Fantasia: Difference between revisions

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* ''[[Toccata and Fugue in D minor]]'', attributed to [[Johann Sebastian Bach]]. This sequence features abstract images, shapes and forms moving in time to the music.
* ''[[Toccata and Fugue in D minor]]'', attributed to [[Johann Sebastian Bach]]. This sequence features abstract images, shapes and forms moving in time to the music.
* ''The Nutcracker Suite'', composed by Peter Illyich [[Tchaikovsky]]. Surprisingly, this features no characters from the ''[[The Nutcracker (theatre)|Nutcracker]]'' ballet, but original sequences based on the Seasons featuring dancing fairies, fish, flowers, leaves, and even ''[[What Do You Mean It Wasn't Made on Drugs?|mushrooms]]'' (not a [[Mushroom Samba|samba]], sadly).
* ''The Nutcracker Suite'', composed by Peter Illyich [[Tchaikovsky]]. Surprisingly, this features no characters from the ''[[The Nutcracker (theatre)|Nutcracker]]'' ballet, but original sequences based on the Seasons featuring dancing fairies, fish, flowers, leaves, and even ''[[What Do You Mean It Wasn't Made on Drugs?|mushrooms]]'' (not a [[Mushroom Samba|samba]], sadly).
* ''The [[Sorcerers Apprentice]]'', composed by Paul Dukas. The most famous scene in the entire film. This sequence features [[Mickey Mouse]] as [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|a sorcerer's apprentice]], who borrows his master's enchanted hat and decides to try out its powers. He finds out, however, that the magic is a [[Power Incontinence|little too much for him to handle.]]
* ''The [[Sorcerer's Apprentice]]'', composed by Paul Dukas. The most famous scene in the entire film. This sequence features [[Mickey Mouse]] as [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|a sorcerer's apprentice]], who borrows his master's enchanted hat and decides to try out its powers. He finds out, however, that the magic is a [[Power Incontinence|little too much for him to handle.]]
* ''[[The Rite of Spring]]'', composed by [[Igor Stravinsky]]. This sequence showcases the evolution of life on Earth, from the formation of the planet to the extinction of the dinosaurs, [[Science Marches On|according to the theories of the time]].
* ''[[The Rite of Spring]]'', composed by [[Igor Stravinsky]]. This sequence showcases the evolution of life on Earth, from the formation of the planet to the extinction of the dinosaurs, [[Science Marches On|according to the theories of the time]].
* ''The [[Arcadia|Pastoral]] Symphony'', composed by [[Ludwig Van Beethoven]]. During this part of the film, mythical creatures such as centaurs, cupids, satyrs, unicorns, and Pegasuses prance around, and attend a festival for the god Bacchus/Dionysus, only to have it interrupted by Jupiter/Zeus and Vulcan/Hephaestus.
* ''The [[Arcadia|Pastoral]] Symphony'', composed by [[Ludwig Van Beethoven]]. During this part of the film, mythical creatures such as centaurs, cupids, satyrs, unicorns, and Pegasuses prance around, and attend a festival for the god Bacchus/Dionysus, only to have it interrupted by Jupiter/Zeus and Vulcan/Hephaestus.