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This is the original Three Little Pigs Silly Symphony; its duration is 8:23. It features the Three Little Pigs and the Big Bad Wolf, as well as the famous song "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?" According to a few sources, the heavily Jewish image and accent of the Wolf knocking on the brick house's door was removed for the DVD release, but it seems that this revised voice was applied to the YouTube video, even though the visual was not adjusted.

Having easy, unlimited access to the film which is the subject of my research is essential, not only for being able to form a thesis but for being able to interpret and synthesize the various resources I'll find on the subject. I can draw direct evidence as to the narrative structure, characterization, and use of color, music, and sound, and hear the song "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?" whenever I please.

This book is an enormous print compilation of Disney sketches and animated stills accompanied by text discussing early animation, its principles and appeal, the procedure of putting animation on the screen, character development, animating expressions and dialogue, acting, and other aspects of the technical and nitty-gritty details of how animation works. On page 292, in the Music and Sound section, it devotes an entire page to an example of how composed music and sound effects were synched with the animation. The example is from Three Little Pigs, and includes a sketch of the pig who built with straw running towards his home to take refuge from the wolf.

Beside the sketch are two strips, or "exposure sheets," which show how the pig's movements and actions change with time using little thumbnail sketches along paper with divisions representing time on screen. The main accents of the scene, such as going through the door, slamming the door, opening the door, pulling in the Welcome mat, and closing the door once more are shown along the strips, placed according to which frame contains the action. Where each measure of music falls is notated along the strips as well, and the swelling or dropping off of the line of action through the frames must resonate with the music synched with the film. This is a perfect example of the meticulous detail and effort put in by Disney animators that imparted quality to the resulting films and gave the studio a competitive edge.

The document is a primary source, and a perfect example of the care and extra work put in by Disney employees that is discussed in other sources. It gets into the detail of exactly how the amazing feats Disney studios was able to achieve were performed, and Three Little Pigs is a great example of the effective use of synchronized sound. This illustration, and the accompanying discussion, helps me prove that sound effects and music were part of what made Three Little Pigs so astounding. In addition, this book is almost a bible, filled with details of the animating process which would help me gather background information to discuss other aspects of my argument such as illustration and other animation methods which helped in characterization, as well as color and photography methods.

In Chapter 18 ("Everyone Grows Up") of this book, the author discusses the Silly Symphonies, beginning with Three Little Pigs. He provides details and statistics about the film's success, as well as corroborating them with an account of how the old practice of "bicycling," or lending of prints to neighboring theaters between showings, became necessary due to the extent of its popularity. He also mentions that the hit song featured in the film, "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf," was written by Disney composer Frank Churchill, while the lyrics were supplied by Ted Sears. An anecdote about Mary Pickford's visit to the studio as the short was being made is supplied. Multiple quotes are included, and one of Walt Disney's stands out in which he comments that in Three Little Pigs, the studio has finally achieved the goal of creating characters with different personalities.

The book also discusses the seeming resonance of the short film's message with Roosevelt's appeal to Americans to stick together and not give up hope, but delves deeper and notes that Hoover's message of self-reliance, sturdy, conservative building and keeping the house in order are evident. Practical Pig even looks a bit like Hoover! There is an element of reproach to the tale, as if the pigs who built poorly and spent the rest of their time in frivolities had just worked a bit harder, they could have prevented the Depression and other evils lurking in the wings. But an interesting element of this chapter is its inclusion of Disney's responses to these readings; he is quoted as claiming he intended no such message, and even no message at all. He says they were intended to convey nothing more than was shown, and that he left interpretation to others.

This book would be a helpful resource because it provides primary sources, namely Disney’s own words, about the success of bestowing individual personalities upon characters in Three Little Pigs. It also gives an interesting reading of the underlying message of the film but provides evidence that Walt Disney didn’t intend for these readings at all. It proves, using Walt’s own quotes, that Disney saw this film as the first true triumph in character development and differentiation. In addition, as an account of his entire life, the book is a wealth of information pertinent to the background of Walt Disney and his studio.

