage this one after seeing isolated, treacly clips.
Yet seen all together I have to admit that I was softened by a talented
picture that is genuinely charming. The somewhat dated animation resembles
cut outs from a picture book with its pastel hues, and looks and feels more
natural than the angular, jerky computerised movement of the modern Disney
features. It helps that they also employ someone who can actually sing in
the titular role, with an operatic blend to the proceedings. And it would
take the coldest of people not to warm to Snow White's genuine innocence. I
concede, I did wince a little at the cutesy blue birds, but this is vastly
more charming than I had been led to expect.
It's pacy, too: whereas some of the older Disney films tend to drag (I
remember catching the aptly named Sleeping Beauty one Sunday afternoon),
this one is suitably brisk in its portrayal of events. And while modern
cartoons (or "Animated Features" as they pompously like to be known) blow up
the role of the "director", this one really has its eye on cinematic
technique. Just look at the early wishing well scene, shot from the
perspective of the well bottom or the blend of images and dissolves when
Snow White's in the forest.
Many of the songs are classics, of course. Whistle While You Work is still
something you can find yourself humming or whistling while doing the
hoovering, The greatest contention for me though was the seven dwarves, who
always struck me as far too self-consciously cutesy and grating to really
like. Yet, come on � It's Off To Work We Go is a belter, isn't
it?
The actual plot, which is largely sidestepped to make way for the leisurely
song sequences, is more than a little macabre. Even when Snow White's heart
(her severed heart!) is substituted; it's replaced with a pig's heart... and
all for a family audience. I'm not saying this one is morbid, but they deem
Snow White (Or Snow, if we may call her that) so "beautiful, even in death"
that they refuse to bury her and place her in a transparent coffin. In a
parallel universe somewhere there's an offshoot of this movie where the
Prince arrives too late and her rapidly decaying corpse turns into a
flesh-eating zombie. Maybe they should do that as one of their special
straight-to-video sequels � after all, they're grave robberies, aren't
they?
It's a slightly strange plot, too, with Snow White spending the duration
being plotted against by a bitter old Queen. And people say Elton John
didn't get involved with Disney until The Lion King. Yet in order to elicit
Snow White's trust she transforms herself into a scary-looking old hag? Why
not just stay in her own image? And if she can transform her appearance like
that, then why not use the same magic to make herself the sought-after
"fairest of them all"? Yet I guess if she didn't then we wouldn't have a
story, and the apple ofference does have some religious connotations. This
is a one-note plot, though, and subtext isn't the order of the day. Rather,
it's the colour and flavouring of the piece that are there to be enjoyed,
not the somewhat redundant narrative. And while, after the initial thrust,
the film does lose momentum slightly, enjoy it I did, a delightful and
wonderfully made cartoon. Yes, you can read into the white = good/black evil assertions, but for me I'd rather marvel at the songs and images, or
make cheap jokes about MOR pianists.
Just two minor points: why are they called "Dwarfs" and not Dwarves in the
film's title? And seven dwarves working in a mine? Is that an example of
positive discrimination?
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