Everything New You Can Stream on Disney+ in July 2023

By Zach Johnson

Starting this July, Disney+ will begin debuting a collection of 28 newly restored Walt Disney Animation Studios classic shorts. What’s more, the new The Wonderful World of Mickey Mouse: Steamboat Silly will debut on Disney+ on Friday, July 28. In it, Mickey Mouse takes a stroll down memory lane by watching old home movies, but when he accidentally unleashes hundreds of “Steamboat Willie” Mickeys from the film reel, he and the gang must stop them from wreaking havoc on the town with their old cartoon antics.

Earlier in the month, another animated series—Kizazi Moto: Generation Fire—will premiere on Disney+ with all episodes. The action-packed animated sci-fi anthology presents 10 futuristic visions from Africa inspired by its diverse histories and cultures. Throughout the month of July, Disney+ will add a number of SHARKFEST specials from National Geographic; new episodes of beloved Disney Channel series; and so much more!

All the titles coming to Disney+ in July are listed below:

Sunday, July 2
Bull Shark Bandits (Special)
Bull Shark vs. Hammerhead (Special)
Most Extreme Sharks (Season 1, 4 Episodes)
Return of the White Shark (Special)
Saved from a Shark (Special)
Shark Below Zero (Special)
Shark Eat Shark (Special)
Sharkcano: Hawaii
Sharks vs. Dolphins: Bahamas Battleground (Special)
When Sharks Attack 36 (Season 1, 6 Episodes)
When Sharks Attack… and Why (Season 1, 5 Episodes)

Wednesday, July 5
Kiya & the Kimoja Heroes (Season 1, 5 Episodes)
Kizazi Moto: Generation Fire (Premiere) (All Episodes Streaming)
Secret Invasion (Episode 3)

Friday, July 7
Aquamania
Bath Day
Building a Building
Figaro and Frankie
Goofy Gymnastics
The Skeleton Dance

Jeff Jenkins poses for a photo at an Adirondacks lumber yard in New York.

Wednesday, July 12
Bluey (Season 3, 10 Episodes)
UFOs: Investigating the Unknown (Season 1, 5 Episodes)
Never Say Never with Jeff Jenkins (Season 1, 8 Episodes)
Secret Invasion (Episode 4)

Friday, July 14
Yuzuru Hanyu Ice Story 2023 “Gift” at Tokyo Dome (Premiere)

Zoey Johnson (Yara Shahidi) reclines on a gray couch and looks at her younger brother, Andre “Junior” Johnson (Marcus Scribner), in a scene from Season 5 of grown-ish.

Wednesday, July 19
America’s Funniest Home Videos (Seasons 20–22)
grown-ish (Season 5, 18 Episodes)
Hailey’s on It! (Season 1, 5 Episodes)
Miraculous Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir (Season 5, 6 Episodes)
Secret Invasion (Episode 5)
SuperKitties (Season 1, 4 Episodes)

Wednesday, July 26
Life Below Zero: Port Protection Alaska (Season 6, 16 Episodes)
Me & Mickey Shorts (Season 2, 10 Episodes)
Mickey Mouse Funhouse (Season 2, 5 Episodes)
Pretty Freekin Scary (Season 1, 7 Episodes)
Raven’s Home (Season 6, 5 Episodes)
Secret Invasion (Episode 6)

Friday, July 28
The Wonderful World of Mickey Mouse: Steamboat Silly (Premiere)

Disney+ to Debut 27 Restored Classic Walt Disney Animation Studios Shorts

By the D23 Team

Disney+ will begin debuting a collection of 27 newly restored Walt Disney Animation Studios classic shorts starting on Friday, July 7, featuring such iconic stars as Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck, Goofy, Pluto, Chip and Dale, and the studio’s first star, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit. This year marks the centennial of Walt Disney Animation Studios, which is being honored as part of the ongoing Disney100 celebration.

Ranging from classics to lesser-known titles, this package of short films includes examples of Disney’s earliest theatrical shorts, as well as a wide range of entertaining shorts featuring Disney’s most beloved characters. Chips Ahoy, a 1956 CinemaScope short starring Donald Duck and his chipmunk rivals (pictured below), will conclude the series in October, leading up to The Walt Disney Company’s 100th anniversary on Monday, October 16.

In this image from Chips Ahoy, Chip and Dale skim across the surface of a lake from right to left, with Dale in front and Chip holding onto his tail.

The restorations were spearheaded by the Walt Disney Studios Restoration and Preservation team, led by director Kevin Schaeffer, working in close collaboration with creative advisors from Walt Disney Animation Studios. The latter included Dorothy McKim, special projects and 2D animation producer, along with color supervision by Mike Giaimo and animator Eric Goldberg. This same team recently restored Cinderella and is currently working on a restoration of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

“We are thrilled to be working with Kevin Schaeffer and the Studio’s restoration team in presenting these beautifully restored versions of classic Disney animated shorts,” McKim says. “Two of our top artistic talents have lent their expertise and passion to the project to make sure that the films look their very best and are authentic to the creative intentions of the original filmmakers. We’re very excited to be sharing these wonderful shorts with the Disney+ audience. They have never looked or sounded better.”

A full list of the restored shorts follows:

A skeleton hunches over a tombstone in a scene from The Skeleton Dance short.

Premiering Friday, July 7:

  • The Skeleton Dance (1929)
  • Building a Building (1933)
  • Bath Day (1946)
  • Figaro and Frankie (1947)
  • Goofy Gymnastics (1949)
  • Aquamania (1961)

In this image from the animated short Mickey’s Steam Roller, Mickey Mouse drives a speeding steamroller from right to left along a city street. Minnie Mouse is in the cab of the steamroller, behind Mickey. A puff of smoke emerges from the smokestack at the front of the steamroller.

