Get an Inside Look at Mulan, Black Widow, and More in The New Issue of Disney twenty-three

By D23 Team

This spring is promising to be full of action-packed movie magic, whether we’re saving China with Mulan or discovering the secrets behind Black Widow. If you’re on the edge of your seat waiting to see what happens, we have just what you need: The latest issue of Disney twenty-three, jam-packed with exclusive interviews and behind-the-scenes details, coming exclusively to D23 Gold Members later this month.

While the tale of Mulan—the young woman who masqueraded as a man in the Imperial Army to fight Northern Invaders attacking China—may date back centuries, director Niki Caro says, “It felt to me that the story was as resonant now as when it was written.” Caro, and cast from Disney’s incredible live-action adaptation of Mulan, which opens this March, discuss making the epic film that honors both the beloved animated classic and the original story of the heroic warrior. Author Bruce Steele traveled to the set of the film to witness the elaborate battle sequences and the intimate, self-reflective moments that make this new movie so spectacular.

Disney twenty-three Spring 2020

Plus, star Chris Pratt and members of the creative team from Disney and Pixar’s Onward reveal how they made movie magic, while its two leading characters search for a little magic in their own realm. And Pratt talks about the bond he shared with costar (and fellow Avenger) Tom Holland: “Tom really is like a little brother to me, and you see that in this movie.”

And speaking of Avengers, Scarlett Johansson is back as the eponymous star of Black Widow, and the actor and her costar Florence Pugh discuss what it’s like to exchange barbs—and punches—in the new film.

In honor of Earth Month, Disney twenty-three explores The Walt Disney Company’s extensive history of conservation, dating back to Walt himself. And to celebrate both the 50th anniversary of Earth Day and the 25th anniversary of the Disney Conservation Fund, the publication takes a look at the many ways Disney upholds Walt’s vision, from new Disneynature movies and specials coming to Disney+, to National Geographic’s enduring legacy of protecting nature, to an exclusive interview with world-renowned anthropologist Jane Goodall.

Also included in the Spring issue of Disney twenty-three:

  • An oral history of A Goofy Movie—in honor of its 25th anniversary—with the stars and director of the fan-favorite film
  • Todrick Hall talks about crafting the music for the new Magic Happens parade at Disneyland
  • A first look at the dazzling new show Drawn to Life, a breathtaking partnership between Cirque du Soleil, Walt Disney Imagineering, and Walt Disney Animation Studios coming to Walt Disney World Resort this spring
  • The voice cast of Star Wars: The Clone Wars prepares us for the stunning final season coming to Disney+
  • Grace VanderWaal and the cast of Stargirl talk about adapting the YA favorite into a Disney+ original
  • A sneak peek at Inside the Walt Disney Archives: 50 Years of Preserving the Magic, an exhibition of more than 400 treasures opening this March at the Bowers Museum in Santa Ana, Calif.
  • Regular features including From the Desk Of, By the Numbers, Character Analysis, D Society, and Ask the Walt Disney Archives

Learn more about D23 Gold Membership here.

Inside the Wonderfully Weird World of Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made

By Beth Deitchman

A crowd has assembled at a park in North Portland, not far from the city’s iconic St. Johns Bridge. A rainbow of picnic blankets fills the grassy lawn, and in keeping with local culinary tradition, colorful food trucks are parked at the edge of the celebration while scores of kids and families work up an appetite. Many are in costumes inspired by wild animals, and there’s even a polar bear in our midst (more on that later!). Though a light mist falls over the location, the cast of the Disney+ original movie Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made (along with a sizeable group of Oregonian extras) prepares to begin their day of filming. “You’re from Portland—you can do it!” cheers the film’s assistant director as they get started, and the weather has no impact at all on the mood of the crowd. In fact, it’s invigorating to them, and only underscores the filmmakers’ decision to base this quirky story in a city that celebrates being different.

The fifth grader at the heart of Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made truly marches to the beat of his own drum. Winslow Fegley stars as Timmy, a bit of an outsider at school with a hilarious deadpan sense of humor. Timmy enjoys a warm relationship with his overburdened single mother, Patty, and he has an equally close but complicated dynamic with his business partner in Total Failure Inc.—the detective agency he runs with Total, a 1,500-pound polar bear. (We told you it was complicated.)

Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made

The film—which premieres on Disney+ this Friday, February 7—is based on the first in a popular series of books by Stephan Pastis, creator and illustrator of the syndicated comic strip Pearls Before Swine. When Pastis embarked upon writing his first novel, he was drawn to the idea of a great detective who might not actually have much of a clue. “It made me laugh to think of someone who’s very arrogant and thinks he’s the world’s best at something. That dichotomy, between how he saw himself and how he really was, made me laugh,” Pastis tells us.

Pastis’ book, Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made, became a New York Times bestseller when it was published in 2013 and it also found a fan in Tom McCarthy—director of acclaimed films such as The Station Agent, Win Win, and Spotlight (for which he received an Oscar® for best original screenplay). McCarthy came on board as director and co-wrote the screenplay with Pastis, who shares that seeing his novel come to life is “just like the inside of your brain has exploded.” During an action sequence filmed earlier in the production—which involved a car driving into a house—he marveled, “That’s only happening because one day I typed that.”

Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made

The author shares that he and McCarthy veered somewhat from the book as they envisioned bringing it to the screen, but it was imperative to both of them to retain Timmy’s unique voice. The character appears in literally every scene of the film, and the production looked at thousands of young actors before Fegley was cast. Timmy Failure producer Jim Whitaker (A Wrinkle in Time) says of Fegley, “He was just Timmy Failure. He’s got this certain quality of being his own unique soul. You can feel it. You can see it in his eyes.” Whitaker explains that Fegley intrinsically understood Timmy’s belief that he is a brilliant detective. “He plays the part in the way of not knowing the irony of the fact that [Timmy] is a failure. He’s not the greatest in the world, but he truly believes he is,” Whitaker says, “and in the end, he’s really not wrong because he is who he is.”

Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made

Though some might think of Total as a product of Timmy’s imagination, Whitaker emphasizes, “Total is a polar bear in real life to us.” To realize the character, the filmmakers studied polar bears in captivity and enlisted Oscar-winning visual effects supervisor Rich McBride to help bring Total to the screen. McBride is no stranger to bears, having won the Academy Award® for designing and creating the bear that terrorizes Leonardo DiCaprio’s character in The Revenant. “That’s the standard we’re holding [McBride] to and that he wants to hold himself to,” Whitaker explains, stressing that McBride shares their commitment to making Total a real polar bear that Timmy—and viewers—will adore. “It’s not an anthropomorphized polar bear. It’s not a polar bear that talks,” Whitaker notes. “He shows up in unusual places—in the middle of scenes he’ll pop up—he’ll kind of show up in a closet. He shows up wherever Timmy’s imagination wants him to show up.”

In McBride’s first conversation with McCarthy, the director shared that his vision for the movie was that it have quirky, “indie” sensibilities, but with a giant visual effect—aka a real polar bear—in the middle of it. They talked about using costumes, but according to McBride, “McCarthy wanted it to feel like a real bear. He kept referencing his dog, Georgia. So it’s like a sidekick, someone who is always following [Timmy] around and does quirky things but still acts like a real bear.” McBride and his team digitally created a complete skeleton, a full muscle system, and a full skin system that will drive the behavior and movement of the fur on the surface by the time Total comes to life on screen.

Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made

To create a foundation for these incredible visual effects that will be added in post, Michael Adamthwaite is on set to provide motion capture reference. He’s suited up in what he refers to as “a bear-shaped canoe” and walking on all fours. “It’s blown out all the possibilities for what they can do for every shot,” he says of the marriage of technology and performance capture that’s turning an imaginary polar bear into a realistic on-screen sidekick.

“Polar bears have a lot of charm and they’re funny and quirky and they do silly things,” McBride says. “I think we can incorporate their real behaviors within the action that we have within the movie.”

Total may be adorable, but that’s not why Pastis chose a 1,500-pound polar bear companion for Timmy when he first put pencil to paper. “The true answer is I don’t really think stuff through,” he laughs, but acknowledges that Total is symbolic of Timmy’s father, who left before the events of the story start to unfold. “It’s because it’s big and strong and he’s missing a dad in his life. To some degree [Total is] probably a substitute for a father who would normally be a protector, but also be sort of soft and gentle,” Pastis shares.

Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made

And while some parents might try to put the kibosh on an imagination as active as Timmy’s, Patty Failure is happy to let it be. “She doesn’t discourage it. She doesn’t encourage it either. She just allows it to kind of cultivate,” says Ophelia Lovibond, who plays Timmy’s equally quirky mom. Patty doesn’t worry until she finds her son watching TV after a bad day, rather than living in his own creative world. She sees Timmy and Patty as a “dream team.” “It’s not a mother telling her son what to do all the time. It’s just that they’re in this together,” Lovibond says. “She’s really open with him about the fact that cash flow is a bit of a problem. She doesn’t stress him out about it but she’s honest about things. She’s like, ‘C’mon, you’ve got to help me out here. We’re going to do this together.’” They’re friends, as well as mother and son.

Pastis believes that audiences will relate to the story of Timmy, a young boy who is struggling in a difficult situation at home. “All he really has going for him is his imagination,” the author says. And it’s Timmy’s imagination—not to mention that of Pastis and McCarthy—that makes Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made a film like none that you’ve seen before.

“There’s a tendency in the world that we live in to say, oh, the film is ‘this-meets-this.’ This is not ‘anything-meets-anything.’ It’s its own unique film,” Whitaker says of Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made, emphasizing, “I think [the film] will feel very different in a good way.” And that estimation couldn’t be more apt for a story that celebrates individuality, set in a city that is also very different in a good way, where a little rain and the first-ever fifth grader-polar bear detective duo would both receive a totally warm welcome.

East High Will Stage a Disney Classic in Season Two of High School Musical: The Musical: The Series

By Zach Johnson

It is with deepest pride and greatest pleasure that East High proudly presents… Beauty and the Beast! Production has resumed in Salt Lake City on season two of Disney+’s High School Musical: The Musical: The Series as the East High drama students prepare to perform Beauty and the Beast as their spring musical. Slated for a late 2020 debut, season two will feature both reimagined musical numbers from the High School Musical movies and the stage production of Beauty and the Beast, as well as new, original songs that follow season one hits such as “Born to Be Brave” and “Just for a Moment.”

Created and executive-produced by Tim Federle, the series has been “Certified Fresh” on Rotten Tomatoes®. Additionally, it was recently nominated for a GLAAD Media Award. Joe Serafini (Seb) is a series regular in the second season, joining returning cast members Olivia Rodrigo (Nini), Joshua Bassett (Ricky), Matt Cornett (E.J.), Sofia Wylie (Gina), Larry Saperstein (Big Red), Julia Lester (Ashlyn), Dara Reneé (Kourtney), Frankie Rodriguez (Carlos), Mark St. Cyr (Mr. Mazzara), and Kate Reinders (Miss Jenn).

