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- Music video for the Chip 'n' Dale Rescue Rangers TV series performed by the Jets.
- In For Scores, host Jon Burlingame takes listeners on a magical journey into the world of film and television composers, revealing never-before-heard special moments behind many of today's most beloved scores. This season, you'll hear personal stories from the composers of Marvel Studios Avengers and Pixar's Toy Story films, Captain Marvel, Coco, Ralph Breaks the Internet, and so much more.
- Training film demonstrating methods for repairing damage to an aircraft fuselage.
- Jiminy Cricket explains the basics of fire safety.
- An unpicked pilot for a web-series, Pavel Grinyov explains the VHS culture of late USSR and post-Soviet nineties and the phenomenon of voiceover translation. Main example provided is a voiceover translation of Back to the Future (1985) by Vasiliy Gorchakov.
- Guillermo del Toro's Netflix adaptation of "Pinocchio" breathes new life into the over-century-old art form of stop-motion animation. The film achieved a new level of expressiveness in its animated puppets by marrying traditional stop-motion techniques with newer technologies. Insider spoke with "Pinocchio" puppet fabrication supervisor Georgina Hayns and animation supervisor Brian Leif Hansen about the labor of love behind the film. Hayns and Leif Hansen are world-renowned stop-motion artists who brought their expertise to the three-year undertaking that was "Pinocchio." Previously, Hayns supervised character fabrication for "Kubo and the Two Strings" (2016), "The Boxtrolls" (2014), "ParaNorman" (2012), and "Coraline" (2009). Leif Hansen was an animator on "Missing Link" (2019), "Fantastic Mr. Fox" (2009), and "Frankenweenie" (2012). Both artists worked on Tim Burton's "Corpse Bride" (2005), which was pioneering for its use of geared heads to express nuanced emotion in stop-motion characters, a technique adopted in "Pinocchio." Meanwhile, other stop-motion films like "Coraline" laid the groundwork for the implementation of 3D printing technology in "Pinocchio." Del Toro's team built and expanded upon all of these tools and more to light up the lived-in world of "Pinocchio".
- Focuses on the Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey's 113th edition of its Red touring unit.
- This early Disney Circle-Vision (Circarama) 360-degree film took audiences on a train tour of Europe. Sponsored by Swiss Federal Railways, it was shown at an exposition in Lucerne, Switzerland.
- The Muppets get interviewed about their social life
- Training film explaining how the controls of the C-1 aeronautical autopilot are set up prior to take off.
- Light-hearted look at early human efforts to fly, hosted by Orville, the albatross from The Rescuers (1977), for the pre-show of PSA's Circle-Vision attraction at Disneyland. Opened on July 4, 1984 and ran for five years.
- Training film demonstrating techniques for repairing or replacing sections of damaged wings on aircraft.
- Training film explaining proper procedure for setting up the C-1 aeronautical autopilot for use during a bombing run, and evasive action during anti-aircraft fire.
- Tech advancements have allowed Disney to go from more static environments in its earliest computer-animated movies to a living, breathing landscape in "Strange World" (2022). This new setting has a level of movement, texture, dimension, and scale that would have been unthinkable 17 years ago, when Disney made its first foray into full computer animation with "Chicken Little" (2005). Since then, Disney has expanded its tool set with each successive film to create landscapes that feel just as alive as the characters.
- A Who's Who of award winning composers and other experts offer insights into music's role in adding character to animated shorts and features.
- Ancient-warfare expert Roel Konijnendijk rates 10 battle tactics, ancient warfare weapons and infantry/cavalry formations in movies and television for realism, with scenes from "Game of Thrones" and "The Witcher."
- Professional swordsman Dave Rawlings broke down 10 sword fights in movies and TV, critiquing their realism and technique.
- Host Patrick Van Horn visits the Walt Disney Studios for a backstage look at the making of the live-action version of Rudyard Kipling's "The Jungle Book."
- This Disney Circle-Vision 360-degree film, sponsored by Canada's telephone companies and shown at the Telephone Association of Canada Pavilion, took visitors at Expo '67 in Montreal on a breath-taking tour of Canada's landmarks and events. Highlights include a plane ride over Niagara Falls, Canadian Mounties on horseback, and the Calgary Stampede.
- Jiminy Cricket narrates the history and practice of pedestrian traffic safety.
- Training film demonstrating how instrument control panel units control direction and level of flight when the autopilot is operational.
- Many movies, TV shows, and music videos have called for surreal sequences where the characters are thrown into zero gravity as the room they're in starts to move around them, thus finding themselves walking on the walls and ceilings. It started when Fred Astaire danced on all corners of a room in 1951's "Royal Wedding." A rotating set with a fixed camera attached allowed the actor to dance with no gravity while still keeping his feet to the ground. This technique was applied in similar ways in movies like "Poltergeist" and "High School Musical 3," as well as music videos like Lionel Richie's "Dancing on the Ceiling" and Ariana Grande's "No Tears Left to Cry." Movies like "Inception" innovated by allowing its actors to fight in a rotating hallway with multiple cameras capturing the action. In 2019, the pilot episode of HBO's "Euphoria" used a revolving set to allow its main character, played by Zendaya, to walk on walls. VFX supervisors David Van Dyke and Nhat Phong Tran of Pixomondo told us how the show used everything from motion-control cameras to visual effects to create a scene with not one, but two centers of gravity.
- This special aired in 2013 on Disney Channel Spain shows the finalists of the contest, in this one the cast of La gira show who will go to the final and other participants including Juanma Rios.
- The Force Is with Them: The Legacy of Star Wars is a Video Documentary included in the 2004 DVD of the Star Wars Original Trilogy. It explained the impact of "Star Wars" on various directors and actors.
- A short film produced by Walt Disney World Resorts that shows the steps involved with checking into the hotel.
- "Fast and Furious 9," set for a 2021 release, is the 10th installment in a franchise known for pushing the boundaries of car chases. But there has been a lot of technological innovation leading up to this point that originated in classic films like "The French Connection" and allowed for even more realistic and dynamic chases in newer films like "Baby Driver" and "Extraction." In this episode of "Movies Insider," we take a look at how the art of the car chase has evolved over eight decades in Hollywood, from the influential chase in "Bullitt" to the wild spectacles of the "Fast and Furious" franchise.