Premiering Friday, August 11:

  • Barnyard Olympics (1932)
  • Mickey’s Steam Roller (1934)
  • Donald’s Nephews (1938)
  • Goofy and Wilbur (1939)
  • Donald’s Cousin Gus (1939)
  • The Flying Jalopy (1943)

In this image from the animated short Playful Pluto, Pluto is in a grassy yard confronting a garden hose. He’s frowning at the hose and has one front leg raised to stomp out a leak in the hose while he also shakes water off his body.

Premiering September 5–8:

  • Trolley Troubles (1927)
  • All Wet (1927)
  • The Barn Dance (1929)
  • Playful Pluto (1934)
  • Mickey’s Kangaroo (1935)
  • Merbabies (1938)
  • Bone Trouble (1940)
  • Pluto, Junior (1942)

In this image from the animated short When the Cat’s Away, Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse dance in the middle of a room, while other mice stand in the background. Mickey, on the left, is dipping Minnie. There’s a sign hanging on the wall behind them that reads Home Sweet Home.

Premiering Friday, October 6:

  • When the Cat’s Away (1929)
  • Fiddling Around (1930)
  • Camping Out (1934)
  • Wynken, Blynken and Nod (1938)
  • Old Macdonald Duck (1941)
  • Inferior Decorator (1948)
  • Chips Ahoy (1956)

We Like Him When He’s Angry! The Hulk’s Top 5 Fights in the MCU

By Zach Johnson

Ever since Bruce Banner first transformed into The Hulk in 2008’s The Incredible Hulk, he’s made smashing impacts on some of the biggest villains—and heroes!—in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. (It’s not always easy to tell who’s who when you’re angry all the time!) In celebration of The Incredible Hulk making its long-awaited Disney+ debut today, we’ve rounded up five of the so-called Strongest Avenger’s most memorable fights in the MCU.

The Hulk smashes his fists into the ground, causing it to erupt.

5. The Hulk vs. Abomination (The Incredible Hulk, 2008)

Perhaps the only person angrier than The Hulk is Abomination (Tim Roth). After he wreaks havoc in Harlem, it’s up to The Hulk to stop him. “Any last words?” Abomination bellows, swinging a metal chain in the air. Pounding his firsts into the ground, The Hulk replies, “Hulk... smash!” This turns the ground into rubble, giving him the upper hand. But after an appeal from Betty Ross (Liv Tyler), he elects to spare Abomination’s life.

The Hulk picks Loki up by his feet and slams him into the ground, left and right.

4. The Hulk vs. Loki (Marvel’s The Avengers, 2012)

The Battle of New York is one of epic proportions—and for the newly formed Avengers, it proves just how mighty they really are. After taking down countless members of the Chitauri army, The Hulk sets his sights on the “puny god” they serve, Loki (Tom Hiddleston). He tosses him around like a rag doll, leaving him to contemplate his total and utter failure.

Thanos holds The Hulk overhead, then throws him onto the ground.

3. The Hulk vs. Thanos (Avengers: Infinity War, 2018)

No one can shake The Hulk’s confidence quite like the Mad Titan (Josh Brolin). Having just acquired the Power Stone from Xandar, Thanos intercepts the spaceship carrying Asgard’s survivors—and easily overpowers The Hulk, to Thor (Chris Hemsworth) and Loki’s surprise.

In the town square, The Hulkbuster repeatedly punches The Hulk in the face.

2. The Hulk vs. Hulkbuster (Avengers: Age of Ultron, 2015)

Leave it to Bruce and Tony Stark aka Iron Man (Disney Legend Robert Downey Jr.) to think two steps ahead. Aware that The Hulk could cause a major catastrophe at a moment’s notice—as he does in Johannesburg—Iron Man deploys the Mark XLIV Iron Man Armor to restrain and contain The Hulk. Easier said than done, of course, since he won’t “go to sleep.”

Thor smacks The Hulk in the face with a weapon during combat.

1. The Hulk vs. Thor (Thor: Ragnarok, 2017)

After Thor crash-lands on Sakaar, the Grandmaster (Jeff Goldblum) forces him to compete in the Contest of Champions. To Thor’s surprise, his opponent is none other than The Hulk—“a friend from work.” But it quickly becomes apparent that The Hulk isn’t going to take it easy on him. In fact, it isn’t until the Grandmaster intervenes that the fight comes to an end.

Behind the Scenes of Stan Lee with Director David Gelb

By Zach Johnson

Everyone knows Disney Legend Stan Lee... but they’ve never seen him quite like this.

From Marvel Studios and acclaimed director David Gelb, Stan Lee is the official documentary about Lee and his journey to become one of the most influential people in the world of comic books and pop culture. Tracing his life from his challenging upbringing as Stanley Lieber to the meteoric rise of Marvel Comics, the film tells Lee’s story in his own words. Using only archival material—from personal home video, interviews, and audio recordings—the film examines Lee’s origin story and what emerged from it: a universe of stories with three-dimensional characters that continue to resonate with people worldwide.

As Stan Lee makes its streaming debut on Disney+, Gelb joins D23: The Official Disney Fan Club for a Q&A.

A miniature of Stan Lee reclines on a couch with one hand behind his head. Paper is crumpled on the floor. A notepad, comics, and a coffee cup are on the table next to him.

