SALUDOS AMIGOS and THE THREE CABALLEROS: Blu-ray (Walt Disney, 1942-44) Disney Exclusive
Encouraged by
President Franklin Roosevelt’s ‘Good
Neighbor Policy’ (legislation drafted in 1933 that effectively launched a
PR campaign to better the U.S.’s relations with Latin America), Walt Disney’s Saludos Amigos (1942), and its
subsequent ‘sequel’ of sorts, The Three Caballeros (1944) can hardly
be counted upon as ‘great art’ in the
vein of Walt’s Snow White and The Seven
Dwarfs (1937), Pinocchio, Fantasia (both released in 1940) or Bambi (1942). Commercially, however,
they proved far more successful at the box office than virtually all of the
aforementioned except Snow White. Indeed, Walt’s flourish of success with Snow White had been lavishly exported
on these subsequent projects. And yet, the public failed to take to them as
they should. Though justly regarded as classics today, at the time, each did
little except to strain the studio’s coffers. And Walt, true to his genius, had
pushed his animators hard on the craftsmanship of these iconic milestones;
perhaps too much, resulting in the legendary strike of 1941. 334 employees
walked the picket line in a nasty display that dragged on from May until the Fall
(another 303 remaining at their posts). The workers’ demands for higher wages
and security against arbitrary layoffs (among other grievances) deeply wounded
Walt’s belief he had built ‘a family’
business founded on mutual respect and trust.
Barely escaping
bankruptcy, Walt’s survival during this fallow period depended upon the reissue
of his animated Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and Goofy shorts; also, the
production of more of the same, and finally, his relinquishment of authority to
the U.S. military, who not only commandeered several sound stages to use as a
repair shop for their antiaircraft unit, but also effectively took over whole
portions of its production facilities to make instructional films for the war
effort. With America’s entry into WWII, the U.S. government’s grave concern,
that the spread of fascism would infest its neighboring nations, and thus
present a far more immediate threat to its own sovereignty, resulted in a
direct response from Hollywood; the industry en masse throwing itself into exhalations
of Latin American culture and, even importing a few of its most popular stars;
Carmen Miranda, Xavier Cugat and Ricardo Montalban among them. The government and the industry’s overnight
amalgamation of talent and resources could hardly be counted upon for its
altruism. Indeed, several South American nations had already allied themselves
with the Nazis. Besides, the war in Europe had effectively cut off Hollywood’s
highly lucrative marketplace for their product.
Even Walt’s
participation had an angle. His company was overextended in debt. Now, under
safe conduct from the U.S. State Department’s Coordinator of Inter-American
Affairs, Nelson Rockefeller, Walt and a select troop of his most trusted
journeymen made their pilgrimage to Brazil, Argentina, Chile and Peru. Disney’s
cartoon shorts had always been popular in these countries. But it was
Rockefeller’s sincere hope a ‘goodwill’ tour would inspire even more U.S.
loyalty to follow it. To this end, Walt proposed producing not only a movie
about their trip abroad, but perhaps several more, celebrating the culture as
well as these burgeoning alliances. After
some finagling, Rockefeller secured federal loan guarantees to produce both Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros for $50,000 each. Today, we are so inundated
with global connectivity, the resources of the world at our fingertips via even
the most basic computer access, it behooves us to reconsider for a moment the
morale boost each of these movies gave toward fostering friendly relations
between the Americas. At a time when most Americans could scarcely afford to
travel, impressions of foreign cultures remained in the dark ages. Hence, Walt’s
live-action inserts, depicting the modernity and affluence of cities like Rio
de Janero and Buenos Aires startled many when Saludos Amigos premiered.
Initially, four
short subjects were planned for independent release. Instead, Walt elected to
combine them into what would become a brief main staple at the studio – the
package deal – ‘feature-length’ releases
with dubious artistic distinction, except to say Disney’s artisans continued to
put their best feet forward, ensuring the quality of animation was not
sacrificed. At 45 minutes, Saludos
Amigos is Walt’s shortest ‘feature’;
comprised of brief live-action inserts depicting his journey abroad and four
short subjects, strung together with the flimsiest of connective tissue. The
first of these is no better than a half-dozen Donald Duck cartoons from a
similar vintage; Walt’s most lovably short-tempered fowl, decidedly out of his
element and suffering for it against the serene splendor of Lake Titicaca in
the High Andes. The second short, Pedro,
is a cozy little story about a single propeller mail plane forced to pick up
the slack when his more robust, four-propeller father develops a severe cold in
his pistons.
This ‘little
plane that could’ endures a hellish thunderstorm and downdrafts that threaten
to dash him to pieces on the mountainside.
