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- Simon's cat follows the silent-movie-like adventures of a cat and his owner and lots of others.
- After a recording session, the band Aerosmith invites the audience to see them perform in concert.
- The junk monster threatens two small "junk" dogs, but the boy dog (Oilspot) manages to defeat the monster and rescue his girlfriend (Lipstick).
- Mushu the Dragon takes a quick look behind the scenes of Mulan's recording sessions, with interviews from several cast members.
- Phil Collins performs in the music video "Strangers Like Me" from the original motion picture soundtrack for the film Tarzan (1999) recorded for Walt Disney Records. The music video features Phil Collin singing and pay instruments while in a jungle. Clips from the animated film feature throughout.
- A series of shorts featuring the seedling Groot along with several new and unusual characters.
- A short film made for the U.S. Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs about the history of the Amazon basin.
- Deadpool and Korg react to the trailer for Free Guy.
- Spot follows his nose to find the source of a lovely smell.
- Spot loves playing with water.
- Spot has lost his ball at the circus. Where can it be?
- It's a windy day, and Spot wants to fly his kite. He has some trouble getting it airborne, and eventually it gets stuck in a tree, too high for him to reach.
- Spot and his dad went for a walk in the woods. But spot was wondering if there ever will be a lion, a tiger, an elephant, or a bear lurking somewhere in the woods.
- Spot goes for a walk in the garden. It's his first time going out on his own.
- Spot tries to find some baby animals at the farm.
- Spot is staying with Steve overnight.
- It's very nice outside. So Spot's mom takes Spot and Helen to the park.
- A chance audition in the early 30s would lead Clarence Nash to a 50 year career voicing Donald Duck.
- Short but informative feature on the work of Pinto Colvig, the original voice of Goofy. It can be found on 'Walt Disney Treasures: Wave Two - The Complete Goofy'.
- "Klaus," Netflix's first animated film, is an origin story of Santa Claus. Because the Oscar-nominated movie appeals to nostalgia, director Sergio Pablos and his team at The SPA Studios in Madrid decided to make the film in 2D. But they also wanted to advance the look, so they developed new technology that adds details like lighting and texture to the characters that make them appear 3D. Insider spoke with Pablos to find out how they made the innovative film, which earned an Academy Award nomination for best Animated Feature and seven Annie Awards.
- This little featurette consists mostly of an outline about how Goofy should be animated - meaning, how his body and gestures work, and how his personality should be depicted. The outline had been written by Disney animation legend Art Babbitt in the late 1930s.
- The short film looks at this problem from a city development aspect rather than farm living. The film proposes solutions to the clean water and sanitation issues in third world countries.
- New mothers are show how to care for young infants during nursing and as they grow and their diet changes from liquid to solid foods.
- When Pixar released the first installment of Toy Story in 1995, it wasn't just a technological marvel. It also elevated storytelling to a new level for animated films. Here are Pixar's 5 essential rules of storytelling that are essential to understanding why their hit films like "Inside Out", "Up", and "Monsters Inc." feel so perfect.
- Presented as part of the STAR WARS: LAUNCH BAY experience at Disneyland and Disney's Hollywood Studios, "Meet the Makers" is a featurette exploring the past, present and future of the STAR WARS franchise, including interviews with the new generation of storytellers behind the Saga.
- A quirky young girl with a wild imagination is encouraged by her grandfather to follow her dreams, even though her classmates make fun of her.
- About the "Flynn Lives" movement.
- Insider takes a look at the ways that underwater scenes are created for movies - whether they're shot in the ocean, in an underwater tank or on dry land later adding underwater qualities using lighting tricks and CGI.
- New York City in the 1930s. Through George Gershwin's famous tune, "Rhapsody in Blue," a story is told about a day in the life of four random people who are longing for something more: a construction worker, who would rather play drums at a jazz club, an unemployed man looking for a job, a girl who wants to spend more time with her parents but must instead be dragged around the city by her governess, and a rich man with a bossy wife who would just like to have some fun.
- A lot of unseen work happens to make every movie come to life. At Pixar, tailoring and simulation artists animate clothing, which is key to making characters in movies like "Coco" and "Onward" feel real. Food stylists make sure all the real food in a given scene stays fresh, while other artists make fake food when working with the real item would be too difficult. Bug wranglers work on movies like "Spider-Man" and "Arachnophobia," manipulating light, air, and room temperature so insects will put on their best possible performance. And if you've ever seen a baby cry on screen, chances are a baby wrangler was standing behind the camera making sure that happened.
- When a camera-wearing security guard attempts to track down some missing art, he accidentally damages his camera, leading the audience on an audio adventure relayed through high-tech headphones.
- 2021 began with a lot of uncertainty about delayed releases and how we would be able to consume blockbuster movies. Regardless of whether you watched at the theaters or from the comfort of your home, there were many captivating movies that took filmmaking to another level. High-adrenaline flicks like "Shangi-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings," "F9" and "No Time to Die" created in-camera stunts that you may have thought were CG. Young audiences got to see 2-D characters come to life like never before in "Clifford the Big Red Dog," and "Space Jam: A New Legacy." And real-life landscapes were constructed in both "Old" and "The French Dispatch" to transport viewers to another world. Here's what 16 movies of 2021 looked like behind the scenes.
- WWI historian Alexander Watson rates five more First World War battle scenes from movies for realism. He discusses the accuracy of the trench warfare and military strategy portrayed in "1917" (2019) and "Paths of Glory" (1957). He also comments on surprise attacks, cavalry, and helmets in "War Horse" (2011) and "Blizzard of Souls" (2019). Watson analyzes the guns, artillery, ships, destroyers, cannons, and other weapons used in "Admiral" (2008).
- Documentary regarding two of the "nine old men" of Disney animators.