Disney+ has also shared a video of the cast singing a portion of the award-winning Broadway musical’s renowned title song, “Beauty and the Beast,” to celebrate the news:

“We’re excited about Tim’s plans for the new season,” said Ricky Strauss, president, Content & Marketing, Disney+. “He continues to amaze and surprise us with the relationships and stories he’s creating for this unbelievably talented cast. Season two will be filled with even more of the humor, heart, and music that made HSMTMTS a break-out series on Disney+.”

Gary Marsh, president and chief creative officer, Disney Channels Worldwide, added, “The opportunity to ‘borrow’ one of the most classic Disney scores—and build our second season of HSMTMTS around it—is like having your wish upon a star granted.”

“The outpouring of love and support for season one has been incredibly exciting, and I’m thrilled that the Wildcats are putting on Beauty and the Beast in season two,” said Federle. “It was one of the first Broadway shows I ever saw, when I was 14, and it’s got all the perfect metaphors for the high school experience: Do people judge me for how I look? What is true love? Will I achieve the future I dream of? And, perhaps most importantly, it’s got dancing forks.”

Season one of High School Musical: The Musical: The Series is now available on Disney+. The soundtrack debuted on the Billboard 200 at No. 31, while “All I Want,” written and performed by Rodrigo, has been streamed more than 52 million times. Rodrigo will perform it on Live with Kelly and Ryan February 6; please check your local listings.

Watch the Big Game Trailers for Mulan, Black Widow and Marvel Studios’ Disney+ Series

By Zach Johnson

Yesterday, millions of people watching the Big Game got a special look at two of the year’s most highly anticipated films, Mulan and Black Widow, plus a sneak peek at three of Marvel Studios’ new series in the works for Disney+: The Falcon and The Winter Soldier, WandaVision, and Loki.

Mulan

When Disney’s Mulan opens in theaters on March 27, it will tell the legendary tale of a fearless young woman who risks everything out of love for her family and her country to become one of the greatest warriors China has ever known. When the Emperor of China issues a decree that one man per family must serve in the Imperial Army to defend the country from Northern invaders, Hua Mulan, the eldest daughter of an honored warrior, steps in to take the place of her ailing father. Masquerading as a man, Hua Jun, she is tested every step of the way and must harness her inner strength and embrace her true potential. It is an epic journey that will transform her into an honored warrior and earn her the respect of a nation… and a proud father.

The cast of Mulan includes Yifei Liu as Mulan, Donnie Yen as Commander Tung, Tzi Ma as Zhou, Jason Scott Lee as Böri Khan, Yoson An as Honghui, and Ron Yuan as Sergeant Qiang, with Gong Li as Xianniang and Jet Li as the Emperor. The film is directed by Niki Caro from a screenplay by Rick Jaffa & Amanda Silver and Lauren Hynek & Elizabeth Martin, suggested by the narrative poem “The Ballad of Mulan.” Chris Bender, Jake Weiner, and Jason Reed are the producers, and Bill Kong, Barrie M. Osborne, Tim Coddington and Mario Iscovich are the executive producers.

Black Widow

In Marvel Studios’ action-packed spy thriller Black Widow, Natasha Romanoff aka Black Widow confronts the darker parts of her ledger when a dangerous conspiracy with ties to her past arises. Pursued by a force that will stop at nothing to bring her down, Natasha must deal with her history as a spy and the broken relationships left in her wake long before she became an Avenger. Scarlett Johansson reprises her role as Natasha/Black Widow, while Florence Pugh stars as Yelena, David Harbour stars as Alexei/The Red Guardian, and Rachel Weisz stars as Melina.

Directed by Cate Shortland and produced by Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige, Black Widow—the first film in Phase Four of the Marvel Cinematic Universe—opens in U.S. theaters on May 1, 2020. In addition to the TV spot, Marvel Studios also shared four character posters:

super bowl trailers

super bowl trailers

super bowl trailers

super bowl trailers

The Falcon and the Winter Soldier
Following the events of Avengers: Endgame, Sam Wilson/Falcon (Anthony Mackie) and Bucky Barnes/Winter Soldier (Sebastian Stan) team up in a global adventure that tests their abilities—and their patience—in Marvel Studios’ The Falcon and The Winter Soldier. Directed by Kari Skogland, Malcolm Spellman serves as the series’ head writer. It will debut on Disney+ this fall.

WandaVision
Marvel Studios’ WandaVision blends the style of classic sitcoms with the MCU as Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen) and Vision (Paul Bettany)—two super-powered beings living their ideal suburban lives—begin to suspect that everything is not as it seems. Directed by Matt Shakman, Jac Schaeffer is the series’ head writer. WandaVision will debut on Disney+ this year.

Loki
In Marvel Studios’ Loki, the mercurial villain Loki (Tom Hiddleston) resumes his role as the God of Mischief in a new series that takes place after the events of Avengers: Endgame. Directed by Kate Herron, Michael Waldron is the series’ head writer. Loki will debut on Disney+ next year.

Disney Bringing Hamilton Movie with Original Broadway Cast to Theaters

By Zach Johnson

Look around! Look around at how lucky we are! Today, The Walt Disney Company, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Jeffrey Seller, and Thomas Kail announced an agreement for the worldwide distribution rights that will bring Hamilton—the 11-time-Tony Award®-, Grammy Award®-, Olivier Award-, and Pulitzer Prize-winning stage musical—to movie screens. The film will be released by The Walt Disney Studios in the United States and Canada on October 15, 2021.

