Beauty and the Beast 1991 Without Human Again
Edit
This film was re-released in IMAX and other large format theaters on January 1, 2002. The following changes were made to the film for this release:
- The "In Association with Silverish Screen Partners IV" credit is replaced with "The Special Edition Of--" on the opening title sequence. The 2002 Platinum Edition DVD omits this credit and the Walt Disney Pictures Presents credit stays on screen.
- The 2002 Platinum Edition DVD omits the Beast's "stutter" ("You wan-wanna stay in the tower?").
- The animation in some of the scenes went back through the clean-up animation department a second time, to right problems such equally wavering lines and missing details, which, while not very noticeable during a traditional 35mm showing of the film, would have been discomforting on a much large IMAX screen. Small-scale details, such as the blood in Creature'south wound later on his fight with the wolves, were also added.
- At the end of the "Something There" sequence, the background has been changed from Belle and Beast in front of the fireplace to an empty hallway, and a flake of the character blitheness has also been altered in this shot.
- Six minutes of new footage was added between the songs "Something In that location" and "Beauty and the Beast," well-nigh of which is made upward of a new musical sequence, "Human Again." This song was written by Howard Ashman and Alan Menken for the original version of the film, just cut for continuity purposes. After Alan Menken altered the vocal to make it work for the Broadway stage version of Beauty and the Beast, the vocal was worked back into the film.
- During the "Human Again" song sequence, the household objects clean up the Beast'southward castle, which necessitated having the background artists go back and digitally re-paint the backgrounds for the castle scenes that followed so that the castle was make clean.
- The blitheness for Cogsworth'south line to the Animate being after Belle is freed ("Yes-yep-yeah, but...why?") was completely re-washed, as the directors never liked how the animation looked in the original version.
- New sound effects are added to the shot where Belle and Phillippe leave the castle to find Maurice, which are supposed to suggest that the Fauna trashes his room in anguish (and also so that the backgrounds from this indicate on would non have to be repainted).
- The ending credits are longer to necessitate the add-on of an additional passage of score music, the version of the 'Transformation' theme that was cut out of the original film, to the end of the motion picture.
In the 2010 Diamond Edition release and current releases, the original 1990 Walt Disney Pictures logo was replaced with the electric current 2006 Walt Disney Pictures logo and the 2007 Steamboat Willie-inspired Walt Disney Animation Studios logo was added in. These changes were also made in the 3D re-release.
The "Work-In-Progress Edition" has also been released on a CAV laserdisc in 1992. This is the unfinished preview version shown at the New York Moving-picture show Festival in September 1991, with lxxx% of its animation complete, the remaining footage represented by sketches, drawings and painted storyboards. It runs the same length equally the last cutting and has no new scenes but includes 18 minutes of special features, including alternate version of "Exist Our Guest" sung to Belle's father after he stumbles into the castle. It was decided to make "Be Our Guest" more of a show stopper and identify it in the middle of the movie to be sung to Belle. The alternating scene is all in pencil test.
On the soundtrack and possibly preview/test screenings, at that place is a scene during the "Gaston" vocal in which Lefou tries to spell Gaston'southward proper noun and then gives up. This scene is not in the video version. Only some copies of the soundtrack take the full length music of "Due west Wing", which is the energetic instrumental music heard when the Beast saves Belle from the wolves. What versions (CD or cassette, retail or music club) have which, and why information technology was trimmed, is a tough question, but the long version is four:22 and the short ane is 3:39. (The short version is cutting right where Belle is running out of the castle before the assault.) The CD box set "The Music Backside The Magic", which features The Petty Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, and Aladdin music, is as well completely void of the full track, containing but a 2:19-long version.
A different version of the "Work-In-Progress Edition", mentioned higher up, was released on VHS in a special box set. It features all the scenes from the final movie but doesn't include the alternate version of "Exist Our Invitee." The tape does include a making-of documentary and a short sequence illustrating step-by-step how the film was animated. This is the "Work-In-Progress Edition" that is available on DVD.
When the moving-picture show was released on DVD in October 2002, information technology offered 3 versions of the motion picture: The "Special Edition" (the 2002 IMAX re-release), the "Piece of work-In-Progress Edition" (with Belle in the "Be Our Guest" sequence; the original piece of work-in-progress cut featured Maurice in this sequence), and the "Original Theatrical Release". The "Work-In-Progress Edition" and the "Original Theatrical Release" are both actually identical to the 2002 IMAX/"Special Edition" re-release, except that information technology retains the original animation of the footage from the end of "Something At that place" until Belle's release from the castle (this includes the retention of Cogsworth's original animation in his chat with the Beast after Belle is freed) and the original end credits sequence. All of the other edits that were made to the 2002 IMAX re-release (the cleaned-up animation, no stuttering Beast, etc.) are besides present in this version.
Contribute to This Page
Source: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0101414/alternateversions
ارسال یک نظر for "Beauty and the Beast 1991 Without Human Again"