Once Upon a Studio is a 2023 American live-action/animatedcrossoverfantasy comedy short film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios in celebration of the Walt Disney Company's centennial. Written and directed by Dan Abraham and Trent Correy,[1] it aired on ABC on October 15, 2023.[2] In the film, Disney characters come to life from pictures hanging on the walls of the Roy E. Disney Animation Building following the end of a usual work day.[3] The short's art style combines computer graphics, traditional animation and live-action, and features characters from the majority of the studio's works made up to that point.[b] The film was dedicated in memory of Burny Mattinson, the company's longest-serving employee,[5] who made a cameo in the short and died eight months before its release.[6] This is also the final work of Richard M. Sherman before his death in 2024.
Inside the studio, Mattinson's wish comes true. Mickey Mouse, in a production cel from Mickey's Birthday Party (1942), comes to life, and calls Tinker Bell (Peter Pan, 1953). Mickey asks her if all of the employees are gone, in which she nods. Excited, Mickey and Minnie Mouse jump out of the cel, with Minnie getting many of the characters from the studio's filmography to all meet in the lobby. While everyone is getting prepared, Mickey approaches a photograph of studio co-founder Walt Disney and thanks him in a private, somber moment.
All the characters go outside to the lobby to take a group photo for the 100th anniversary with Mickey getting them together. However, Goofy accidentally falls off his ladder, thus causing the camera to break into pieces. Everyone starts to leave disappointed as the group photo is apparently canceled. Just then, Alan-a-Dale (Robin Hood, 1973) plays "When You Wish Upon a Star" on his lute, joined in by Scat Cat (The Aristocats, 1970) on his trumpet and Mirabel Madrigal (Encanto, 2021) on her accordion as Hathi Jr. (The Jungle Book, 1967) makes a trumpeting sound.
Other characters take turns singing the song's lyrics; first Belle and the Beast (Beauty and the Beast, 1991), followed by Quasimodo (The Hunchback of Notre Dame, 1996), Pocahontas (Pocahontas, 1995), Ariel and Scuttle (The Little Mermaid, 1989), Baloo and Mowgli (The Jungle Book, 1967). Meanwhile, the brooms from Fantasia (1940) sweep up the pieces of Goofy's camera, Fix-It Felix, Jr. (Wreck-It Ralph, 2012) repairs the camera to its original state, Hercules (Hercules, 1997) puts the ladder back in position, and the Fairy Godmother (Cinderella, 1950) uses her magic to help Goofy up the ladder while setting the camera up for the photo. Snow White (Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, 1937), Mulan (Mulan, 1998), Asha (Wish, 2023), and Winnie the Pooh sing the next line in the song, before Mickey holds up Jiminy Cricket (Pinocchio, 1940), who leads the assembled characters for the song's final line before they pose for the group photo, with Tinker Bell using her wand to match cut to the finished photo.
The film ends with a tagline that reads, "To all who imagined with us, laughed with us, and dreamed with us, Thank You".
Once Upon a Studio was created spontaneously in preparation for the Walt Disney Company's centennial in October 2023;[20] directors Trent Correy and Dan Abraham discussed ideas during their free time[21] for approximately eight months.[22] The duo called the film a "love letter" to Walt Disney Animation Studios as well as "a thank you to anyone in the audience that's ever connected with a film over the last hundred years."[20][23]
The short film includes 543 characters[24] from the studio's feature and short films, up to Wish (2023), and vocals from more than 40 voice actors.[20] Archival recordings were used for certain actors who died before production or were unavailable to do so; this included the Genie's dialogue, which was sourced from previously unused audio recorded by Robin Williams[25] under acceptance from Williams' estate, according to Josh Gad, the voice of Olaf.[14] Other archive recordings taken from their original films include Bobby Driscoll as Peter Pan and Cliff Edwards as Jiminy Cricket, as the filmmakers intended not to recast those characters.[16]
Animation
Once Upon a Studio combines traditional animation, computer animation, and live-action footage, with Eric Goldberg serving as the head of hand-drawn animation, while Andrew Feliciano worked as head of computer animation.[20][10] Among the hand-drawn animators recruited for the short was current Disney animators Mark Henn, Randy Haycock, Alex Kupershmidt, and Bert Klein also provided animation for the short, as did former Disney animators James Baxter, Ruben Aquino, Tony Bancroft, Nik Ranieri, and Will Finn;[26] the animators worked both on characters they have previously animated in addition to other classic characters; Baxter requested the directors to work on characters from Bambi (1942), having been a fan of the film while growing up.[10] Goldberg recruited CG animators in the studio who also had experience in hand-drawn animation.[10] Hand-drawn apprentices were also hired to provide animation for the short.[10] The characters were animated in a way that replicated their original films' art style.[27]
Almost 80% of the short's animation is hand-drawn.[10] By the directors' insistence, the hand-drawn animation was done with ink and paper, which Goldberg approved of.[10] Goldberg made the scenes entirely hand-drawn, after which Feliciano would create CG animation that would match the hand-drawn characters' movement.[10] He also personally animated the scene where Mickey approaches a photo of Walt Disney, as he was interested in the scene because of its emotional tone, as well as the Genie, which he originally animated in Aladdin (1992), and characters originally drawn by Ward Kimball.[10]