“Lin-Manuel Miranda created an unforgettable theater experience and a true cultural phenomenon, and it was for good reason that Hamilton was hailed as an astonishing work of art. All who saw it with the original cast will never forget that singular experience,” said Robert A. Iger, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, The Walt Disney Company. “And we’re thrilled to have the opportunity to share this same Broadway experience with millions of people around the world.”

The original Broadway cast appearing in the film include Tony Award winners Miranda as Alexander Hamilton; Daveed Diggs as Marquis de Lafayette/Thomas Jefferson; Renée Elise Goldsberry as Angelica Schuyler; and Leslie Odom Jr. as Aaron Burr; Tony Award nominees Christopher Jackson as George Washington; Jonathan Groff as King George; Phillipa Soo as Eliza Hamilton; and Jasmine Cephas Jones as Peggy Schuyler/Maria Reynolds; Okieriete Onaodowan as Hercules Mulligan/James Madison; and Anthony Ramos as John Laurens/Philip Hamilton.

The cast also includes Carleigh Bettiol, Ariana DeBose, Hope Easterbrook, Sydney James Harcourt, Sasha Hutchings, Thayne Jasperson, Elizabeth Judd, Jon Rua, Austin Smith, Seth Stewart, and Ephraim Sykes. Film producers include Miranda, Seller, and Kail, who also directs.

“I fell in love with musical storytelling growing up with the legendary Howard Ashman-Alan Menken Disney collaborations—The Little Mermaid, Beauty and The Beast, Aladdin,” said Miranda. “I’m so proud of what Tommy Kail has been able to capture in this filmed version of Hamilton—a live theatrical experience that feels just as immediate in your local movie theater. We’re excited to partner with Disney to bring the original Broadway company of Hamilton to the largest audience possible.”

The film of the original Broadway cast performing Hamilton is a leap forward in the art of “live capture,” as it will transport audience into the world of the Broadway show in a uniquely intimate way. Combining the best elements of live theater and film, the result is a cinematic stage performance that is a wholly new way to experience Hamilton. “We are thrilled for fans of the show, and new audiences across the world, to experience what it was like on stage—and in the audience—when we shot this at The Richard Rodgers Theatre on Broadway in June of 2016,” said Kail. “We wanted to give everyone the same seat, which is what this film can provide.”

A Look Back at the Oscars®, Fantastic Voyage

By Lynne Drake, Walt Disney Archives

The 39th Academy Awards were held on April 10, 1967, at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. The 20th Century Fox film, Fantastic Voyage (1966), was shot in CinemaScope Color and won the night’s top prize for Art Direction (Color). Art direction for the film was overseen by Jack Martin Smith and Dale Hennesy, with set decoration by Walter M. Scott and Stuart A. Reiss.

The sci-fi fantasy epic also won the category for Best Special Visual Effects (Art Cruickshank) and was recognized that year with nominations in Cinematography (Color) (Ernest Laszlo), Film Editing (William B. Murphy), as well as Sound Effects (Walter Rossi).

In honor of this fantastical and award-winning heritage, please enjoy a special look at concept art and sets from Fantastic Voyage.

 

Every Oscar®-Winning Movie and Short You Can Watch on Disney+

By Zach Johnson

The 92nd Academy Awards® are right around the corner, and The Walt Disney Company’s portfolio of brands combined for a total of 23 nominations in 15 categories. Before this year’s Oscars® ceremony airs live on Sunday, February 9, at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT on ABC, we’ve rounded up previous winners you can stream now on Disney+.

Flowers and Trees

1930s
Flowers and Trees (Best Animated Short)
Three Little Pigs (Best Animated Short)
The Tortoise and the Hare
(Best Animated Short)
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (Honorary)
The Old Mill (Best Animated Short)
Ferdinand the Bull (Best Animated Short)
The Ugly Duckling (Best Animated Short)

Pinocchio

1940s
Pinocchio (Best Original Score; Best Original Song: “When You Wish Upon a Star”)
Dumbo (Best Original Score)
Lend a Paw (Best Animated Short)
Miracle on 34th Street (1947) (Best Actor in a Supporting Role: Edmund Gwenn; Best Story: Valentine Davies; Best Adapted Screenplay)

20,000 Leagues Under the Sea

1950s
The Living Desert (Best Documentary Feature)
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (Best Production Design; Best Visual Effects)
The Vanishing Prairie (Best Documentary Feature)

The Sound of Music

1960s
Polyanna (Juvenile Award: Disney Legend Hayley Mills)
Mary Poppins
(Best Actress in a Leading Role: Disney Legend Julie Andrews; Best Film Editing; Best Visual Effects; Bets Score; Best Original Song: “Chim Chim Cher-ee)
The Sound of Music (Best Picture; Best Director: Robert Wise; Best Original Score; Best Sound Mixing; Best Film Editing)

Bedknobs and Broomsticks

1970s
Bedknobs and Broomsticks (Best Visual Effects)
Star Wars: A New Hope (Best Art Direction; Best Costume Design; Best Film Editing; Best Original Score; Best Sound; Best Visual Effects; Special Achievement for Sound Effects Editing)

Who Framed Roger Rabbit

1980s
Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back (Best Sound; Special Achievement for Best Visual Effects)
Star Wars: Return of the Jedi
(Special Achievement for Visual Effects)
Tin Toy
(Best Animated Short)
Who Framed Roger Rabbit (Best Sound Editing; Best Visual Effects; Best Film Editing)
The Little Mermaid (Best Original Score; Best Original Song: “Under the Sea”)