D23: What made you want to tell Stan Lee’s story in this format?
David Gelb (DG): I’ve always been a big fan of Marvel Comics; they were my go-to when I would go to the comic book store. It had so much to do with the humanity, the relatability, and the interconnectedness of the characters, as well as Stan’s own voice—whether it was little editorial notes or things from Stan’s “Bullpen Bulletins.” My mom got me a big volume of Marvel Comics from the ’60s that had classic, hand-picked fan-favorite stories, and I also had How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way. Stan’s writing was always in my head when I was a kid. The way he used big words, he didn’t talk down to his fans. I’d have to go into the dictionary to look up what “loquacious” meant, for example. He had an immense respect for his readers, and he tried to bring comic books to a place where they really meant something. It was very inspiring to me as a kid; it was my favorite thing. I made a career out of telling stories of very inspiring people who have achieved great things, and so when the opportunity to make this documentary about Stan came to me, I leapt at the chance. I was really humbled and honored by the challenge of doing it. I wanted to make something he would’ve loved—that tells his story from his point of view and does it justice.

D23: With previous projects, you had access to your subjects. That obviously wasn’t the case here, as Lee is no longer with us. After sifting through archival material, how did you fill in the gaps in instances where he wasn’t available to elaborate or explain himself?
DG: That was the greatest challenge, even with the thousands of hours of material. He did so many interviews and so much writing; he was probably one of the most prolific authors ever. There were moments where I wished I could just call him and ask him what he meant, or I that could ask him to follow up on something. But thanks to our research team, we’d isolated the story points we really cared about, and then we really dug deep to find the pieces we needed to tell Stan’s story. We wanted to make the film a memoir of Stan’s creative life and his creative journey from his time working with Marvel. We had to figure out: How did he do it? And why did he do it? That was our compass—the humanity of Stan.

A miniature of Stan Lee makes a phone call from his desk.

D23: Once you figured that part out, how did you put it all together?
DG: We looked at in terms of, “What are the most important things that really inspire us? Who are the characters with the most interesting origin stories? Let’s dive into those and then portray them in the most visually entertaining way we can, using miniatures and animated comic panels—all the tools of cinema, really—along with Stan’s voice.” He was the master of telling other people’s origin stories, and we wanted to tell Stan’s origin story.

D23: Lee was larger-than-life. How do you distill that origin story into an 86-minute film?
DG: That’s why we had to focus our story and make it a memoir of his creativity, because his life was very big and very complicated, and there are many facets to it. What I was most interested in was getting to the bottom of what had inspired me as a kid, which is this universe that he had created, and these unique and interesting characters that he had co-created with his collaborators. How did he do that? And where did these ideas come from?

D23: Without giving anything away, where do those ideas come from?
DG: Something Stan often talked about was how Marvel Comics is the world outside your window. Those were things that inspired him. He wanted to take reality and then, through comic books, teach lesson or make a statement about inequality. In the case of X-Men, they were an allegory for the gay rights movement and the civil rights movement. All of these things come from the real world. His own experiences as a kid had everything to do with the experiences of Peter Parker. We were so inspired by the fact that nobody had done this before—that nobody had made a vulnerable, relatable superhero. We were really moved by that. It was really about Stan Lee’s perspective of the world—as well as his co-creators’ perspective—and how he translated that through his characters. That’s why his characters mean so much to people; they’re not just random guys with superpowers. They have an origin story that means something, and they’re fighting for something that means something. They make mistakes and learn from them. That is the experience of any human.

A headshot of Stan Lee director David Gelb

D23: Lee was an open book, but what surprised you about as you were making this film?
DG: Stan was a very sensitive person. He grew up in very uncertain circumstances in the Great Depression. He was anxious about money. He describes this moment of when he would listen to his parents arguing about money and the uncertainty it made him feel. He just wanted to get a job so he wouldn’t have to live in fear. He wanted to be able to provide for himself and, eventually, his family. He cared deeply about his family. He also went through some personal tragedies that are detailed in the film. Yes, he’s this larger-than-life character you’ve seen on TV, but he’s a real person. There is a delineation a little bit between the character of Stan Lee that he presents when he goes on late-night talk shows, cracking jokes and everything, and the real guy with real sensitivities. We cover the conflicts and the great highs and lows with his key collaborators, Steve Ditko and [Disney Legend] Jack Kirby. We have footage that shows his sensitivities and emotions regarding that—wanting to give them credit, and at the same time, standing up for what he came up with. These are real things that any person goes through in a collective creative process. We wanted to show him, just as he did with his own comic book characters, as a human being—to show him as somebody who has an urge to make an impact on the world, but who also just wants to make enough money to take care of his family, to make sure that the people working around him are satisfied and are able to keep working. It’s just very human.

D23: What do you hope Disney+ viewers take away from your Stan Lee documentary?
DG: Stan’s key message—which he talked about quite a bit—is to believe in yourself. If you have something you want to say, believe in it and you may succeed. You may not. But don’t give up on your vision because somebody else is says it’s a bad idea. Everybody said he was crazy for trying to make comic book characters that were relatable or vulnerable, that used big words. These are all things that people thought that he was nuts for, but it turned out he was right. I think that what Stan wants to convey—and what we want to convey—is that if you believe in something, go for it. And don’t let the pessimism of others bring you down.

Gathering Intel from the Secret Invasion Cast and Crew

By Zach Johnson

“Who do you trust?”

That’s the central question in Marvel Studios’ Secret Invasion, a new Original series premiering Wednesday, June 21, on Disney+. (It’s also the tagline in the Secret Invasion comics, a limited series of eight issues published in 2008 and written by Brian Michael Bendis.) Because, as it turns out, a faction of rebel Skrulls is done waiting for Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) to find them a new home planet. Considering that the alien race can shape-shift into anyone they choose, well... trust is lacking.

“It’s a very human show,” Ali Selim, who directs all six episodes, said at a recent press conference. “It’s the Nick Fury story. He’s a human. He does have his own version of superpowers, but they’re not like superheroes’ superpowers. It’s a story about him putting his feet back on the ground once again after some time. I like stories that come from the heart, that are human-scaled, then reach for a universal appeal, rather than the reverse.”

