Well we got a two-parters for some reason with the next episode of Festival of Family Classics, 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea.
A bunch of ships near Australia were being destroyed
by a “sea monster”, as a crew were set to hunt for the “sea monster” only to
have their ship being destroyed with three known survivors. The three survivors
are. The sea monster reveals to be the first unofficial submarine named
Nautilus, powered by Captain Nemo and his possibly cloned crew. Nemo hated
humanity in the surface world, so he lives the rest of his life in the seas
with the survivors as guest than slaves.
Thankfully I don’t have nostalgia connection with
the Disney version, and known them from Captain Nemo bursting out, “You’re calling
it murder?” and Michael Douglas singing “Whale of a Tale” to the point my music
teacher sings that in high school. I’ve seen the Nautilus in two version of
Mysterious Island (Journey 2 counts, sadly), and part of the squid was seen in The
Pagemaster as it came from the book of 20,000 Leagues Under the Seas.
It’s strange that two of the characters, Ned Land and
Nemo look very close in design to Kirk Douglas and James Mason in the Disney
version. Despite this is the abridged version of story, the performances are
not going to be as the obvious popular version. The minor difference is they
trade Esmeralda the Seal for Fifi the Blue Dolphin, which is kind of an
improvement that Fifi is actually more useful than Esmeralda, somehow. What’s a
downgrade is trading Peter Lorre’s character for Professor Aronnax’s son, who
I’ll describe him as proto-Spike Witwicky, yet as useful as Sam Witwicky. Pick
your own brunette everyman to compare!
This is probably the first dynamic design for Rankin
Bass. As much as I like Paul Coker’s round design, it is a different take. The
downside of being dynamic here is that it’s so detailed it’ll stiffen the
animation, as it won’t be as energetic as their other animation, and would
almost be on par with The Red Baron in energy level. It’s not too stiff as
those crappy cut-out animations that uses live action mouths instead, or never
moving their lips at all. It might be what would be used later in Thundercats.
It’s not entirely aims for kids under 12, as there’s a scene where they Nemo
throws a harpoon at a hammerhead shark. The shark got stabbed, bleeds, and swam
away with the harpoon still intact. You know, for Family, Festival of Family
Classics! Now why is this story need to be a 2-parter is beyond me.
This is simple an OK episode. I can’t recommend this
animated version to everyone, yet I haven’t seen an animated version that’s on
par or better than the Disney, despite it’s impossible to be better than a
groundbreaking film. Think of this as shorter lived Sealab. If you’re
interested, give it a cannonball….
(A viewer pulled out cannon
to aim at the animated film.)
Of A Dive to watch the film! Geez, I’m trying to
some variety from diving without going literal. At least aim the cannon at the
Dic version. Oh right, what’s the next episode for Festival of Family Classics?
Jack O’Lantern, finally, but I’ll save that for October. What’s after that?
Johnny Appleseed! Dammit, I’m going to need Ziegler’s Apple Cider for this!
I have vague memories of watching a 20 000 leagues animation in the 90s on vhs. The Kirk Douglas character in the white and red shirt is surprised by electric stoves and in one scene says "what fresh h-ll is this?" Was this that? Or am I thinking of something else? Its been like 20 years.
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