Beauty and the Beast

1990s
Beauty and the Beast (1991) (Best Original Score; Best Original Song: “Beauty and the Beast”)
Aladdin (Best Original Score; Best Original Song: “A Whole New World”)
The Lion King (1994) (Best Original Score; Best Original Song: “Can You Feel the Love Tonight?”)
Pocahontas (Best Original Score; Best Original Song: “Colors of the Wind”)
Toy Story (Special Achievement)
Geri’s Game (Best Animated Short)
Tarzan (Best Original Song: “You’ll Be in My Heart”)

Ratatouille

2000s
For the Birds (Best Animated Short)
Monsters, Inc. (Best Original Song: “If I Didn’t Have You”)
Finding Nemo (Best Animated Feature)
The Incredibles (Best Animated Feature; Best Sound Editing)
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (Best Makeup)
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (Best Visual Effects)
Ratatouille (Best Animated Feature)
WALL•E (Best Animated Feature)
Up (Best Animated Feature; Best Original Score)
Avatar (Best Production Design; Best Cinematography; Best Visual Effects)

Big Hero 6

2010s
Alice in Wonderland (2010) (Best Art Direction)
Toy Story 3 (Best Animated Feature; Best Original Song: “We Belong Together”)
The Muppets (Best Original Song: “Man or Muppet”)
Brave (Best Animated Feature)
Frozen (Best Animated Feature; Best Original Song: “Let It Go”)
Big Hero 6 (Best Animated Feature)
Inside Out (Best Animated Feature)
Piper (Best Animated Short)
Zootopia (Best Animated Feature)
The Jungle Book (2016) (Best Visual Effects)
Coco (Best Animated Feature; Best Original Song: “Remember Me”)
Bao (Best Animated Short)
Free Solo (Best Documentary Feature)
Black Panther (Best Original Score; Best Costume Design; Best Production Design)

Congratulations to all of this year’s nominees!

New Mulan Trailer and a ZOMBIES 2 AWOO Challenge—Plus More in News Briefs

By Courtney Potter

See Mulan in action, and prepare to channel your inner werewolf this weekend… Read more, along with other news from around Disney, in this week’s news briefs!

Let’s Reflect On This Brand-New Mulan Trailer and Character Posters

We’ve been waiting with bated breath, and now it’s almost here—Disney’s live-action adventure Mulan will open in theaters in just a skosh over two months! To celebrate, do check out this brand-new trailer for the film, above… as well as some of the striking new character posters, below:

Mulan posters

Director Niki Caro brings the epic tale of China’s legendary warrior to life in Mulan, from a screenplay by Rick Jaffa & Amanda Silver and Lauren Hynek & Elizabeth Martin, suggested by the narrative poem The Ballad of Mulan. It tells the story of a fearless young woman who risks everything out of love for her family and her country to become one of the greatest warriors China has ever known. When the Emperor of China issues a decree that one man per family must serve in the Imperial Army to defend the country from Northern invaders, Hua Mulan, the eldest daughter of an honored warrior, steps in to take the place of her ailing father. Masquerading as a man, Hua Jun, she is tested every step of the way and must harness her inner strength and embrace her true potential. It is an epic journey that will transform Mulan into an honored warrior and earn her the respect of a grateful nation… and of a proud father.

Look for Mulan at a cineplex near you March 27!

Save the Date!
Be sure to mark these upcoming Disney events on your calendar:

D23 and Walt Disney Archives
January 31, 2020
Disney’s Aladdin the Hit Broadway Musical VIP Tickets
February 8, 2020
D23 Magical Screening Series: The Three Caballeros 75th on The Walt Disney Studios Lot
February 12, 2020
D23 at Disneyland After Dark: Sweethearts’ Night!
February 13, 2020
Attend The Call of the Wild Red Carpet Premiere in Hollywood!
February 15, 2020
D23 Magical Screening Series: The Three Caballeros 75th at Walt Disney World
February 16, 2020
D23 Magical Screening Series: The Three Caballeros 75th Near Washington, D.C.
March 4, 2020
D23 Member Preview of Inside the Walt Disney Archives at the Bowers Museum
August 9, 2020
Adventures by Disney Rhine River Cruise Presented by D23
Parks
January 17—February 9, 2020
Lunar New Year returns to Disney California Adventure park
January 17—February 24, 2020
Epcot International Festival of the Arts
February 28—April 21, 2020
Disney California Adventure Food & Wine Festival returns to Disneyland Resort
March 4June 1, 2020
Epcot International Flower & Garden Festival at Walt Disney World Resort
March 4, 2020
Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway opens at Disney’s Hollywood Studios

Studios
March 6, 2020
Onward opens in U.S. theaters
March 27, 2020
Mulan opens in U.S. theaters
May 1, 2020
Marvel Studios’ Black Widow opens in U.S. theaters
May 29, 2020
Artemis Fowl opens in U.S. theaters
Television
February 9, 2020 (8:00 p.m. ET | 5 p.m. PT)
The Oscars® air live on ABC.
February 14, 2020 (8 p.m. EST/PST)
ZOMBIES 2 premieres on Disney Channel and DisneyNOW
February 16, 2020 (8 p.m. EST/ 7 p.m CST)
American Idol returns to ABC
Disney+
February 7, 2020
Timmy Failure premieres
February 14, 2020
Disney’s Fairy Tale Weddings premieres
February 21, 2020
Star Wars: The Clone Wars premieres
March 13, 2020
Stargirl premieres

Zombies 2 Awoooo Challenge

Celebrate National Werewolf Day with ZOMBIES 2 AWOO Challenge

Ready to channel your inner werewolf? (Who isn’t, really?) Well, look no further than the ZOMBIES 2 AWOO Challenge—in honor of both the upcoming, highly anticipated Disney Channel Original Movie and National Werewolf Day on Thursday, February 6!