CG animators had to rebuild the character models for CGI characters from films created before Tangled (2010) due to updates made to animation technology over the years, with rigging and rendering being reworked so that they could be used with modern technology.[10] The CG animators worked closely with the hand-drawn team, with Goldberg and Feliciano, the latter a fan of Aladdin since childhood, inspecting the short to determine whether a scene would be led by a hand-drawn or CG character, after which they would evaluate whether a hand-drawn or CG character should be animated first in the scene.[10] Animators with experience in hand-drawn and CG animation, such as Tyler Pacana and Anthony DeRosa, worked on scenes combining both formats; Pacana used a technique named "2D puppetry" to help rig the final photo shot.[10]
Many of the props that the animated characters interact with are CG, including the vending machine that Stromboli shakes and Goofy's camera and ladder.[28]
An early idea the filmmakers received from studio employees multiple times was to include a scene of a room full of all the characters voiced by Alan Tudyk since he has voiced a character in every Disney Animation film since Wreck-It Ralph (2012). This idea was abandoned, but Tudyk was included in the short as the voice of the Mad Hatter (Alice in Wonderland [1951]).[16]
Music
Dave Metzger composed the score for the short,[10] which was composed so that it would feel reminiscent of each character's debut appearance.[16] In the scene where Mickey approaches a photo of Walt Disney, the song "Feed the Birds" from Mary Poppins (1964) is heard, which was chosen due to being Disney's favorite.[10] As they discussed the idea with executive music producer Matt Walker, he suggested bringing in song co-writer Richard M. Sherman to perform a new rendition of the song.[10] Sherman recorded the song on August 22, 2022, at Disney's original office and using the same piano the Sherman Brothers used to perform the song for Disney.[10] The song, "When You Wish Upon a Star" from Pinocchio (1940), was sung by the cast in the finale. In this song, each character sings one at a time in the beginning and they all sing at the end.
Release
Once Upon a Studio had its world premiere at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival during the opening day celebration on June 11, 2023.[23] It was also screened for attendees at the Walt Disney Studios panel at Destination D23 on September 10, where it received a standing ovation, and as the BFI Special Matinee of the BFI London Film Festival Opening Day event on October 14.[29][30] It had its first public showing on ABC on October 15 (as part of The Wonderful World of Disney: Disney's 100th Anniversary Celebration, hosted by Kelly Ripa) in front of the TV premiere of Encanto, before streaming on October 16 on Disney+ and Hulu, and aired on the same date on Disney Channel (as part of Once Upon a Monday Movie Marathon) in front of an airing of Frozen II, Disney Junior, FX, FXX, FXM, and Freeform. The short was later released on YouTube on December 24.[31] In Canada, it premiered on CTV 2 the same day as the ABC broadcast. Unlike the American broadcast, which featured a host and an intro, CTV 2 only aired the short and Encanto afterwards. On October 18, 2023, Disneyland Resort announced that a short film, Once Upon a Studio was added inside the Opera House cinema in Main Street Cinema at Disneyland, since the beginning of the 100th anniversary celebration of the Walt Disney Company and Walt Disney Animation Studios on October 16, 2023.[32]
There was a discussion of pairing it with the theatrical release of Wish (2023), but Disney decided to release it in a more accessible format.[33] However, it was theatrically released alongside Wish in Japan on December 15, 2023.[34] It was also screened in theaters with a Disney100 limited engagement re-release of Moana (2016), and for one week at the El Capitan Theatre in Los Angeles, where public screenings were held to qualify it for the Best Animated Short Film shortlist[35][36] for the 96th Academy Awards. It would ultimately make the shortlist on December 21.[c]
Home media
Once Upon a Studio was released on digital platforms on January 23, 2024. It was included in the Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray releases of Wish, which was released on March 12, 2024.[43]
Reception
Critical response
The short received positive reviews from critics, who called it an "emotional and nostalgic experience."[44][45][46][47]
Ratings
The short premiered on ABC on Sunday, October 15, 2023, as a "sustainer" to the network television premiere of Encanto (2021) from 8:00 pm to 8:11 pm, in which it received 2.57 million total viewers in 1.736 million households, with a 1.39/4 HH rating. It also received a 0.45/4 adults 18–49 rating/share, which was equivalent to 0.587 million viewers watching in that demographic.[48] Its premiere on Disney Channel the following day at 6:05 pm (serving as a sustainer to a "Disney Channel Movie"[49]) received 0.349 million viewers, making the highest rated program on the network that week and the 343rd most viewed program on all of cable television.[50] It received a 0.11 P2+ rating, and 0.10 rating with adults 18–49, equivalent to 0.131 million viewers in that demographic.[51]
House of Mouse, an animated television series by Roberts Gannaway and Tony Craig that is also a crossover of many Disney Animated Canon films.
Once Upon a Mouse, a 1981 animated featurette by Jerry Kramer and Gary Rocklen produced to commemorate the studio's 24th animated feature film, The Fox and the Hound.[d]
Who Framed Roger Rabbit, a 1988 film by Robert Zemeckis that is also a crossover of many animated characters (including Disney's) in a live-action environment.
^"Disney Channel Ratings". USTVDB. Archived from the original on October 26, 2023. Retrieved October 26, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
^"Once Upon a Studio". USTVDB. October 16, 2023. Archived from the original on September 23, 2024. Retrieved October 26, 2023.