From 1929 to 1939, Walt Disney produced a series of 76 short animated films. "Three Little Pigs," which was released in 1933, marked the first example of the technical innovation and experimentation whose culmination would make possible Disney's future work, and the beginning of an era of feature films with recognizable characteristics for which Disney would become known. "Three Little Pigs" pioneered in the areas of narrative, character development, color, and music and sound integration; Disney set high goals for itself and achieved them in this short film.
This book contains an interesting analysis of the characterization of the pigs in Three Little Pigs in the third chapter, entitled "'You've Got to Really Be Minnie:' Building a Better Mouse, 1928-1938. The author argues that this film was concerned with more than making the pigs look alive through the animation: each character had to have a distinct personality. Other parts of the discussion deal with how the movements, expressions, and other aspects of the pigs were relatively formulaic, but, coupled with the music, they emerged as different characters. There is also a long excerpt from a memo of Walt Disney's, which was attached to the outline for Three Little Pigs that made its way around the studio in December of 1932. It discusses various ways to add to the appeal of the pigs, with their voices, rhymes, and other elements, and concludes with the sentence: "They will be more like human characters." Characterization is the emphasis of this section, and the success in this arena is attributed to Frank Churchill's gift at improvising and adapting with his composing and Burt Gillett's energetic direction.

This source is perfect, both for its commentary on and primary source excerpts concerning the characterization of the pigs in Three Little Pigs. It is a primary source, and is especially key for making the point that not only can the efforts to differentiate and bestow personalities upon the pigs be seen today, but that they were actually intended and discussed during production. The studio put conscious effort, due in no small part to Walt Disney’s specific requests and suggestions, into making Three Little Pigs the first of its releases to feature characters with pleasing but individual personalities.

The animated short Three Little Pigs is the focus of this paper; the author claims that this short was significant first for epitomizing the quality of Disney films in the 1930s, whose popularity can't be conceived of today. In addition, the author sees the film as crucial in character animation, paving the way for the enduring characters of the next decade. The narrative, indirectly, and the commercial success, more directly, enabled Disney's first feature-length animated film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

The article also discusses the technical achievements of the film, such as the difficulty in animating such similar characters and the effective use of color. The latter innovation, color, was used most effectively by including subtle tone changes with purpose, such as to reinforce the exhaustion of the wolf after trying to blow down the brick house by changing the colors of his face. Finally, sound was key to the film's success and influence. Written to illustrate a song that became a hit, "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?", the music helps differentiate characters. The character development was further aided by focusing on four characters, instead of the huge undifferentiated masses often featured in earlier Silly Symphonies.

Finally, the article addresses the metaphor of the story as two-pronged. The popularity of the film suggests the dormant, hopeful message that hard work alone will allow men to prevail even in times of doubt; this was an appealing message in the Depression. Second, audiences saw Walt Disney as a role model. It's possible that simple plots, like that of this short, helped Disney films maintain popularity over competing Warner Brothers series which today seem more appealing.

This article is key to my argument; it helps provide evidence that Three Little Pigs paved the way for Snow White and the future Disney style of creating feature-length films with the same character development, simple plots and positive, moral underlying messages that appealed to audiences.

This is a book of color illustrations and other similar primary source illustrated documents, from final screenshots to draft sketches to storyboard excerpts.  The accompanying text provides context for each picture.  It begins with a series of essays, the second of which is entitled "Mickey Mouse and Silly Symphonies."  The essay discusses how the emphasis on music in earlier short films such as Steamboat Willie and The Jazz Fool led directly to the initiation of the Silly Symphonies.  Many are mentioned, such as the first, Skeleton Dance, and the first in color, Flowers and Trees.  Two drawings from Three Little Pigs are featured.  The essay discusses the evolution of Technicolor, especially from the two-color to three-color system.  It also discusses the development of the art of animation, especially as driven by the inventive animator Albert Hurter.  He designed settings and main characters, and invested significant effort in developing concepts and visuals which would trigger further development and inspiration on the part of the story writers and other animators.

