After watching Anastasia recently, I wonder what a Don Bluth take on My Fair Lady would have been like. For those of you not in the know, 20th Century Fox gave Don Bluth the choice of doing a remake of Anastasia or My Fair Lady. I think he made the right choice because Anastasia allowed more fantasy elements that would be better for animation.
This randomly makes me remember there was a King and I movie, probably by Richard Rich or someone else. I wondered if any other old musicals were pushed.
Perhaps not the thread to discuss this, but in recent years I've started to doubt this story (it seems to come from a single, not particularly substantive, source), and even if it is true I certainly don't think he would have succeeded had he gone through with it, which always seems to be the unspoken assumption whenever it was brought up. We all know The Flintstones was more than a little "inspired" by The Honeymooners, but that doesn't mean it would fit any legal definition of plagiarism, the similarities are in isolation all pretty generic things that Gleason certainly didn't invent; there is perhaps nothing The Flintstones shares with The Honeymooners, that The Honeymooners itself doesn't share with Laurel & Hardy's Sons of the Desert.
But going with the idea that he did somehow succeed I guess that would have put pay to Scooby-Doo as we know it, as that is widely believe to have been similarly inspired by Dobie Gills. You'd like to think maybe Hanna-Barbera would have gone for more original ideas, or maybe they would have just doubled down on the celebrity cartoons and live action tie-ins.
What implications would it have retrospectively as a precedent I wonder? Would MGM have been able to put pay to Herman & Katnip for being too close to Tom & Jerry? Would Superheroes be OK; when we get down to it, aren't most superheroes at least a little derivative of Superman or Batman? Would the owners of The Shadow have been able to put pay to Batman? How far could it have gone?
That's a big part of what got Fawcett Comics shut down later bought by DC/National. They sued their competition for Captain Marvel's similarities to Superman.
The Honeymooners stuff makes me think of the Warner Bros. shorts that were even more blatant than Hanna Barbera with the Honeymooners and Jack Benny parodies, etc. WB tried to crack into original TV animation, judging from the Road Runner pilot. The animation seemed so good for that era of TV, and expensive. I wonder if it would have been sustainable, if a network took the bait.
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