Pedro soars, chiefly because of the animators’ uncanny sense of space and
depth achieved during its flying sequences. And while the third segment in Saludos Amigos, ‘El Gaucho Goofy’ is decidedly amusing – if hardly innovative – it
is for the film’s finale, Aquarela do
Brasil, that the picture is best remembered today; chiefly for the creation
of the cigar-smoking parrot, Jose Carioca. Of all the sequences in Saludos Amigos, ‘Aquarela’ is most authentic to the flavor of Latin America; Carioca,
a breezy and fun-loving ‘bon vivant about
town’, introduces his American cousin, Donald Duck to the pleasures of
Copacabana Beach and, better still, the samba Donald performs with a
silhouetted dancer, suspiciously resembling the Brazilian bombshell, Carmen
Miranda.
Two years after Saludos Amigos, Walt returned to the
pampas for his second outing – The Three
Caballeros (1944). And while more ambitiously mounted in its live-action/animated
sequences, it more or less follows the same episodic format as its predecessor.
The picture’s premise is threadbare at best. Donald Duck receives a very large
crate wrapped in paper; a present from his Latin American friends to mark the
anniversary of his birthday. Unpacking the box, Donald discovers a movie
projector, screen and film reels. We delve into the first of seven segments, ‘The Cold-Blooded Penguin’ – narrated by Disney
fav, Sterling Holloway. Disgusted by his natural inability to adapt to the
frigidity of the South Pole, a penguin named Pablo elects to sail away to a
warmer climate. His first several attempts end in near fatal freezing to death,
saved only by the goodness of two non-descript penguin buddies. Pablo lashes a
potbellied stove to his back, erects a wind sail and cuts free a block of ice
using a handsaw. His makeshift boat sails down the South American coastline,
eventually landing on a small parcel of palm-treed dirt in the Galápagos
Islands.
The second
cartoon, The Flying Gauchito, depicts
small boy (in the English-speaking version, from Uruguay/from Argentina in the
Spanish dub) who, in his search for a condor’s nest, unearths a miracle
instead; a winged Burrito (Spanish for ‘little
donkey’). After a playful pursuit,
the boy harnesses the mule’s energy and they become inseparable, eventually
entering and winning the grand derby, despite their remote chances against some
beefy competition. In Baía, the third
sequence, singer Aurora Miranda (yes, Carmen’s sister) takes Donald and Jose
Carioca through a pop-up TripTik through the Brazilian state. This sequence was
meant to recapture the joie de vivre of Saludos
Amigo’s finale. Yet, despite Miranda’s infectious voice and some stunning
visuals, it somehow never rises to the occasion; noisy and colorful, but
otherwise never rekindling the magic as before.
The movie’s
fourth vignette is Las Posadas (literally
translated as ‘inn’ or ‘shelter’), depicting a small group of Mexican children
celebrating Christmas with a re-enactment of the journey of Mary and Joseph. Repeatedly denied refuge, the children are
eventually welcomed into a stranger’s home, culminating with the breaking of a
piñata. We regress to Donald’s discovery of his own piñata in the gift box.
Now, we are reintroduced to Jose Carioca and a new edition; Panchito Pistoles –
a gun-toting Mexican rooster who elects to take his cohorts on a flying sarape
to Pátzcuaro, Veracruz and Acapulco. The trio sails overhead, hunting down
bathing beauties on a beach and indulging in some Latin rhythms along the
way. Over the skies of Mexico City, Donald
falls in love with the disembodied head of singer, Dora Luz, warbling the melodic
ballad, ‘You Belong to My Heart’: a
phantasmagoric display of colors and shapes. This bizarre ‘dream sequence’
segues into the picture’s finale, as Panchito leads his cohorts in the title
tune. “We’re three caballeros, three gay
caballeros, they say we are birds of a feather…we're happy amigos, no matter
where he goes, the one, two, and three goes, we're always together.” The
lyrics to this infectious ditty are a joyous celebration of cross-cultural
camaraderie, written by Ray Gilbert and performed by Clarence Nash (the voice
of Donald Duck), José Oliveira (Jose Carioca) and Joaquin Garay (Panchito). But
the song is actually based on Ay,
Jalisco, no te rajes: a Mexican tune composed in 1941 by Manuel Esperón
with lyrics by Ernesto Cortázar. We follow ‘these three happy chappies, with
snappy serapes, who party beneath their gaudy sombreros. They sing and they
samba, and shout, ‘Ay caramba!’ until
‘some Latin baby, says yes, no or maybe.’