From now through this Sunday, February 2, fans can show off their wild side by entering the AWOO Challenge—the opportunity to be part of the longest howl of all time!—by uploading their very own howling video, to potentially be included in a compilation video set for release on National Werewolf Day. All submissions will be entered for a chance to win a ZOMBIES 2 prize pack full of movie-inspired swag from the upcoming DCOM.

Additionally, fans can also participate in the AWOO Challenge by visiting a special ZOMBIES 2 Surprise Lockers event in three locations across the country to record and upload their video in-person; events are scheduled for Saturday, February 1, and Sunday, February 2 in San Diego, CA (Fashion Valley Mall), Philadelphia, PA (King of Prussia), and Louisville, KY (Jurassic Quest at the Kentucky Exposition Center).

For more information, visit z2awoo.com—and mark your calendars for the big ZOMBIES 2 premiere on Valentine’s Day, Friday, February 14, at 8 p.m. ET/PT on Disney Channel and DisneyNOW.

Disney Fairy Tale Weddings to Premiere on Disney+ This Valentine’s Day

 We’re big fans of Disney Fairy Tale Weddings ‘round these parts, so this next bit of news got us more excited than an entire wedding party hitting the dance floor for the “Electric Slide”: The feel-good series is back, and this time it’s bringing some wedded bliss to Disney+! And it’ll follow everything from epic weddings and intimate vow renewals, to magic proposals and even some memorable anniversary celebrations—all with that distinctive Disney magic.

Hosted once again by Stephen “tWitch” Boss (resident DJ on The Ellen Show) and his wife, Dancing with the Stars pro Allison Holker, the eight-episode season will take viewers to Walt Disney World and Disneyland Resorts; aboard Disney Cruise Line; on the gorgeous grounds at Aulani, A Disney Resort & Spa; and even internationally with some romantic trips with Adventures By Disney. Viewers will also have the chance to get the inside scoop on planning a Disney Wedding—sitting in on a planning session and gathering wedding “inspo.”

It all kicks off on Friday, February 14—Valentine’s Day—when Disney Fairy Tale Weddings premieres on Disney+… and if you’ve got some nuptials coming up, don’t forget to visit Disney’s Fairy Tale Weddings & Honeymoons for more info!

Harrison Ford Talks The Call of the Wild in New Featurette

In just a few weeks’ time, we’ll get to experience the literary classic The Call of the Wild in a whole new way. And this week, we heard from the film’s star, Harrison Ford, in a new featurette entitled Adventure Companions. Take a look, above.

Adapted from the beloved book, The Call of the Wild vividly brings to the screen the story of Buck, a big-hearted dog whose blissful domestic life is turned upside down when he is suddenly uprooted from his California home and transplanted to the exotic wilds of the Canadian Yukon during the Gold Rush of the 1890s. As the newest rookie on a mail delivery dog sled team—and later its leader—Buck experiences the adventure of a lifetime, ultimately finding his true place in the world and becoming his own master. As a live-action/animation hybrid, The Call of the Wild employs cutting edge visual effects and animation technology to render the animals in the film as fully photorealistic (and emotionally authentic) characters.

Directed by Chris Sanders—and starring Ford as John Thornton, Omar Sy as Perrault, Dan Stevens as Hal, Karen Gillan as Mercedes, and Bradley Whitford as Judge Miller—the film opens in theaters February 21.

American Idol

American Idol Returns to ABC on February 16

The search for the next singing sensation is almost here: American Idol is back on ABC for season three beginning Sunday, February 16 (8-10 p.m. EST)! Returning this season are music industry legends and all-star judges Luke Bryan, Katy Perry, and Lionel Richie—as well as Emmy®-winning producer Ryan Seacrest as host. Plus, multimedia personality Bobby Bones will return to his role as in-house mentor.

In the highly anticipated premiere, us lucky viewers will embark on a nationwide journey across Savannah, GA; Milwaukee, WI; Washington, D.C.; Los Angeles, CA; and Sunriver, OR, where the show’s iconic judge auditions will surprise audiences with never-before-seen twists. Those auditioning for the coveted ticket to Hollywood include a subway performer from Harlem who gives one of the most emotional auditions in Idol history; a garbage collector with no experience who heads to the streets of Savannah, alongside host Seacrest, to warm up for his audition; and a hopeless romantic who encounters her own fairy tale twist during her audition as she sings from the heart. We can’t wait for all the magical musical merriment!

Onward

Special Look at Onward Coming to Disney Parks

We’ll get to meet the Barley brothers from Disney and Pixar’s Onward in fairly short order—but, if you’re planning on enjoying some Disney vacation magic in the next few weeks, you’ll soon be able to delight in an early sneak peek of the film!

For a limited time beginning Friday, February 7, guests visiting Disney Parks can catch a glimpse of scenes from the film; sneak peeks will be shown in the Tomorrowland Theater at Disneyland park and as part of the Walt Disney Presents attraction at Disney’s Hollywood Studios at Walt Disney World Resort. Additionally, guests aboard Disney Cruise Line can also catch this special look at scenes from the film during select sailings in February and early March.

Set in a suburban fantasy world, Disney and Pixar’s Onward introduces two teenage elf brothers—Ian (voice of Tom Holland) and Barley (voice of Chris Pratt)—who embark on an extraordinary quest after being given the chance to spend one more day with their father. Join the adventure in theaters beginning March 6!

