Archive for the ‘knock-offery’ Category

Ex Situ: Kimba The White Lion versus The Lion King

August 5, 2008

This Ex Situ refers to one of the most heated controversies surrounding Disney’s The Lion King. No, not that SEX/SFX dust cloud thing. No, not the “Original Theatrical Cut” DVD’s fraudulent advertising. Nor the fact that the filthy, treacherous, often mentally handicapped hyenas are all voiced by minority actors. Nor that troubling Riefenstahlesque imagery. Nor the confusion over whether Timon is Rosencrantz and Pumbaa is Guildenstern or vice versa.

This Ex Situ’s particular controversy is: that much of The Lion King seems to have been wholeheartedly ripped off from the influential 1960’s Japanese anime Kimba the White Lion. Perhaps not the overall plot, but several scenes and characters in The Lion King bear a suspiciously uncanny resemblance to scenes and characters in Kimba.

Over at Kimba W. Lion’s Corner of the Web, there’s a ranting, unwieldy, and unfortunately cyan page discussing the whole issue:

It is my opinion that the creative people at Disney most definitely knew of Kimba as they were making The Lion King– but somehow, before the movie could be released, it was decided that the tie must be denied. Even if that means a slap in the face for Osamu Tezuka, the “Walt Disney of Japan”.

It’s pretty damning evidence.

Remake of Tezuka’s Popular Story Turns Into Denial? >Catena Ex Situ

Mini-Analyzations

July 8, 2008

  • Anyone else read WALL•E as a sort of white flag between Steve Jobs and Bill Gates? How, in the future, all that’s left is a tough, very primitive PC is all that’s left in the vast wasteland of Earth and here comes this sleek and sexy Mac that is better in every way, and yet at the very end, the two have to band together for the future of mankind? The one damning thing is that WALL•E sounds like a Mac when he boots up. Hmm…
    -Contributed by Doc Happenin
  • After reading the post about WALL•E I just wanted to throw something out there that I’ve been thinking about. I was compelled to contribute to your finely crafted blog when I followed the link and saw him on a pile of trash and in the heap was a discarded doll of Sully. [Ex Situ: Is WALL-E Environmental or Hypocritical?]
    Pixar is very pro-environmental and for this to be stated - “I don’t have a political bent, I don’t have an ecological message to push” - is a slap in the face. If we use Monsters, Inc. as a case study we can prove that they do, in fact, have a political and environmental slant.
    The main premise of Monsters, Inc. is to uproot the current system of energy consumption and production and to find alternative means for generating energy. Fear wasn’t a viable energy source anymore because it was fading fast while, obviously, by the end of the film they made laughter seem to be endless and more efficient. It reeks (no pun) of the fight between fossil fuels and alternative energy - be it wind, solar or whatever. aside from this, the rest of the movie is wrought with big business maneuvers, corporate scandals and cover-ups and a communist finale - Sully, a worker, takes control of the company.
    I think they do push their agendas and do it in a way that most people never fully catch on. It’s propaganda with crayons and celebrity voices and they send it home with your kids happy meals.
    -Contributed by Raymond K.
  • Seven Samurai The Magnificent Seven ¡Three Amigos! A Bug’s Life
    -Contributed by The Editor

From the archives: Stone-age Inconsistencies

May 29, 2008

The following was contributed by Brendan S.

The original Flintstones TV series, enjoyable as it’s always been, was rife with a number of inconsistencies- Fred’s car seating anywhere from two people to both his family and the Rubbles, the five distinctly different designs for supporting character Joe Rockhead, whether Wilma’s maiden name was “Pebble” or “Slaghoople” and so on- but they were small potatoes compared to what would follow in the subsequent spinoffs that managed to throw everything out of whack: pretty much trashing the continuity of its flagship program in the process! (The Frankenstone/Shmoo episodes immediately come to mind.)

How is it that a teenage Pebbles & Bamm-Bamm were members of a band that played early ’70s ‘bubblegum’ music, while pre-adolescent versions ‘kiddie’ versions of Fred, Wilma, Barney and Betty (their parents, mind you!) could have fun with such ’80s pastimes as Walkmans & personal computers? Equally ludicrous- Dino as a puppy and making the future Mr. Slate the same age as Fred and the gang!

Okay, they were following the ever-changing trends of Saturday morning television respectively aping both The Archie Show and Muppet Babies, but the whole Flintstones aging and de-aging thing continues to this very day!

Now, granted, there were two episodes from the old show in which Fred dreamed he was an elderly codger and they worked. Adding to the confusion, however, Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm were adult newlyweds in a pair of ’90s tv specials. On the current Post Cereal commercials, they’re infants again! (The Pebbles ads, at least, being a little closer in spirit to vintage Flintstones in that many of that show’s obscure supporting characters occasionally turn up!)

Could that alien being the Great Gazoo have possibly thrown the entire Bedrock universe off-kilter with his magic out of revenge for being stranded in the Stone Age? It’s certainly a much more believable explanation for all these latter-day discrepancies, wouldn’t you say?

The following was contributed by Brian B.

Why does Fred wear a tie? He works for a construction company, he drives the bulldozer. I don’t know any construction workers that wear ties. Perhaps if Fred was a foreman or a supervisor (foremen are usually covered with dirt hence no tie, but I’m giving the benefit of the doubt here) perhaps then he might have use for a tie. As near as I can figure, it was because Ralph Cramden wore a tie. Ralph drove a bus, not a bulldozer. If Ralph was going to dig dirt all day I doubt he’d wear a tie. Perhaps Wilma made him wear it, maybe she thought it looked sexy. But when he came home from work he was probably covered with dirt, and probably bathed immediately (I hope). So then he would have had a chance to change into something sexy for Wilma.

From the archives: Jayce and the Wheeled Warriors as a Star Wars Knock-off

February 6, 2008

jayce_bar.jpg

Contributed by Russell P.

jaycezv0.jpgDid anyone ever notice how Jayce and the Wheeled Warriors was a complete plagiarism of Star Wars? Young man in a search for his father, guided by a wise sage, and accompanied by a space pirate and comedy robots!

You can just tick of the characters against those of Star Wars,

  • Jayce=Luke Skywalker
  • Herc=Han Solo
  • Gillian=Obi Wan Kenobi
  • Oone (the magic lance guy)=C3P0
  • Ardrick=Anakin Skywalker
  • Sarboss=Emperor Palpatine
  • Flora=Leia Organa Skywalker (sort of)
The Lightning League is also very reminiscent of The Rebellion. The thing is, it probably avoided Lucasfilms prowling eyes due to it being a cartoon, despite paralleling Star Wars far closer than Battlestar Galactica (which was actually involved in a case with Lucas over plagiarism).
What entertained me about Jayce, was how despite the Sci-fi setting and the fact they had a starship, was that every week they would resort to a land battle using customized mining vehicles, (Armed Force, Drill Sargent etc.). The sort of plots they used to actually promote this situation were laughable. Still it was an excellent cautionary tale about the abuses of genetic engineering and botany.