Episode 19 - The Hunchback of Notre Dame (Gary Trousdale & Kirk Wise, 1996)
The Fantasy/Animation podcast takes listeners on a journey through the intersection between fantasy cinema and the medium of animation. Available via Apple Podcasts, Spotify and many of your favourite podcast hosting platforms!
For Episode 19, Chris and Alex revisit the Walt Disney Studio and its adaptation of Victor Hugo’s nineteenth-century Gothic novel for its cel-animated musical The Hunchback of Notre Dame (Gary Trousdale & Kirk Wise, 1996). A melodrama set against the backdrop of medieval Paris, the film reworks its classic source material and gives it the Mouse House treatment, bringing Hugo’s mature literary Gothicism together with Disney’s ‘cartoon’ principles. Discussion ranges from the film’s evocation of the ‘topsy turvy’ carnivalesque to specific elements of its character design, as Chris and Alex consider how Hunchback’s broader thematic concerns of suppressed sexuality and obsession, damnation, and grotesque horror reconfigure Disney’s (fairy) tale ‘as old as time’ formula.
Suggested Readings
Bakhtin, Mikhail. 1984. Rabelais and His World. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Pallant, Chris. 2010. “Neo-Disney: recent developments in Disney feature animation.” New Cinemas: Journal of Contemporary Film 8, no. 2: 103-117.
Schweizer, Rochelle. 1998. Disney: The Mouse Betrayed: Greed, Corruption, and Children at Risk. Washington: Regnery Publishing Inc.
Ward, Annalee R. 2003. Mouse Morality: The Rhetoric of Disney Animated Film. Austin: University of Texas Press.