8 Disney Film-Inspired Animated Series You Need to Watch on Disney+

By Jocelyn Buhlman

If you’ve ever watched a Disney movie and wished you could see more of the story, we’ve got some good news for you: Disney+ has lots of television series based on classic Disney animated features that you can stream right now! Some are prequels to beloved films, while others are sequels that continue the big-screen adventure—or even tell a story set around new characters in an animated world that you already love. Read on for some of our favorites that we’re sure you’ll be adding to your watchlist.

Disney's The Little Mermaid

1. Disney’s The Little Mermaid
Before Ariel became part of our human world, she was flipping her fins through adventures in the undersea world of Atlantica. The animated series, which introduced us to an ocean’s worth of new characters and charming new songs, is streamable on Disney+ right now, so swim on over and join the fun.

Hercules the Animated Series

2. Disney’s Hercules: The Animated Series
If you loved the myth-turned-Disney magic of 1997’s Hercules, this animated series chronicling Herc’s life as a teenager is perfect for you. Produced by Mark McCorkle and Bob Schooley (the creative minds who also brought you Kim Possible and Big Hero 6 The Series), the series serves both as the story of Hercules’ hero training and as a way to retell many classic Greek myths within the world of Hercules. If you want epic adventures with your favorite zero-turned-hero, it would be a myth-stake not to stream season one on Disney+ right now.

Big Hero 6: The Series

3. Big Hero 6: The Series
McCorkle and Schooley also serve as executive producers of Big Hero 6 The Series—and the animated series is now streamable and ready to save your next binge-watching day! Picking up the action after the events of the film, join Hiro, Baymax, Wasabi, Honey Lemon, Gogo, and Fred on their adventures protecting their city from nefarious villains. Hiro also faces an even bigger challenge: being the new kid at the San Fransokyo Institute of Technology! Can the team save the day? Will Hiro fit in on campus? Head over to Disney+ to find out.

Lilo & Stitch: The Series

4. Lilo & Stitch, the Series
Stitch was experiment 626—so what happened to the 625 other experiments? This animated series, set after the events of the original Lilo & Stitch, sets out to answer that question, with Lilo, Stitch, Jumba, Pleakly, and all your favorite characters discovering a new “cousin” of Stitch in every episode. Some display unique talents for destruction (experiments that make earthquakes or tsunamis!), while others are just plain silly  (Stitch-prototype experiment 625 prefers making sandwiches to making mayhem). Two seasons of the sci-fi series are available for streaming on Disney+ right now.

The Emperor's New School

5. The Emperor’s New School
If you thought that Kuzco being a llama was hard, wait until he has to go to school! In order to officially become Emperor, Kuzco has to pass all his classes—which won’t be easy, given that the school is run by Principal Amzy (who is Yzma in disguise, attempting to make Kuzco fail). Two seasons of laugh-out-loud adventure are available to stream on Disney+ right now, so you can keep grooving with your favorite characters from the beloved film The Emperor’s New Groove.

Rapunzel's Tangled Adventure

6. Tangled: The Series
What happens after “happily ever after?” For Rapunzel and Eugene, it involves getting tangled up in a lot of adventure! Between reacquainting herself with her family (and the kingdom of Corona!) and trying to explore the secrets behind, you know, the whole “glowing hair” thing, there’s so much more in Rapunzel’s story to explore. Full of catchy music, intriguing plots, and beloved characters both new and old, fans of the original Tangled film will fall in love with this animated series.

The Three Caballeros

7. The Legend of the Three Caballeros
This year we’re celebrating 75 years of the original The Three Caballeros film, and what better way to celebrate then by flocking to Disney+ to watch this adventure following Donald Duck, Jose Carioca, and Panchito as they journey to mystical realms and battle the forces of evil with the help of Xandra, the Goddess of Adventure!

The Lion Guard

8. The Lion Guard
The Lion King 2 introduced us to Simba and Nala’s daughter, Kiara, but now’s your chance to meet their son, Kion! Tasked with leading the Lion Guard—a team of skilled animals who protect the Pride Lands—Kion joins his friends Bunga, Fuli, Beshte, and Ono on adventures across three seasons that you can stream right now on Disney+ for a roaring good time.

Q&A with Eric and Susan Goldberg About the Magical, Musical World of Fantasia 2000

By Jocelyn Buhlman

This month, we’re celebrating the 20th anniversary of Fantasia 2000, which invited a new generation of Disney animators to showcase their talents as they visually interpreted classical compositions in the style of 1940’s Fantasia. To celebrate this stunning film’s milestone anniversary, we sat down with supervising director Eric Goldberg and with his wife, Susan Goldberg, who provided art direction for two sequences in the film that Eric directed and wrote: “Rhapsody in Blue” and “The Carnival of the Animals.”

D23, The Official Disney Fan Club: The “Rhapsody in Blue” sequence in Fantasia 2000 was originally planned as a standalone short film—can you share a little bit about how the sequence became part of Fantasia 2000?

Eric Goldberg (EG): What happened was Fantasia 2000 had already started production. I proposed to Roy Disney and Don Ernst a sequence set to “Rhapsody,” and they felt that the music was too modern.

We were making it as a standalone short, but we were also working on Fantasia 2000. There was a screening of the film with 50 percent new stuff and 50 percent from the classic Fantasia, but the classic stuff didn’t really cut well with the new stuff—they’re all great, but there’s a time lag there between the two periods during which they were produced. The lights came up, Roy [Disney] turned around to me and said, “Eric, is ‘Rhapsody in Blue’ going to be ready in time?” I said, “Actually, yes, because we’re on a parallel track.” That’s how it got in.

D23: What inspired you to stylize the sequence like the caricatures of Al Hirschfeld?

EG: Al Hirschfeld was a huge influence on me. I had previously appropriated his style on Aladdin, basing characters on curvilinear drawings like his.

