翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Saluda Factory Historic District
・ Saluda Formation
・ Saluda Grade
・ Saluda Lake
・ Saluda Main Street Historic District
・ Saluda Mountains
・ Saluda Old Town Site
・ Saluda River
・ Saluda Theatre
・ Saluda Township, Jefferson County, Indiana
・ Saluda, Indiana
・ Saluda, North Carolina
・ Saluda, South Carolina
・ Saluda, Virginia
・ Saludecio
Saludos Amigos
・ Salug
・ Salug River
・ Salug, Zamboanga del Norte
・ Salugara Monastery
・ Saluggia
・ Salui, Malawi
・ Saluiyeh
・ Saluja
・ Saluk
・ Saluk (disambiguation)
・ Saluk Qeshlaqi
・ Saluk-e Olya
・ Saluk-e Sofla
・ Salukaphathwa Gwebi'nkumbi Sigcawu


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Saludos Amigos : ウィキペディア英語版
Saludos Amigos

| runtime = 42 minutes
| country = United States
| language = English
Portuguese
}}
''Saludos Amigos'' (''Hello, Friends'' in English) is a 1942 animated feature package film produced by Walt Disney and released by RKO Radio Pictures. It is the sixth animated feature in the Walt Disney Animated Classics series. It is the first of six package films made by Walt Disney Animation Studios in the 1940s. Set in Latin America, it is made up of four different segments; Donald Duck stars in two of them and Goofy stars in one. It also features the first appearance of José Carioca, the Brazilian cigar-smoking parrot.〔''Walt & El Grupo'' (documentary film, 2008).〕 ''Saludos Amigos'' was popular enough that Walt Disney decided to make another film about Latin America, ''The Three Caballeros'', to be produced two years later. ''Saludos Amigos'' premiered in Rio de Janeiro on August 24, 1942. It was released in the United States on February 6, 1943. It garnered positive reviews and was only reissued once, in 1949, when it was shown on a double bill with the first reissue of ''Dumbo''.
==Background==
In early 1941, before U.S. entry into World War II, the United States Department of State commissioned a Disney goodwill tour of South America, intended to lead to a movie to be shown in the US, Central, and South America as part of the Good Neighbor Policy. Disney was chosen for this because several Latin American governments had close ties with Nazi Germany,〔 and the US government wanted to counteract those ties. Mickey Mouse and other Disney characters were popular in Latin America, and Walt Disney acted as ambassador. The tour, facilitated by Nelson Rockefeller, who had recently been appointed as Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs (CIAA), took Disney and a group of roughly twenty composers, artists, technicians, etc. from his studio to South America, mainly to Brazil and Argentina, but also to Chile and Peru.
The film itself was given federal loan guarantees, because the Disney studio had over-expanded just before European markets were closed to them by the war, and because Disney was struggling with labor unrest at the time (including a strike that was underway at the time the goodwill journey began).〔
The film included live-action documentary sequences featuring footage of modern Latin American cities with skyscrapers and fashionably dressed residents. This surprised many contemporary US viewers, who associated such images only with US and European cities, and contributed to a changing impression of Latin America.〔 Film historian Alfred Charles Richard Jr. has commented that ''Saludo Amigos'' "did more to cement a community of interest between peoples of the Americas in a few months than the State Department had in fifty years".〔Richard, Alfred Charles Jr. Censorship and Hollywood's Hispanic Image: An Interpretive Filmography, 1936-1955. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 1993, p274, cited in 〕
The film also inspired Chilean cartoonist René Ríos Boettiger to create Condorito, one of Latin America's most ubiquitous cartoon characters. Ríos perceived that the character ''Pedro'', a small, incapable airplane, was a slight to Chileans and created a comic that could supposedly rival Disney's comic characters.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Saludos Amigos」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.