There are two reasons for this firstly most Disney movies are U or PG (Parental Guidance) classified, and mainstream rock songs are not suitable for the types of audiences that may be watching these movies. Secondly Disney will usually create they're own scores of music to they're animation, this means that they will not be paying royalties to the bands contributing the music for every Cinema Ticket, DVD or Download of the movie sold.
Probably not considering Justin isn't a Disney boy. Although he has a purity ring and is innocent, he makes hip hop/pop music, and is definitely more edgy than Disney. And last time I checked, every song that Disney produces isn't about a girl/says the word 'shawty'.
Thrash metal and hard rock.
The song "True Love's Kiss" is from the animated and live-action Disney movie "Enchanted." The first line of this song says "I've been dreaming of a true love's kiss and the prince I'm hoping comes with this."
Not exactly.... in 2010 the cruise liner of Disney will come to Malta
no
They are feature-length Cartoons. the genre was pioneered by Walt Disney- Disney did not invent movie cartoons- but did string them together to feature length such as Snow White , Bambi, etc. for this he deserves credit. Modern Cartoon films include Anastasia, which does deal with a historical topic, not cartoon characters of the Disney type- it was made by Fox, not Disney productioins! It is true Walt pioneered Feature-length cartoons- and also mixtures of cartoons with live actions-- pioneered in the l946 Song of the South and later done with better effect in the last film personally supervised by Walt Disney- Mary Poppins. Animal cartoons are seen dancing on a Merry-Go-Round with live actors such as the Title Character.
Collodi was the Italian author of Pinocchio. like many Disney characters, he was adapted from another, by then deceased, writer. This is also true of Winnie The Pooh ( A.A. Milne) and The Wind in the Willows characters ( Kenneth Grahame) which have been adopted by Disney, but are not originally Disney cartoons.
Yes, it is true that watching only cartoons has nothing to do with working as a computer programmer
Yes.
Almost all movie and TV cartoons have at least theme songs and often background musical accompaniment. Some early Disneys overdid this- such as Alice and Wonderland- A very merry Un-Birthday to you, it"s true.) Most cartoons- not just Disney, had at least theme songs ( merrily we roll along) was used by ALL the Warner Bros. characters not just Flagship Bugs Bunny. Felix the Cat had a themes which introduced his famous prop- the Bag of Tricks- itself a minor part of the language. Some science-fiction cartoons did not have theme songs, maybe because of copyright problems as these were syndicated on different shows in different parts of the country.
Disney world where dreams come true
Not exactly a family values Stalwart, Mr. Disney. It is true, all sorts of interrupted, semi orphaned, absentee parents, kids staying with relatives for the summer- presumably a corrective measure- it"s all over Disney films even in cartoons such as Mermaid ( where is the Queen of Atlantis?) live action films also suffer from disrupted home life. I am surprised the Legion of Deceny types did not pro-rate Disney on this angle. In comparison Dennis The Menace had a normal two-parent family, and so on. It cannot be entirely a sympathy device, as cartoons do not , by their very nature generate sympathy or compassion, usually. it is an odd field mark of Walt Disney films.
Yes, it is true.
Jennie Holland did the Disney's and got the ideas it is true
"Walt Disney World Where Dreams Come True"
I'm right brained, and I prefer cartoons. I watch some shows with real people too.
Walter Elias Disney, the man, died in l966. The studio retained his name and in a sense he bags credit for things he had nothing to do with, this was also true in his lifetime. Pinocchio, Bambi, and Winnie-The-Pooh were adapted to movie cartoons by the Disney Organization ( the first two in his lifetime) but they were not characters created by Disney ( unlike Mickey Mouse for example) People confuse the Man with the Studio, and it is hard to separate the two. The question cannot be given a concrete, point blank answer.