According to Kevin Feige, executive producer and President of Marvel Studios, it was executive producer Jonathan Schwartz who first imagined adapting this story for Disney+. “Jonathan came into my office a number of years ago—when we were thinking about what kinds of shows to do on Disney+—with this idea of translating the great Secret Invasion storyline from the comics in a darker, grittier spy show, which we hadn’t done,” Feige said. “We love to do different genres for everything, and this was an attempt to dive back into things we touched upon in Captain America: The Winter Soldier but hadn’t in a while—really delving into the tone of a spy show and seeing this very different dynamic between Fury and Talos than we had seen in our [1990s-set] buddy-action movie Captain Marvel.”

The rebel Skrull leader Gravik (Kingsley Ben-Adir) sits alone, with his hands clasped, in an abandoned room. Sunlight pours in from the broken window behind him.

Noting that the espionage series will play out like a “political thriller,” Selim said each episode will tackle “very simple human emotions, like trust and suspicion,” in addition to diving into “the personal life of Nick Fury and the inner life of Nick Fury”—something he’s managed to conceal from nearly everyone since joining S.H.I.E.L.D. more than 30 years ago.

Now that he’s left S.A.B.E.R. and is back on Earth (much to his chagrin), Fury will “lead you to all these other people that are really, really interesting,” Jackson said. For the first time in years, he will reunite with old friends such as Talos (Ben Mendelsohn), Maria Hill (Cobie Smulders), Colonel James “Rhodey” Rhodes (Cheadle), and agent Everett Ross (Martin Freeman), as well as Sonya Falsworth (Olivia Colman). “They’ve got history,” said Colman, who makes her MCU debut in Secret Invasion. Like the carefully trained MI6 agent she portrays, Colman didn’t say much else about her role. “She’s quite funny,” the Academy Award® winner added, “and she’s potentially a little bit not that nice sometimes.” Ever direct, Jackson said Colman’s character is “possibly the most dangerous woman in the U.K.”

Naturally, Fury’s prolonged absence has damaged his longstanding partnership with Hill. “I think their relationship is quite strained,” Smulders says, “because she’s been calling, and he hasn’t been answering him.” After both Hill and Fury vanished during the five-year Blip, things got... complicated: “I think Maria Hill came back, someone else was sitting in her desk, and she immediately kicked them out and got to work. I think there was a mountain of cases to get to, which is part of her resentment towards Fury, because he wasn’t around.”

Sonya Falsworth (Olivia Colman) stands in a library and holds a wooden owl.

Audiences will soon be introduced to several new characters, including Gravik (Kingsley Ben-Adir), a young rebel leader; G’iah (Emilia Clarke), Talos’ daughter; Pagon (Killian Scott) and Beto (Samuel Adewunmi), Gravik’s trusted followers; and U.S. President Ritson (Dermot Mulroney). “I love working with Ben,” Clarke said. “Obviously, there’s tension all over the shop, but there is a deep familiarity, and a shorthand, and a knowledge of each other. It’s just so easy and free, acting with Ben. It’s gorgeous. We had a giggle, didn’t we?”

Clarke added that none of the MCU veterans offered much advice about “being in the world of Marvel.” Rather, they simply made sure to create an inviting set that enabled her to give her best performance. “You’ve just gone to the top of the tree, and then you find everyone who’s there is just having a really good time,” she said. “That’s kind of how it felt.” Ben-Adir agreed Marvel “really looks after you,” while Mendelsohn said, “Marvel has the best people you’ll ever work for. In 40 years, no one has come close to working for Marvel.”

Colman, a longtime fan of the MCU, feels the same way. “After every Marvel film that’s landed in cinemas, I phoned my agent and said, ‘Please, can I be in a Marvel [project]?’” she recalled. “Finally, either she got fed up with me calling her, or it just happened. So, it wasn’t, ‘Why Secret Invasion?’ Secret Invasion called, and at the mention of the word ‘Marvel,’ I went, ‘Yes... Please!’ I had an absolute ball, and it’s lived up to everything I was hoping for.”

An Exclusive Sneak Peek at Villains of Valley View Season 2

By Emily Hewitt

What’s in store for the characters of Villains of Valley View this season? D23 got the inside scoop from Isabella Pappas (Amy Madden) and Kayden Muller-Janssen (Hartley) on the pleasures and perils that fans can look forward to in Season 2 of the hit series., debuting June 15 on the Disney Channel.

The new season follows Pappas’ character Amy who struggles to balance her life in Texas with deciding to take on her new role, leader of supervillains, in Centropolis.

“In the first two episodes you really get to see her kind of struggle over this decision,” Pappas tells D23. “It’s kind of what her family’s owed but then, at the same time, it would mean losing everything that really matters most to her.”

As an impulsive person, Amy grows into herself throughout Season 2 by learning to put her loved ones first, Pappas shares.

“She realizes, as the episodes go on, that she’s hurting her family and she has to deal with the fact that maybe she needs to feel a little bit guilty. Maybe she needs to change just a little bit,” Pappas says.

Along with Amy jumping in and out of the supervillain lifestyle, her parents, Eva and Vic Madden, will also get caught up in villainous activities that even Amy thinks are too extreme.

Amy’s loyal best friend, Hartley, meanwhile, continues to grow throughout the season as she goes on more supervillain excursions with the Maddens.

“The stakes are raised not only for Amy and the family, but also for Hartley,” Muller-Janssen says. “A lot of new threats come to town, which means a lot more messes that Hartley needs to clean up.”

Another familiar face this season? Hartley’s grandmother, Celia, who will continue appearing at precisely the wrong times when the Maddens are up to their villainous activities—providing even more comedic relief.