In this case,
the girl happens to be Carmen Molina from Oaxaca, miraculously transformed via
Donald’s hallucinations from a cactus into A Charro-wearing dancer with a
riding crop. Donald and Carmen perform the spirited ‘La Zandunga’, accompanied by other dancing cacti, and then ‘Jesusita en Chihuahua’, a trademark of
the Mexican Revolution. This sequence is notable for its masterful combination
of live-action and animation. Carmen and Donald effortlessly engage one another
as the other colorful cacti swirl around and swarm them. Now, Panchito and José
intrude. Donald battles a toy bull on wheels, loaded with firecrackers. The toy
explodes, its display of pyrotechnics spelling out ‘the end’ – first, in Spanish (Fin), accompanied by the colors of
the Mexican flag; then, similarly, in Portuguese (Fim) and the colors of
Brazil, and finally, in English, and American ‘red’, ‘white’ and ‘blue’.
In hindsight, Saludos Amigos plays like a ‘coming attraction’ trailer for The Three Caballeros; a far more flamboyant
excursion. While the live-action sequences in Saludos Amigos were all photographed in Technicolor, under less
than perfect natural lighting conditions, they pale to the lush and
fully-saturated hues of Walt’s studio-bound reincarnations of Latin Americana
on display in The Three Caballeros.
The integration of live-action and animation in this latter movie is also far
more accomplished. And yet, many of The
Three Caballeros’ animated sequences lack heart; particularly ‘The Cold-Blooded Penguin’ that gets the
movie off to a very rocky start. It seems almost sacrilege to criticize Walt’s
legendary nine old men for a lack of originality here. But this sequence alone
simply fails to engage the viewer as it should. The animators have better
success with ‘The Flying Gauchito’,
and, of course, the finale: a tour de force where all stops are pulled out for
a chaotic display of color and noise; easily, the most excised and revived
sequence, endlessly featured on the Disney Channel, at the Mexican pavilion of
Florida’s Epcot Center, and, rumored to have been the inspiration for John
Landis’ 1986 comedy, Three Amigos,
costarring Steve Martin, Chevy Chase and Martin Short.
Disney Inc. bows
Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros on Blu-ray,
together for the first time. Alas, this disc is a Disney Exclusive, costing big
bucks on Amazon for those of us whittled out by the studio’s present
shortsightedness not to include anyone residing outside of the U.S. into their
‘exclusive’ club membership. Walt’s only goal was always to unite the peoples
of the world in harmony. Not so much, the custodians presiding over his legacy
today! The good news: great pains have been taken in the remastering of each of
these features in 1080p. Neither presentation will disappoint. In previous
releases, Disney Inc. had elected to digitally remove the cigar Jose Carioca
perpetually chomps on, as well as the cigarette loosely dangling from Goofy’s
lips during the ‘El Gaucho’ sequence.
Mercifully, both have been reinstated herein. This Blu-ray features the
unaltered and original theatrical releases of each movie, albeit with a
disclaimer about the perils of smoking.
Colors are eye-popping.
As with other animated features released to Blu-ray, Disney has homogenized
film grain to the point of obliteration. By my eyes, it doesn’t impact one’s
enjoyment of either film, though, undoubtedly there will be those who poo-poo
its removal. Even so, there are no ‘waxy’
misfires a la The Sword and the Stone here. Contrast is beautifully balanced
and fine detail is revealed throughout. As already stated, the live-action
sequences in Saludos Amigos appear
less luminous, owing to their natural lighting conditions. But the vibrancy of
3-strip Technicolor ensures virtually everything presented is sparkling, crisp
and absolutely gorgeous – even at a glance. The one unforgivable sin all
Disney Inc.’s ‘exclusive’ Blu-rays share
in is the absence of ‘extra features’.
Personally, I do
not see the point in such omissions. The archival work has already been done
for prior DVD releases, ergo, it costs the studio nothing to include them on
their Blu-rays. We will forgo attempting to deconstruct the current executive
mindset of Disney Inc.’s home video apparatus. In my not so humble opinion,
they possess none! If Walt were alive
today, I have no doubt the progressive mogul would have seen to it by now that
virtually all of his hard-achieved monuments to animation and live-action – including
Song
of the South – had found their way on Blu-ray for everyone to enjoy. We
will wait in the hope of better things and see if the current brain trust (and
I use this term quite loosely) at the Mouse House gets their act together.
Where for art thou, Melody Time, Make Mine Music, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, the original The Parent Trap, That Darn
Cat, The Moon Spinners, The Happiest Millionaire, The Journey of Natty Gann…oh heck, my head hurts. Bottom line: Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros come highly recommended. Good stuff here, but
if you don’t live in the continental U.S. expect to pay through the nose for
it! More back catalog – pretty please!
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
Saludos Amigos – 3.5
The Three Caballeros – 3
VIDEO/AUDIO
4.5
EXTRAS
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