by PrincessKiara » January 3rd, 2011, 11:24 pm
[quote="SuperBabySimba"]People, please. I know the FIRST film's makers studied them to make the movements realistic. But they went to AFRICA too. Movements they could've gotten well enough for one simple cartoon film from studying them on any nature document.
But in any case, as Simba's Pride film is the more essential part for this question, they could use the first film as source well enough, but still they went to study the animals. Thus, there likely was more to it than just the movements. [/quote]
If had been an animator working on SP, I would want to study real-life lions, not just use the first film/or a documentary as a reference.
[quote="SuperBabySimba"]And what's with the word 'must'? I mean, obviously there are artistic liberties taken with the behaviour in both films, and obviously they were 'must'.
But why must there be artistic liberties taken in the aging matters when it's a feature film for children? It's not as if children wouldn't be entertained with realistic aging designs, like they wouldn't be with accurate lion behaviour. Plus, I see no harm done in educating children at the same time by designing them realistically seeing to real nature, (the education coming through parents or comparing the film's lions to lions from nature books and documents.) And Disney's classic cartoons aren't just for children - they're family movies. And don't they even have all those educating CD-rom merhandices even?[/quote]
Scar is younger than Mufasa, yet his mane is darker. This is despite the natural fact that the older a lion is, the darker his mane becomes. That`s what I call an artistic liberty. That had to be taken for several reasons. Scar is the villain, for one. A black mane makes him look evil. Secondly, if all the male lions in the movie had brown manes, it perhaps be confusing for the kids and make it difficult to tell them apart.
You have to remember that in TLK, the lions behave more human-like than lion-like. It`s not supposed to be all that realistic or educational, it`s supposed to be entertaining. For children and adults alike. TLK is a family movie indeed, but primarily aimed at kids. Of course there`s nothing wrong with educating kids on realistc animal behaviour, but that`s not what TLK is aiming to do.