“I am concerned for Celia because I do not understand how she has not caught on yet. I’m at the point of thinking maybe she really does know that they are villains, but is trying to play it down because there has been one too many situations of her being in the middle of a villain altercation,” Muller-Janssen shares.

There’s a new supervillain in town who will play a big role in Season 2. This new threat will leave viewers on the edge of their seat as it is unclear if Amy will come out on top, according to Pappas.

“It was really cool to see a villain that was of our age,” Pappas says. “It’s more of an even chance because they’re sort of on the same playing field.”

Not only do the Maddens have to battle supervillains in Centropolis, but they also must face relatable real-life challenges, such as getting jobs, unraveling their family’s history, and being responsible.

“The things that they are going through emotionally and physically are things that we would actually go through when we were in high school or maybe kids nowadays,” Muller-Janssen says. “This season definitely just raised the stakes and also has a lot more life lessons to learn and very beautiful heart-to-heart moments that are going to be really lovely for everyone to see.”

5 Fantastic Things to Watch This Weekend Presented by State Farm®

By Courtney Potter

School’s out for most… the sun is shining… and barbecues are firing up in backyards and patios around the country. Yup, summer is officially here! (Well, maybe it’s not quite official ’til June 21, but you catch our drift.) And luckily, there’s also lots of fun and frolicsome viewing to look forward to—on the streaming device of your choice—from around the worlds of Disney this very weekend. From catching back up with your favorite Sheffield pals of The Full Monty (after more than two decades!) to diving deep into the career of the one and only Disney Legend Stan Lee, here’s just a sampling of what’s in store:

In an image from FX’s The Full Monty, Gaz (Robert Carlyle) and his teenage daughter Destiny (Talitha Wing) are sitting on a small hillside. It’s windy and overcast, and some flowers and tall grass surround them. Destiny is looking at her father and smiling; Gaz is looking forward. She wears an army green jacket and blue jeans; he wears a leather jacket and dark jeans.

FX’s The Full Monty—now streaming on Hulu
Twenty-five years later, we join the original Monty crew for a funny and uplifting eight-episode story of friendship and community. Gaz (Robert Carlyle) is navigating relationships with his grown-up police officer son Nathan (Wim Snape) and rebel-teenage daughter Destiny (Talitha Wing). Dave (Mark Addy) and his wife Jean (Lesley Sharp) now work at the same school—and are dealing with big issues, both in and out of the classroom. Lomper (Steve Huison) and Dennis (Paul Clayton) are married and trying to keep their dwindling café afloat. And Horse (Paul Barber) is simply struggling to make ends meet amidst a crumbling welfare system. Meanwhile, Gerald (Tom Wilkinson) plows on in his job at a construction firm. The film’s original screenwriter Simon Beufoy returns, joined by co-writer Alice Nutter, who—fun fact—was a member of the U.K. punk band Chumbawamba (“Tubthumping”). (Recommended for mature audiences only.)

In an image from Marvel Studios’ Ant-Man and The Wasp: Quantumania, Cassie Lang (Kathryn Newton) and Scott Lang (Paul Rudd) are standing in the midst of Quantumania, looking at something to their left. There is a bright light to their right, and rock formations surround them below and in the distance.

Assembled: The Making of Ant-Man and The Wasp: Quantumania—now streaming on Disney+
Join cast and crew as they delve into the creation of Marvel Studios’ Ant-Man and The Wasp: Quantumania. Combining riveting behind-the-scenes footage with candid interviews, Assembled reveals just how the incredible new world was brought to the screen. In the film, Super Hero partners Scott Lang (Paul Rudd) and Hope van Dyne (Evangeline Lilly) return to continue their adventures as Ant-Man and The Wasp. Together with Hope’s parents Janet van Dyne (Michelle Pfeiffer) and Hank Pym (Michael Douglas), and Scott’s daughter Cassie Lang (Kathryn Newton), the family finds themselves exploring the Quantum Realm—interacting with strange new creatures and embarking on an adventure that will push them beyond the limits of what they thought possible.

A promotional image from Disney Channel’s Pretty Freekin Scary, featuring Kyan Samuels as Pretty, Yonas Kibreab as Remy, Leah Mei Gold as Scary, Eliana Su’a as Frankie, Emma Shannon as Nyx, Shawn Carter Peterson as Mr. Ripp, and Napiera Groves Boykin as Mrs. Ripp. They are all standing on a light blue set that features a series of strange stairways going in different directions, and appears as though the floor they’re standing on is a funhouse-type mirror. The actors are all smiling at the camera.

Pretty Freekin Scary—new series premieres Thursday, June 15, at 9 p.m. ET/PT on Disney Channel (before moving to Fridays); also streams on Disney+ beginning Friday, June 16
Fourteen-year-old Frankie Ripp (Eliana Su’a) had a perfect life—a great family, an annoying little brother, a popular boyfriend, and a BFF she could always count on. However, her life took a surprising turn after an unfortunate incident. Heated debate in the Underworld, with the Grim Reaper herself, ensues—and Frankie is forced to navigate life with new Underworld guardians Pretty (Kyan Samuels) and Scary (Leah Mei Gold) in the most challenging setting of all… middle school!

The poster for the new documentary Stan Lee, coming to Disney+ Friday, June 16. An image of an older Lee sitting at a desk is at middle; around him are comic book depictions of Spider-Man, Iron Man, and Thor as well as small toy versions of him as a young man sitting at a desk typing, reading a book, or pointing at a piece of paper. Behind everyone is a blue sky with cut-out paper clouds, and surrounding everyone is a cut-out New York cityscape.

