TheFrogPrincess Tagged Articles at Cinematical
Disney's 'Princess and the Frog' Gets New Artwork
Filed under: Animation », Music & Musicals », Disney », Family Films », Images »

After the first teaser trailer showed up recently for The Princess and the Frog, Disney's return to traditional hand-drawn-style animation, a lot of the blogosphere was labeling the film potentially racist. Hopefully the political correctness circles have died down a bit, though (or are at least concentrating too hard on Tropic Thunder), and we can appreciate some beautiful new artwork from the film without wondering how it might be reflective of stereotypes and whatnot. Over at DisneyAnimation.com, there is a gallery of "visual development" images that give us more of the background depicting 1920s New Orleans and its vicinity. For someone like me, who just recently revisited the Big Easy, the artwork is enough to get me excited about the movie, which unfortunately I must wait for until Christmas 2009.
The Princess and the Frog is a jazzy musical fairy tale based on the classic story "The Frog Princess" and features the first ever African American Disney princess (voiced by Anika Noni Rose). Other characters include a trumpet-playing alligator and a love-sick Cajun firefly. And clearly, from what these new images show us, it's set in New Orleans' French Quarter, as well as the Garden District (or maybe the mansion in this image is further outside the city) and on the bayou, where apparently someone lives in a shipwrecked boat, Swiss Family Robison style. Hopefully, since the story takes place during Prohibition, we'll get to see some swamp-set bootlegging going on.
Be sure to also visit the other project pages on DisneyAnimation.com, for minor info on 2010's Rapunzel and the Phillip K. Dick adaptation King of the Elves, set for a 2012 release. I'm sure there will be more artwork added for those titles in the future, so keep the site bookmarked.
Disney's 'Princess and the Frog' Gets a Teaser
Filed under: Animation », Disney », Family Films », Movie Marketing », Trailers and Clips »
I'm as big a fan of Pixar movies as anyone, but I honestly miss the old-fashioned 2-D style animation from Walt Disney. I think there's definitely room for both hand-drawn and computer animated films, because as brilliant as movies like Toy Story, Ratatouille and Wall-E may be, they're a completely separate kind of filmmaking from the traditional Disney films. They shouldn't be compared to nor should they replace the kind of beloved fairy tale classics we've enjoyed from the Mouse House for 70 years. So, before commenting on the new teaser trailer for The Princess and the Frog (available here if the YouTube version is removed), let me just say, welcome back, 2-D!
OK, so what do I think? Well, upon seeing the New Orleans setting, my first response was unfortunately one of fear: what if Disney one-ups its Hunchback of Notre Dame pole-dance debacle with a scene involving Mardi Gras beads? Well, obviously Disney knows better than to be so blatantly naughty, though I wouldn't doubt that animators will find some way to slip in a hint of Big Easy-style debauchery.
Anika Noni Rose to Voice 'The Frog Princess'
Filed under: Animation », Music & Musicals », Casting », Disney »
Though Beyoncé Knowles and Jennifer Hudson stole the Dreamgirls spotlight from Anika Noni Rose, it is Rose who apparently beat out Hudson (as well as ladies like Alicia Keyes and Tyra Banks) for the lead role in Disney's upcoming animated musical feature, The Frog Princess. (I'm sorry, but if Tyra Banks thought she had a chance here, then I'd love to have a little bit of what she's been smoking.) Rose will voice Maddy, Disney's first ever black princess -- a role that garnered the interest of practically every black actress/singer in Hollywood. And who can blame them -- heck, this is history in the making. Go Disney!
Set during the 1920s Jazz Age in New Orleans, The Frog Princess will be based on the classic fairytale and feature music from -- who else -- Randy Newman. Pic will also mark the first 2D Disney film since 2004's Home on the Range, and hopes to tap into the spirit of the Broadway-style musicals that were so successful for the Mouse House throughout the late '80s and '90s. In addition, Ron Clements and John Musker (directors of Aladdin and The Little Mermaid) have been tapped to write and direct. The first images of Princess Maddy have already been released, and though it's said to be early concept art, both pictures are in line with what you'd expect from an animated Disney Princess, in that she's pretty and petite with not an ounce of fat on her. How do you feel about the film? Is it just me, or does it feel slightly odd that it's 2007 and we're actually celebrating the fact that a major studio has decided to create their first animated African-American princess? Is this something that should have been done years ago?
The African-American Disney Princess Maddy -- A Step Forward, or Another Miss?
Filed under: Animation », Romance », Sci-Fi & Fantasy », Disney », Celebrities and Controversy », Scripts »
While no one can argue with Disney's animated achievements, there's a large, cavernous space to discuss their racial downfalls. The company has gotten a lot of flack for their heroes being generally light-skinned, American English-speaking good guys with symmetrically perfect features, while the villains embody the opposite (Aladdin). However, in March, Jette Kernion alerted us to Disney's latest animated feature -- The Frog Princess, which will break new ground by introducing an African-American princess.The big question: can they pull it off? The team bringing Princess Maddy to the screen are John Musker and Ron Clements. Sure, they brought us The Little Mermaid, but they're also responsible for Aladdin, which was far from a beacon of multiculturalism and racial respect. I'm surprised that Disney would tempt fate with that pair, and not completely remove themselves from the last doomed attempt. That being said, you can check out the first image of Maddy to the right, and she doesn't look half bad. Of course, no Disney film would be complete without a girl with small, cute features, but she also has a different look about her -- sort of old school Betty and Veronica.
However, Maddy actually seems to have two looks, and I'm wondering if the picture to the right wasn't just the stepping stone to making her more like the rest of the recent Disney ladies. (sigh) This other picture has her looking much more like Jasmine and the other heroines that Disney has released over the last few decades. Have they all forgotten that girls can still be cute while looking different? Snow White was nothing like Sleeping Beauty, yet both were popular and loved. What do you think? Is Disney finally starting to get it right, or are they still completely clueless?









