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Looking back at the best cartoons of the 1950s needs to take into account the era. With the ravages of World War Two somewhat receding and film production and attendance stabilising, animated feature films made a notable return to the big screen in the 1950s. It was the decade that arguably sparked an ever-increasing range of animation production internationally over the coming decades.
Fantasy and animation often dovetailed with vigour and the Disney Animation Studio in Los Angeles arguably asserted its centrality to the medium, and it success would set Disney’s 12 principles of animation that are followed today. Of the Disney animated films of the 1950s, animation director Shaun Magher notes that, “The Disney films made in the ‘50s created a bedrock for all others to follow”.
(Image credit: Disney)
01. Alice in Wonderland
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The film’s distinct visual palette was significantly the result of the work of designer Mary Blair. Art historian Ruth Millington explains that, “For Alice in Wonderland, she [Mary Blair] made hundreds of gouache studies, in which the heroine falls down the rabbit hole into a technicolored world of unusual colour contrasts”.
(Image credit: Disney)
02. Lady and the Tramp
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Lady and the Tramp was the first animated Disney movie based on an original idea rather than being an adaptation.
(Image credit: Halas & Batchelor)
03. Animal Farm
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This adaptation of George Orwell’s novella, Animal Farm remains one of the most famous and lauded of British animated feature films. The movie comprises 750 scenes and 300,000 drawings.
Unlike Disney, Halas & Batchelor opted for a simpler aesthetic for Animal Farm, using flat, uncluttered background paintings and stylised character designs, to focus attention on George Orwell’s allegory. As Drew explains: “The genius also lies with its aesthetic and technique: beautifully drawn, expression-filled and executed 2D cel animation, and very gritty in its dull tones used making this a quintessential British classic.”
(Image credit: Disney)
04. Sleeping Beauty
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Walt Disney had struggled to communicate to his creative leads, his approach and vision to the adaptation of the fairy tale.
(Image credit: Lev Atamanov / Soyuzmultfim, 1957)
05. The Snow Queen
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The Snow Queen is identified as the film that compelled Hayao Miyazaki to continue working in animation after a period of doubt early in his career as an animator. The Ghibli Museum re-released the film in 2007.
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