Stan Lee—Friday, June 16, on Disney+
After first debuting at the Tribeca Film Festival, this new documentary joins the streaming service this week. From Marvel Studios and acclaimed director David Gelb, Stan Lee is the official documentary film about Disney Legend Stan Lee and his journey to become one of the most influential people in the world of comic books and pop culture. Tracing his life from his challenging upbringing as Stanley Lieber to the meteoric rise of Marvel Comics, the film tells Lee’s story in his own words. Using only archival material—personal home video, interviews, and audio recordings—Stan Lee examines Lee’s origin story and what emerged from it: a far-reaching universe of stories with three-dimensional characters that have resonated with people all over the world.

In an image from the Searchlight Pictures’ film Chevalier, Joseph Bologne (Kelvin Harrison Jr.) is standing amongst musicians, who are seated at either side of him. He is holding a violin and its bow aloft, as if he has just finished playing a piece. The musicians—some with violins, a few with cellos—all have music stands, some with candles attached, in front of them. All are wearing clothing specific to the French Revolution period.

Chevalier—Friday, June 16, on Hulu
After premiering in theaters on April 21, this Searchlight Pictures film will now be available to stream on your favorite device… Chevalier is inspired by the incredible story of composer Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges. The illegitimate son of an African slave and a French plantation owner, Bologne (Kelvin Harrison Jr.) rises to improbable heights in French society as a celebrated violinist-composer and fencer, complete with an ill-fated love affair and a falling out with Marie Antoinette (Lucy Boynton) herself and her court.

Peter Pan Takes Flight in a Disney Movie Club Exclusive Anniversary Edition

Created especially for the Disney fan and collector, the new Disney Movie Club anniversary edition of Disney’s Peter Pan features cover art based on the original 1953 theatrical poster and an all-new, must-see bonus featurette In Walt’s Words: Peter Pan on Blu-ray™ disc.  Don’t miss the fascinating backstory of the 15-year development of Disney’s Peter Pan and an insider look at story meetings between Walt and his famed animators.

We caught up with David Daniels, producer of Disney Movie Club’s exclusive featurette In Walt’s Word’s: Peter Pan, who shares his insights about the making of the featurette.

Q&A

Disney: All of Walt Disney’s Animated Masterpieces have fascinating backstories. What do you think makes the development of Disney’s Peter Pan so unique and interesting?
David Daniels: Peter Pan was originally a stage play by J.M. Barrie that first was produced in 1904. Walt, from the time he was a little boy, loved the story of Peter Pan. He saved all his pennies to see the play, and then that story became a part of him. Walt really related to the character of Peter Pan.

So Walt always had in his head to make his own version of Peter Pan, with Walt’s touch. On stage, people could fly, but they were attached to ropes. Through the magic of animation, Walt could make the characters really fly. Instead of Tinker Bell being a little speck of light on the stage, Walt and his animators got to make her a fully realized character. There were a lot of things that they were able to do through the magic of animation and through Walt’s imagination that couldn’t be done in a stage production.

Like Peter Pan, the boy who never grew up, Walt was very young at heart. Disney’s Peter Pan has that magical element to it that’s such the embodiment of Walt Disney… that sense of magic and adventure every kid dreams of. Imagine a boy coming and giving you pixie dust, you flying over London and going to an island full of adventure with pirates and mermaids, lost boys and fairies—that’s every little kid’s imagination come to life!

Disney: You’re a longtime Disney buff, but in working on this new featurette, what was something new and unexpected that you learned?
DD: I didn’t realize that it was actually one of the first feature animated movies that Walt wanted to make. It was potentially supposed to be the second movie, before even Disney’s Pinocchio, but it ended up taking 15 years and not happening until the early ’50s.

His original animators, like Freddie Moore and Bill Tytla, were supposed to be the original character leads. But by the time the Studio got into production, it was the next generation of animators, the Nine Old Men—so Frank Thomas, Ollie Johnston, Marc Davis, Eric Larson—and those guys ended up being the lead animators.

It took 15 years because Walt had to work on getting the story rights, and then World War II happened and production on feature animated movies stopped. During that time, the Studio started working on the war shorts, and the kind of movies they put out, like Disney’s Make Mine Music and Disney’s Melody Time, were compilations of animated shorts with interstitials between them—and not full-length feature animations.

Disney: Why do you think that Disney’s Peter Pan is such an enduring classic?
DD: The characters! The characters were always there from the original story but Disney interpreted those characters, developed them, and brought them to life through animation in a way that was magnificent and magical. They became classic Disney characters that lived on in the Disney legacy, especially characters like Tinker Bell.

Tinker Bell became an iconic Disney character, from lighting the castle in the theme parks and starting the fireworks every night to being in the opening logo of all the Disney television shows—even the company logo had Tinker Bell in it. She is such an interesting character—pretty, magical, sassy. There have been rumors that Tinker Bell was modeled after Marilyn Monroe, but the featurette dispels that myth!

Disney: Who is your favorite character in Disney’s Peter Pan?
DD: I would say it’s Captain Hook. He’s the quintessential Disney Villain. He’s evil, but he’s also a comedic character, which led the way to other characters like him. Captain Hook was one of the first villains where Disney created this comedic element to the otherwise evil characteristics, leading the way for other great Disney Villains like Gaston, Scar, and Ursula.

Disney’s Peter Pan 70th Anniversary Edition on Blu-ray + DVD + Digital Copy includes the all-new bonus featurette In Walt’s Words: Peter Pan on Blu-ray disc, available exclusively through the Disney Movie Club. This special anniversary edition also features collectible cover art based on the original 1953 theatrical poster.

Visit DisneyMovieClub.com today to purchase your copy of the Club-Exclusive 70th Anniversary Edition of Disney’s Peter Pan or to join the Disney Movie Club!

Fans in the U.S. Can Now Bring Home the Magic on Echo Devices with Hey Disney!

Fans in the U.S. Can Now Bring Home the Magic on Echo Devices with Hey Disney!

