10 November 2012

Bambi (1942)


 Within in the first five minutes of this film, I was struck by how gentle it is.  I can't think of a better word for it.  This film is gentle.  This feeling stays throughout, even in the dramatic moments, because the protagonist is a shy creature and it wouldn't suit his story to present it in another way.

This was yet another Disney movie that I didn't see while young.  So many people say that they were shocked and devastated when Bambi's mother meets her fate, but I already knew of her demise before I saw the film for the first time.  As a result, I almost feel like I'm missing an essential part of what it is to watch Bambi, because her death wasn't a shock to me.  For such a thing to happen in what is mostly such a peaceful film was quite traumatic for many viewers, I believe.

Although I didn't watch the film as a child, I once again must have somehow got my hands on it's related picture book, because I sure did know that I liked Thumper.  I was actually thrilled on watching the movie for the first time to discover that Thumper's character is even more charming than I'd imagined.

The presence of man as an ever present but never seen threat is disturbing, and apparently didn't sit well with audiences in the original theatrical release.  We're shown the idyll of Bambi's world, and then pretty bluntly told that humans constantly threaten to destroy it.  In the current age this is more acceptable, with more people environmentally aware, but back then it would have been pretty confronting.  In fact it's now common for hunters to be portrayed as villains, whereas back then it was quite a commercial risk to make such a connection. 

Final Thought: I really love when animators take care to accurately portray the movement of animals.

Up Next:  The Bandwagon (1953)  

No comments: