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True-Life Adventures

True-Life Adventures is a series of short and full-length nature documentary films released by Walt Disney Studios between the years 1948 and 1960.[1] The first seven films released were thirty-minute shorts, with the subsequent seven films being full features. The series won eight Academy Awards for the studio, including five for Best Two Reel Live Action Short and three for Best Documentary Feature.

True-Life Adventures

Winston Hibler (narrator)

Alfred Milotte (1–3)
Norman R. Palmer (2–12)
Herb Crisler (3)
Lois Crisler (3)

Anthony Gérard (1–11)
Norman R. Palmer (2–14)
Lloyd L. Richardson (6–9)
Jack Astwood (12)

Oliver Wallace (1–14)
Paul J. Smith (2–12)

  • 1948–1960

United States

English

Some of the features were re-edited into educational shorts between 1968 and 1975. The latter year saw the release of The Best of Walt Disney's True-Life Adventures, a compilation film derived from the series.

The Weasel Family (1968)

The Wild Dog Family – The Coyote (1968)

The Wild Cat Family – The Cougar (1968)

The Deer Family (1968)

[4]

The Beasts of Burden Family (1970)

The Bear Family (1970)

Additional educational shorts edited from two or more films were released under a "Nature's Living Album" banner, including:[2][3]


On October 8, 1975, Disney theatrically released The Best of Walt Disney's True-Life Adventures, a full-length documentary film derived from 13 True-Life Adventures films. It was written and directed by James Algar and narrated by Winston Hibler.

Production[edit]

The films were among the earliest production experience for Roy E. Disney. This series was the launching pad for Disney's then-new distributor, the Buena Vista Film Distribution Company, Inc. Interstitial animated segments are included, and some filmed sequences are set to music. Ub Iwerks blew up the 16 mm film to 35 mm for theatrical projection and provided some special effects.[5]

In other media[edit]

Television episodes from Disney's anthology TV series focus on the films, and it inspired a daily panel comic strip that was distributed from 1955 to 1973 and drawn by George Wheeler.[6] Several of the films were adapted in comic book format as one-shots in Dell Comics' Four Color series.

The Living Desert (September 22, 1995)

The Vanishing Prairie (September 22, 1995)

Jungle Cat (September 22, 1995)

Secrets of Life (September 22, 1995)

The African Lion (September 22, 1995)

White Wilderness (September 22, 1995)

Seal Island (March 15, 1996)

Bear Country (March 15, 1996)

Water Birds (March 15, 1996)

The Olympic Elk (March 15, 1996)

Beaver Valley (March 15, 1996)

Nature's Half Acre (March 15, 1996)

Reception[edit]

Although critics denounced the series' anthropomorphizing of animals, educators honored the True-Life Adventures films. In 1954, the professional teacher organization Phi Delta Kappa International awarded Walt Disney its Education Award, and the National Education Association honored him with the American Education Award.[9]

Legacy[edit]

Animators from Walt Disney Productions used film from the series as reference material for a wide range of animals.[10] During the production of The Rescuers (1977), animator Ollie Johnston cited footage from the series—showing the clumsiness of albatross take-offs and landings—as inspiration for the mice's mode of transportation in the movie.[11]


A 1982 Canadian Broadcasting Company documentary titled Cruel Camera interviews a cameraman who worked on the series, who said he disliked the inaccuracy of the narration. In a notorious example he discussed, the lemmings' mass suicide in White Wilderness was staged, with the same small group of lemmings repeatedly shoved off a cliffside—rather than hundreds intentionally jumping as stated by the narrator—into Alberta's Bow River, rather than the Arctic Ocean as is depicted.[12] In 2003, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game discussed the lemming-suicide myth and in 2022, business magnate Elon Musk referred to the story after calling for Mickey Mouse to be released into the public domain, tweeting: "Ironic that Disney would disparage an entire class of rodents when their main character is a rodent – jealous maybe?"[13]


In 2007, Disney established a new nature film label called Disneynature, which produces feature films similar to the True-Life Adventures series.[14] In March 2019, Disney acquired 21st Century Fox, including the nature-themed National Geographic Films.

List of Disney live-action shorts

List of Walt Disney Pictures films

Volume 1 DVD Stats

Volume 2 DVD Stats

Volume 3 DVD Stats

Volume 4 DVD Stats

at the INDUCKS

True-Life Adventures

Fischer, William (April 21, 2022). . Collider.

"The Legacy of Disney's True-Life Adventures Series"