One Hundred And One Dalmatians (1961) [ CERTIFIED × 2027 ]

The Spots That Saved an Empire: A Look Back at 101 Dalmatians (1961)

Unlike the lush, painterly style of previous classics, One Hundred and One Dalmatians embraced a modern, graphic aesthetic.

You can’t talk about this movie without mentioning the "Devil" herself. Cruella de Vil remains one of Disney's most visceral and terrifying villains. The Making and Impact of One Hundred and One Dalmatians

: Animators didn't just guess the spots; they estimated there are exactly 6,469,952 spots throughout the film. An Icon of Evil: Cruella de Vil

: This was the first feature to use the Xerox process to transfer drawings directly to cels.

: This tech kept the energy of the animators' original pencil lines, giving the film a sketch-like, contemporary feel.

In 1961, Walt Disney was in a tight spot. Sleeping Beauty (1959) had been a massive financial flop, and the studio was on the verge of closing its animation department entirely. Enter a litter of spotted pups and a revolutionary new technology that changed the face of animation forever. A Radical New Look

Please click on CryptoTab Browser item below after downloading to install the browser.
Open downloads list from above and click on CryptoTab Browser to install it on your computer
One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961)