Hey Disney!—a new voice assistant developed by Disney and built on Alexa technology—is officially available for customers to purchase in the United States as an annual, auto-renewing subscription in the Alexa Skills Store, for use on their supported Echo devices at home. Additionally, Hey Disney! will be included as part of a subscription to Amazon Kids+. 

A man and two children sit on a couch, looking at their Hey Disney! device. The device is a tablet with mouse ears, stylized to look like Mickey Mouse. On the screen is a menu for “Soundscapes.”

Hey Disney! features tons of awesome entertainment and activities for fans of all ages, including characters from Disney, Pixar, Star Wars, Frozen, The Muppets, and more. And it’s all hosted by a brand-new personality, the Disney Magical Companion—your helpful guide to all the fun included in the experience.

How does it work? Kick off the fun by saying “Alexa, introduce me to Hey Disney.” From there, the Magical Companion will walk you through purchase and set-up, and then fans can invoke the voice assistant by using the wake words, “Hey Disney!” For example, you can say: “Hey Disney, tell me a joke,” “Hey Disney, play a soundscape,” or “Hey Disney, let’s go on an adventure!”

From Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck, Goofy, and Pluto to Frozen’s Anna and Olaf; Aladdin’s Genie; Finding Nemo’s Dory or Cars’ Mater; Chewbacca, R2-D2, or C-3PO from the Star Wars galaxy; and The Muppets’ Fozzie Bear, Animal, or Sam Eagle… depending on the specific request, Hey Disney!’s response will either feature the voice of the Magical Companion or one of the 20+ characters from across Disney, Pixar, Star Wars, Frozen, and a variety of other treasured franchises.

A close-up of the Hey Disney! device, featuring the purple screen for “Soundscapes.”

Hey Disney!, with the help of the Magical Companion, brings innovative ways for fans to experience Disney’s expansive universe of storytelling right in their own living room—from setting alarms and timers, checking the weather, or hearing from Tiana, Dory, and more for character greetings. For instance, you can join characters on Play-Along Adventures: interactive audio and visual experiences that guide you on fun-filled journeys like going fishing with Goofy. Families can also gather around the kitchen table and play Disney trivia, guessing answers to questions like what numbers are on the Mad Hatter’s hat, or the first-ever words spoken by Mickey Mouse.

At bedtime, share a Moana story—one of over 100 storybooks included with Hey Disney!—or drift off to sleep with a soundscape, which transforms your environment with audio and music from the worlds of Disney. Imagine floating to a galaxy far, far away with a Star Wars soundscape inspired by the sounds of an epic saga.

Discover how to awaken the magic of Hey Disney! to unlock stories, games, trivia, and beyond by visiting the Alexa Skills Store.

For more information on how Hey Disney! works, please go here.

Moments to Watch Out for in Elemental

By Bruce C. Steele

Like any visitor to a fabulous new metropolis, moviegoers will eagerly drink in all the colorful sights and enticing sounds of Element City from the very start of Elemental, Disney and Pixar’s new feature. There’s so much to see and hear: airships, floating trains, skyscrapers. Viewers see this bustling urban landscape at first through the eyes of Fire people Bernie and Cinder, an immigrant couple newly arrived in the port city from faraway Fireland. They’ve come to find a new life among the communities already well established in Element City: the Water people who founded the town, and the Earth and Air people who arrived soon after.

The story focuses on Bernie and Cinder’s daughter, the hot-headed Ember (voiced by Leah Lewis), who is poised to take over her father’s corner store—if she can just control her temper long enough. “I relate to her in many different ways,” Lewis said at a virtual press conference earlier this week. “Although I don’t get as angry as she does, when I was younger, I used to. These days I’ve reeled it in a little bit.”

At a moment of crisis, Wade (voiced by Mamoudou Athey) pours into Ember’s life—one of those Water people her parents have long warned her about. The unlikely partnership they forge may rescue Ember’s parents’ shop from being shut down—and teach them a lot about themselves.

At the same time, Elemental is a head-turning travelogue through Element City: its fountains and parks, its splashy condos and sunken treasures, and its residents’ communal fun and intimate interactions. (Pay no attention to that Earth couple doing a little mutual pruning.) “Honestly, I find something new every single time I watch the movie,” said producer Denise Ream.

So moviegoers might need some advance suggestions on what to look out for on this journey. At the press conference, Ream and Lewis were joined by Athey, director Peter Sohn, and songwriter Ari Leff aka Lauv, who performs and co-wrote the original song “Steal the Show” for the film. All offered suggestions on moments and emotions with which viewers will want to connect.

The hazards of proximity
In Ember’s and Wade’s first meeting, look for all the ways they work to avoid getting close. “In the beginning, you see why Fire and Water don't really get along,” Lewis says. “A lot is at stake for them just even interacting—they could literally extinguish one another, and that’s a pretty big thing.”

Lighten up
Elemental has its serious moments and may call for tissues before it’s over, but Athey assured moviegoers that the Pixar humor is in abundant supply. “You can count on Pixar to make you laugh,” he explains, “and I think this movie is hilarious. It’s really fun. You can always count on Pixar for the heart too, so go see this movie and you’ll get what you’re looking for.”

In this image from Disney and Pixar’s Elemental, Ember, a Fire person (voiced by Leah Lewis), on the left, and Wade, a Water person (voiced by Mamoudou Athey), on the right, stand talking at night in what appears to be an industrial area, visible in evening shadows behind them. Ember has one hand cocked at her waist, while Wade has a hand on his chin, like he’s thinking.

Unprecedented animation
Ember and the other Fire people have faces and bodies made of roiling flame, while Water people are transparent and undulate a bit even when standing still. They look entirely natural on-screen, but it took a lot of technical trial and error to get there.