The essays in this book, and especially the color illustrated accompaniment, would help me intelligently discuss the efforts made at Disney studios to embrace technology and inspire animators.  Facts and examples of the development of Technicolor technology and the changes it caused in films are provided and would help me make the point that the Silly Symphonies, the focus of the discussion, were truly a place where new technologies could be tested and Disney employees made efforts to inspire each other to do great things.

This newspaper article commends Disney for not continuing in the direction of Steamboat Willie, but instead “fleshing out” individual characters., giving them “soul” and “color.” The author cites Three Little Pigs as a major turning point for Disney, especially in that it was the first Disney film to have a real plot. The relation of each pig to his house and its construction differentiates and enriches each character. The article includes a quote from Chuck Jones on the subject of Three Little Pigs which comments on character differentiation, saying that in the past, different characters looked different, but in this film, similar-looking characters were differentiated using elements other than visuals alone. The quote also clearly states Jones’ belief that Three Little Pigs was a turning point.

The article mentions music, color, and style as contributing to the success of the film, and states that these factors and the short’s popularity led Disney to another plane. His animated work was, as a direct result of this film, treated seriously, as art, and this can possibly be seen as the beginning of the “Disney empire.” The production of subsequent films, shorts and features, served to codify the Disney style, epitomized by the first Disney feature, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

This article provides a primary source: animator Chuck Jones states that Three Little Pigs was a turning point. Also helpful is the discussion of why the short was so important, with a focus on characterization and plot. An interesting view expressed here but not elsewhere is that not only did Three Little Pigs serve as an internal bridge from experimental to feature-length fairy tale, but it also launched Disney’s fame externally in the eyes of critics and film journals, and in this way contributed to Disney’s future dominance.

In Chapter 1, entitled “Popular Culture,” the author addresses Disney’s populist tendencies, providing examples of Disney’s desire to bring high art to the people and provide messages of reassurance. While looking later in the timeline at works like Fantasia, he mentions the Silly Symphonies as originally being meant to illustrate both classical and jazz music, including the fact that the animators and writers were encouraged to experiment with the medium, aided by the absence of constraints like recurring characters. In addition, Three Little Pigs is cited as a prime example of Disney’s inclusion of his beliefs in battling urban industrialism with the ideals of agrarian and rural values. Looking deeper, the message of this short is seen as a reference to biblical tales like David and Goliath, and is seen as a possible mobilizing force in American society that may have catalyzed demands for solutions to the Depression such as the New Deal.

This source is interesting because it provides direct evidence for what other articles and writings, and my own viewings of Three Little Pigs and other Silly Symphonies, have only suggested: that the animated series began as a field for experimentation and discovery on the part of Disney Studios. It also provides slightly different readings of the moral undertones of the film, claiming that it might have been not only individually inspiring but may have contributed to or more directly affected societal change.

This is a blog entry, but it seems to be of high enough quality for use. Its thesis is that the Republican reading of hard times in Three Little Pigs, both the Depression of the 1930s and even today's housing crisis, is "undercut by various elements of subversion." Characterization helps to differentiate between the lazy pigs and the responsible pig, and these personas are echoed not only in the pigs' actions but the objects they use to decorate their houses. But the author argues that the lazy pigs are so likeable that the message is somewhat obscured, and hypothesizes that much of the Wolf's animosity and the pigs' fear may resemble the corporate structure and relationship between Walt Disney and animators. The primitive use of color contributes to the dream-like quality of Disney, a "surreal," sometimes uncanny vibe which contrasts sharply with how Warner Brothers cartoons, especially today, appear "secular, straightforward, unpretentious, urban, and ethnic.”

This resource would be helpful for showing the effective use of characterization. Its specificity in mentioning how characters are differentiated, through their actions, attitudes, and possessions as well as through color, would be useful. A new look at the short film’s allegorical power, namely, its relevance in today's US economy, is also interesting, as is its comparison of the dreaminess of Disney as compared to the reality of Warner Brothers animated shorts.