Fraidy Cat (lost production material of cancelled Disney animated film; 2004-2005): Difference between revisions

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*[[Music Land (lost Disney animated anthology film; 1955)]]
*[[Music Land (lost Disney animated anthology film; 1955)]]
*[[My Peoples (partially found production material of cancelled Disney animated film; late 1990s-early 2000s)]]
*[[My Peoples (partially found production material of cancelled Disney animated film; late 1990s-early 2000s)]]
*[[Phineas and Ferb (lost production material of cancelled theatrical film of Disney Channel animated series; 2010s)]]
*[[The Search for Mickey Mouse (lost production material of cancelled Disney animated film; 2002)]]
*[[The Search for Mickey Mouse (lost production material of cancelled Disney animated film; 2002)]]
*[[The Seven Dwarfs (partially found production material of cancelled direct-to-video prequel to "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" Disney animated film; 2000s)]]
*[[The Seven Dwarfs (partially found production material of cancelled direct-to-video prequel to "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" Disney animated film; 2000s)]]

Latest revision as of 21:29, 15 August 2023

Fraidycat logo.jpg

Logo for the film.

Status: Lost

Fraidy Cat is a cancelled Disney film that was directed by John Musker and Ron Clements. Character and background designs were done by Andreas Deja, Harald Siepermann, and Hans Bacher. The movie was to be released in 2009 but was shelved in 2005. It was allegedly a satire of a Hitchcock noir film.

Plot

The film details the adventures of Oscar, a cat, and Corina, a cockatoo. They're two spoiled pets that live an easy life in their owner's London flat until a fellow neighborhood pet is kidnapped and Oscar is the prime suspect. The two set off on a mission to find out the real culprit in order to clear Oscar's name.

Cancellation and Availability

The initial story-reel was presented in May 2004, but David Stainton, then president of Walt Disney Feature Animation, wouldn't agree to greenlit development on the movie because he did not see it as marketable to a general audience and he felt that that kids wouldn't know who Alfred Hitchcock is.[1]

To this day, it is unknown how far in production the movie got, but what has surfaced of the movie is a handful of concept art.

Concept Art

See Also

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Animation (Disney)

Animation (Pixar)

Audio

Live Action

Short Films

External Links

References