“There were no roads at Pixar to make characters like this,” Sohn admits. “We were so used to building toys or metal cars that trying to create a character that was entirely an effect was all new for the studio. So we had to bring a lot of construction workers to build this road for us, even to get to an image that would come alive and emote—before we could even talk about moving it. It took hundreds of amazing artists.”

He continues, “The average Pixar character has about 4,000 controls, which sounds like a lot, right? But both Ember and Wade were close to 10,000. There were so many layers of effects going on with these characters that they kept multiplying the challenges in every direction we would go.”

Seeing what’s missing
One lighting effect that typically adds to the realism of CG characters is missing from Ember, Sohn reveals. “You know, you can’t shadow fire. So she remained essentially the same in every shot.” That meant checking each Ember segment for her own, unique emotional authenticity, asking, as Sohn says, “Can we read her face; the landscape of those emotions?”

Wade’s face had completely different effects, he adds. “Water requires these [added] ingredients to feel like water,” including bluish hues, pliable shapes, and rising bubbles. “If you slowed down the bubbles, all of a sudden the water would look like gelatin. If you remove the highlights, a Water person would look like a ghost.” With the lighting changing from the darkness of a basement to the sparkle of a sunlit roof, “every shot was a challenge.”

In this image from Disney and Pixar’s Elemental, Ember, a Fire person (voiced by Leah Lewis), on the left, and Wade, a Water person (voiced by Mamoudou Athey), on the right, sit in a VIP box in a stadium. They share the box with Gale (voiced by Wendi McLendon-Covey), who is an Air person that resembles a big, purple storm cloud, looming over Ember and Wade. Surrounding their box seats are regular stadium seats filled with fans watching a sports event with enthusiasm.

Drink in the settings
It’s easy to focus on the growing attachment between Ember and Wade, and their quest to save her family’s market, Fireplace—but don’t miss the incredible sets around them. Playing tour guide for a moment, Ream urges viewers to appreciate the “the richness the City Hall area—our garden district. Fireplace is in Firetown, and Wade’s family lives in this beautiful penthouse-pool apartment. And we get to go to Cyclone Stadium [pictured above] to watch a fantastic sporting event. There’s just a lot of really great dazzling imagery to explore.”

Within this gorgeous cityscape, Sohn and his filmmaking team have staged a number of “set pieces” worthy of any summer blockbuster. Without spoiling the visual surprises, Ream teases, “there’s a sequence we call The Hot Air Balloon that I think is really, really beautiful. [See the photo at the top of this page.] And then there’s another one we call Bubble Day that has some beautiful moments. I look forward to those scenes in every screening.” In short, get your popcorn before the movie starts, since you won’t want to miss anything.

Catch an earworm
The irresistible original song, “Steal the Show,” includes elements of the film’s lush original score, by Thomas Newman. Newman and lyricist Michael Matosic collaborated on the tune with 
singer-songwriter Leff, who records under the name Lauv. “I started with two loops from Thomas Newman, based on some of the sounds he’s using throughout the film,” explains Leff. “And really from there it was just me writing a chord progression and melodies… just kind of freestyling, which was really, really cool.

“As a fellow composer,” Leff says of Newman, “he gave me the space to shine in the way I needed to. It was just a really beautiful collaboration. I feel like creativity was respected all around by everybody, which is really cool.”

The song is played in part during a smile-inducing montage of Ember’s and Wade’s adventures through Element City, but you’ll need to stay for end credits to enjoy the whole thing.

3-D dazzle
You may want to consider taking in a 3-D screening of Elemental, if that’s available in your local theater. “I recently got to see the film in all its 3-D glory,” Sohn reveals. “The details that were exposed in the 3-D have been really exciting for me. Like Ember’s fire—in 3-D it’s a whole new thing, because she’s transparent, and when she moves her head, all those transparencies start to parallax and give you a depth that we didn’t see when we were working in the 2-D version. I would say, check it out. You’ll be really mesmerized by the effects.”

In this image from Disney and Pixar’s Elemental, Wade, a Water person (voiced by Mamoudou Athey), on the left, and Ember, a Fire person (voiced by Leah Lewis), in the center, stand talking to Brook (Catherine O’Hara), who is Wade’s mother. They’re standing in the hallway of Brook’s family condo in front of a metal door that resembles the hatches on a submarine. It’s the entrance to the condo and is surrounded by a wall tiled in blue-and-green stones.

The big thank you
The themes of immigration and parenting connected Sohn with his lead performers, and the climax of the film is as much about Ember’s parents as it is about Ember and Wade. Bernie and Cinder were inspired in part by Sohn’s parents, Korean immigrants who settled in the Bronx, New York, where he was born. His lead performers have their own immigration stories: Lewis was adopted as an infant from an orphanage in Shanghai, China, while Athey arrived in the United States with his mom and diplomat dad from Mauritania when he was five months old. All three commented on how Elemental honors parental sacrifice.

“My mother and father were so supportive from a very, very early age—at about six or seven—of me wanting to pursue acting and singing,” Lewis says. Along with her sister and grandmother, her family “all put their best foot forward and rearranged their lives to help me grasp this dream.” Like Ember, she adds, “I’m deeply protective of my parents and especially as they grow older. I just I want to do as much as I possibly can for them.”

Athey’s parents’ departure from their home country—just as Bernie and Cinder left Fireland—shaped his life. “I understood that was a sacrifice as a kid,” says Athey. “But as an adult, I have a fuller understanding of what it is to build a life for yourself, and I cannot imagine having to start over for the sake of your family. But they did it. They did it for us [children]. And I think Pete shares that sense of gratitude.”

He continues, “In the making of this film and just talking about it with my parents, it’s not so much like a debt anymore. It feels more like a gift. You have to pay it forward… putting faith in yourself—the faith that they put in you.”