Movies - Other

[cinemageddon org] Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation [1946/Other/MPEG]

  • Download Faster
  • Download torrent
  • Direct Download
  • Rate this torrent +  |  -
[cinemageddon org] Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation [1946/Other/MPEG]

Download Anonymously! Get Protected Today And Get your 70% discount


Torrent info

Name:[cinemageddon org] Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation [1946/Other/MPEG]

Infohash: D121DCAD1C03859B0F1846AD61B102DAA5D734E5

Total Size: 102.41 MB

Seeds: 0

Leechers: 0

Stream: Watch Full Movie @ Movie4u

Last Updated: 2016-02-18 04:08:39 (Update Now)

Torrent added: 2009-08-29 04:57:47






Torrent Files List


Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation (1946).mpg (Size: 102.41 MB) (Files: 1)

 Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation (1946).mpg

102.41 MB
 

tracker

leech seeds
 

Torrent description

Torrent From: http://cinemageddon.org/

[img=[cinemageddon org] Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation [1946/Other/MPEG] preview 1" border="0" alt="[cinemageddon org] Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation [1946/Other/MPEG] preview 0"/>]

Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation
Presenting the Story of Menstruation. A Walt Disney Production Through the Courtesy of Kotex Products
A basic explanation of the purpose and process of menstruation, told largely with diagrams (and completely avoiding the subject of sex).

[quote]Cynical Introduction
Disney's 'The Story of Menstruation' was originally delivered to the International Cellu-Cotton Company on October 18, 1946. It runs approximately ten minutes. It has been estimated that the film has been seen by approximately ninety-three million American women. Neither sexuality nor reproduction is mentioned in this influential film, and an emphasis on sanitation makes it, as Disney historian Jim Korkis has suggested: 'a hygienic crisis rather than a maturational event.'

Schoolgirls in the 1950s were shown 'educational' films, such as 'Figure Forum' and 'Facts About Your Figure' (made by the Warner Brassiere Company) and it helped create 'needs' for such things as foundation support, cosmetics, and a variety of 'sanitary' products in young girls as early as eleven years old.

Undoubtedly the most obscure and esoteric animated film ever produced by the Disney empire, this 'educational' film, as hinted above, was certainly never as much about the enlightenment of American women as much as it was about fuelling the country's post-war economic recovery through the establishment of a consumer culture (and didn't they do well, ladies and gentleman?) and reminding young girls of their place in society (keep a straight back and always smile, damn you!).

Although the artistry of the production has been criticised in modern times, it is important to remember that this was made only 9 years after Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, and mere months after the conclusion of six years of World War (in which the US participated in four). Few if any animation studios had the capability to produce the kind of animated graphics that Disney were able to, and it would be almost fifty years before an alternative method would be found to illustrate biological processes in the abstract and sterile manner demanded by an essentially conservative English-speaking world.

I shall now hand you over to Phil Hall of Film Threat... because no one's paying ME to write these bloody things ;)

Review of "The Story of Menstruation" by Walt Disney (1946)
By Phil Hall
Originally published on Film Threat (www.filmthreat.com)

Walt Disney's least-known and most intriguing animated short. Seek this one out, by all means!

So, what's your favorite Walt Disney movie? "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs"? "Dumbo"? "Bambi"? "The Story of Menstruation"? "Sleeping Beauty"? "Beauty and the Beast"?

"The Story of..." - WHAT? No, kids, Uncle Phil ain't smoking the wacky weed. In 1946, Walt Disney produced an animated film called "The Story of Menstruation." But don't look for this on the Disney Channel or at the Disney Store in your local mall. And that's a shame since it's Disney's least known and (not surprisingly) most intriguing production, and it proves that some people will do anything for money.

During the 1940s, Disney's fortunes were in a precarious state. World War II shut off the lucrative European theatrical market, which cut off a significant source of Disney's revenues. At home, the ambitious feature "Fantasia" was a major commercial failure, draining more money from the company treasury. Disney was in desperate need of new funds, so he swallowed his artistic pride and did the ignoble: he began to take for-hire assignments for government and corporate producers.

Some of these assignments were designed to aid the war effort, most notably morale-building propaganda cartoons made for the American and Canadian governments. But some of these films were standard industrial films, such as "The Right Spark Plug in the Right Place" (commissioned by the Electric Auto-Lite Company) and "The ABC of Hand Tools" (sponsored by General Motors). For the most part, these films were fairly quotidian and not worthy of critical consideration.

However, Disney opted to take a commission from the International Cello-Cotton Company for an educational film designed to be shown in health education classes. What resulted was "The Story of Menstruation," a 10-minute animated film covering an area where Disney's films never went before. Indeed, "The Story of Menstruation" is the first film (as far as I can determine) which uses the word "vagina" (both in the narration and in an on-screen demonstration). Way to go, Walt!