D23: Susan Goldberg (SG): Eric used him for the inspiration on Aladdin for Genie.

EG: When time came to do a “Rhapsody in Blue,” Al came on as our official artistic consultant, which was wonderful. Oh my gosh—to be able to have your work approved by Al Hirschfeld! We showed him the story reel and we showed him Susan’s art direction pieces. He saw those and he went, “First rate!”

It was just a wonderful, wonderful thing to really have him involved. Every now and again you get to work with one of your heroes, and I have been following Hirschfeld since high school, so to actually have a chance to work with him was amazing.

Fantasia 2000

SG: Al came out and did a couple of lectures about his work and about what inspired him and how he approached things. He is truly an interesting guy. One of the most wonderful things he ever said was, “If I need to make a drawing and I don’t have any time, I make a very busy drawing. If I have time, I make a simple drawing because it takes more time,’ and Eric approaches things that way. So, when it came time to do “Rhapsody” and could we do it in Al Hirschfield’s style, I mean, how much more New York can you get?

D23: The hotel in “Rhapsody in Blue” is named “The Goldberg”—are there any other Easter Eggs that fans should watch out for in your  sequences?

EG: Tons of them! The layout department took it upon themselves to do things in the spirit of Hirschfeld, who, of course, always hid his daughter’s name, Nina, in his drawings. If you look at a Hirschfeld drawing and there’s a number down by his signature, that’s how many names are hidden in the drawing. He’s genius, the way he has worked these things in. I tried to do that, too. I put a Nina in Duke’s toothpaste tube. There’s a Nina in Margaret’s fluffy collar.

So, the layout department figured, OK, we’ll put all our names in it. Probably the prime prankster in this one was a layout artist named Doug Walker. And he worked “Doug” into everything—I mean, Doug is all over the place. So much so, that when the film premiered, a film critic phoned the studio with this burning question: “Who’s Doug?”

D23: Do you have personal memories of New York that influenced this sequence?

EG: Well, absolutely. First of all, I met Susan in New York City. I met her through a mutual friend and the New York in “Rhapsody” is not unlike the New York that we knew in, say, the early ’80s.

SG: My first job in animation was actually in New York. I had a friend who was working for a commercial company there, and she said, “Well, why don’t you come up? They need a background painter, and I know you do that.” I just love the energy of New York. I liked the architecture—I grew up in a really small town in Florida. So, for me it was like, “Wow!”

EG: This is kind of our love letter to New York. We both loved New York and we’ve had a lot of similar experiences before we even met in New York, particularly New York City, where it’s always so teeming with different individuals who have different needs and wants and sometimes they brush up against the one another.

D23: What about “Rhapsody in Blue” appealed to you from an animation perspective?

EG: It’s always been my favorite piece of classical music. The thing that I love about it is that it has so many colors in terms of mood changes and instrumentation. It’s got a lot of flavors in it, which are advantageous to telling a fairly sprawling story about New York City. Knowing that Roy wanted a plot, we devised a plot for it and certainly things in the music dictated visuals to me. I would hear one piece and think, that sounds like a pile driver! I’d hear another and think, that sounds like car screeching to a halt. When the time came and I could storyboard it, I started connecting the dots and worked those bits into the story.

D23: Some consider “The Carnival of the Animals” to be a sequel to Fantasia’s “Dance of the Hours”—do you agree? Did “Dance of the Hours” inspire this sequence at all?

EG: Well, here’s the funny thing. Tangentially, yes. OK. We never intended it to be that way. What has happened is there is one huge, huge, huge connection to both of them—and that is the late, great Joe Grant. Joe was the one who came up with “The Dance of The Hours,” and he also came up with “Carnival of the Animals.” Originally, when he had done some rough boards on it, he envisioned [the “Carnival of the Animals” sequence] with the ostriches from “Dance of the Hours.” And, I think Michael Eisner was looking at it, and he said, “How about flamingos? We haven’t done flamingos yet.”

Fantasia 2000

So, Joe changed it to flamingos and that really put a different spin on it. We went to various zoos to study flamingo behavior, and what really came across was that they live by mob rule. When one raises its head, 20 others raise their head. When one looks left, 20 others follow left. And we just thought, OK, the guy with the yo-yo must be the guy who doesn’t want to do that. It’s a story of the conformists vs. the nonconformists, and that gave us our hook.

D23: Do you have a favorite Fantasia 2000 sequence (outside of the two you worked on)?

EG: Oh gosh, I would probably have to say “Firebird Suite.” I think it’s quite beautiful.

Fantasia 2000

SG: We had offices next to the directors [of “ Firebird Suite”], and we watched them put their hearts and souls into it, and they had a really strong animation crew that worked so hard and did it so well.

EG: I think it’s very inspiring, and very beautiful.

SG: It’s such a powerful piece of music, so I think that’s probably my other favorite outside of ours.

D23: What was it like working together on both “Rhapsody in Blue” and “The Carnival of the Animals”?

SG: We’ve actually worked together a lot, because when Eric had a commercial company, I would do backgrounds, or clean up, or assist in animation or design—whatever they needed. We’ve worked together on everything—we’ve always worked really well together. I respect him tremendously.

We have two daughters: My eldest daughter, Jennifer, is a is a character designer and an art director in animation. My youngest daughter, Rachel, is a costume designer and make costumes for [stop-motion] puppets. Animation runs in the blood. If only I could just get my cats into it!

You can watch “Rhapsody in Blue,” “Carnival of the Animals,” and the rest of the fantastically wonderful sequences in Fantasia 2000 on Disney+.