Fantasia

Fantasia (1940)

4 corrected entries

(2 votes)

Corrected entry: In Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony, Disney decided to paint a picturesque setting of Ancient Greek mythology. When Fantasia's host, Dean Taylor, introduces the piece, he uses all Greek names except for the God of wine, which in Greek, is Dionysos. The name Taylor uses is Bacchus, the Latin translation. Also, they depicted "Bacchus" incorrectly. The God Silenus was always pictured as drunk and riding a donkey, as "Bacchus" was in Fantasia.

Correction: They used the names that people would be more familiar with - just because the setting is pseudo-Greek, it doesn't mean that they're restricted to using the Greek names exclusively. Anything else is artistic licence - this isn't a documentary.

Tailkinker

Corrected entry: In the centaur scene where the girls are prettying themselves up for the boys, none of the girls have nipples...yet in the last scene of the movie depicting hell, the demons that fly up at the screen have nipples. Perhaps they didn't think anyone would be offended if nipples were only showed for a brief second.

Correction: Showing the girls with nipples would have produced an "R" rated movie for nudity. Showing the demons with nipples has no such effect. I'm sure that Disney wanted to keep everything clean and "Child Friendly".

I read somewhere that the artists had to go back after the scene was done and paint covers for all the nipples. Don't have a source at hand, unfortunately.

Corrected entry: The movie shows a battle between Allosaurus and Stegosaurus, two dinosaurs that lived in the Jurassic period. Yet many other dinosaurs in this scene, including Triceratops, a Hadrosaur, and a Parasaurolophus, only lived in the Cretaceous period.

Correction: This boils down to artistic license. Events in nature don't spontaneously choreograph perfectly to music that wasn't written until millions of years after these dinosaurs walked the planet either.

Phixius

Corrected entry: During the Pastoral, the part with the winged horses, when they're going to the water, the little ones keep changing colours, right after the dive. It isn't because they're playing in a rainbow, as that doesn't appear until the very end of the Pastoral segment. The winged horses change colors at the beginning.

Correction: This is supposed to happen, it shows that the pool that they dived into is magical. It is NOT a mistake.

If that were the case, pink wouldn't be re-emerging as pink. The only ones who flipped is orange and blue. They would keep a consistency of it instead of only flipping two of the colors. Each also have a slight difference in the mane that stayed true even when they dived. The dead giveaway is when the mane style changed too. It's ever so slight but there.

Other mistake: In the intro to the Pastoral Symphony, the narrator identifies the deity who cloaks the world with Night to be Morpheus, who is the Greek god of sleep and dreams. However, the character in the animation is fairly obviously female, with long hair, eye shadow, and lipstick. My theory is that the character was intended by the art team to be Nyx, the Greek goddess of Night. Night would be a more likely candidate to be making it nighttime across the world, while Morpheus would be more likely to put people to sleep or send them dreams.

Roger Cline

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Suggested correction: Without further evidence/proof, this theory remains just that. A theory.

THGhost

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