Narrated by a very serious older woman (the actress is not identified), "The Story of Menstruation"explains one of the less comfortable aspects facing girls on the road to womanhood. Using animated diagrams, the film details how the menstrual cycle works. At first it is all fairly clinical and perhaps a bit dull, and it is easy to rue the missed opportunity of having Disney characters like Daisy Duck and Minnie Mouse prepping their girlie audience on the messy road ahead of them. Indeed, the annoying menstrual cycle may explain why Daisy and Minnie are often irritable when Donald Duck and Mickey Mouse come calling.

But after menstruation is explained, the film begins to get a little silly. The Disney animators suddenly populate the film with weird female characters: these gals have oversized heads, Stepford Wife-worthy smiles (except for one feeling the cramps of menstruation), and an exaggerated gusto for life. We see them cleaning a house (by lifting furniture with one hand and then dropping it into splinters), riding a horse (bouncing insanely in the saddle, as if they had bed springs in their undies) and dancing the jitterbug with no concern of gravity. One of these gals even takes a shower, and the narrator tells us it's okay to bathe during menstruation.

The narrator also gives the girls some peachy advice: "Try not to throw yourself off schedule by getting overtired, emotionally upset, or by catching cold!" There is also motherly advice to avoid constipation and depression, and to always look beautiful. "It's smart to keep looking smart!" exclaims the narrator, who winds up the film by noting: "There is nothing strange or mysterious about menstruation." Whatever you say, sister!

Oh, the film also points out a booklet called "Very Personally Yours," which was distributed to the young audiences who watched this film. That booklet supposedly recounts most of the information in the film and also offers generous advertising on the Kotex line of feminine products. Oddly, "The Story of Menstruation" makes no mention of feminine products. It is not being cynical to question why the film would talk about keeping up a sharp personal appearance without mentioning how to use the basic tools of feminine personal hygiene. Most likely, the film would never get shown in schools if it came across as an extended Kotex commercial.

"The Story of Menstruation" was a staple in health education classes well into the 1960s. Some online information resources state that it was shown theatrically, though I find it difficult to imagine this title ever played in theaters. Disney had no control over the film after its completion and "The Story of Menstruation" eventually fell into the public domain. Bootleg videos based on the 16mm prints distributed to the schools have been in circulation for some years.

Today's Disney organization ignores "The Story of Menstruation," which is a shame since the film is clearly an unusual addition to the Disney canon. It is also ripe for new revenue building endeavors. One can easily imagine a Disney World ride based on the film, with tourists climbing into an egg-shaped craft for a wild ride down a long and dark fallopian tube through a giant vaginal opening. Maybe there could be a catchy theme song, along the lines of "It's a Small World," to add music to the menstruation - giving the vagina a voice, if you will? Kotex could sponsor the ride and sell feminine products at the concession stands. It could make millions! Or at least it could make more than anything Michael Eisner has created lately. Considering the way Eisner has been bleeding money, "The Story of Menstruation" could easily be a much-needed financial tampon for Disney.

Epilogue
And I leave you with these words from an IMDB contributor. Have we gone too far? Or not come far enough? I leave your opinions up to you, dearly beloved...

Very helpful for young girls 12 July 1999
Rating: 10/10
Author: ***** from Visalia, CA

When I saw this as a child, it answered all of my questions and dispelled any fears or misconceptions that I had. It is easy to watch because it is animated, which makes it unthreatening. It has no moral bias or "preachy" aspects, so nobody should have any objections to it. It is a pleasant film that simply gives the facts of menstruation in a reassuring, "matter-of-fact" way. I hope to show it to my daughter.[/quote]

[img=[cinemageddon org] Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation [1946/Other/MPEG] preview 2]
[img=[cinemageddon org] Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation [1946/Other/MPEG] preview 3]
[img=[cinemageddon org] Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation [1946/Other/MPEG] preview 4]
[img=[cinemageddon org] Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation [1946/Other/MPEG] preview 5]
[img=[cinemageddon org] Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation [1946/Other/MPEG] preview 6]


--- Video Information ---
Video Codec Type(e.g. "DIV3"): MPEG1
Video Codec Name(e.g. "DivX 3, Low-Motion"): MPEG-1
Video Codec Status(e.g. "Codec Is Installed"): n.a. (disabled in GSpot settings)
Duration (hh:mm:ss): 10:15.821
Frame Count: 18456
Frame Width (pixels): 352
Frame Height (pixels): 240
Storage Aspect Ratio("SAR")" 1.467
Pixel Aspect Ratio ("PAR"): 0.909
Display Aspect Ratio ("DAR"): 1.333
Frames Per Second: 29.970
Pics Per Second: 29.970
Video Bitrate (kbps): 1149
Quality Factor (bits/pixel)/frame: 0.454"

[img=[cinemageddon org] Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation [1946/Other/MPEG] preview 1" border="0" alt="[cinemageddon org] Walt Disney's The Story Of Menstruation [1946/Other/MPEG] preview 0"/>]

related torrents

Torrent name

health leech seeds Size
 


comments (0)

Main Menu