Are they foreign or local companies? If those companies are out of the country it may be more difficult for Disney to stop them. I have ordered CDs from Japan that I could not get here. Sorry to have to resort to that, but they are excellent quality and I am delighted to have them. At one time, I didn't think Disney would ever put anything on DVD...they seemed to think it was a fad. Obviously, they came around. But, I guess we may have to wait awhile for this one, unless we go the bootleg route.

By the way, I hope you enjoy the movie. Benson Fong is in this one as Charlie Chan's son. He is one of my favorites. He has been in so many movies and TV shows. He played a young doctor in Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo and the father in Flower Drum Song (which I think is my favorite of all his roles). I'll be waiting for your review!

TGormley
----- Original Message ----- From: "Roger Kim" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU>
Sent: Monday, October 02, 2006 11:14 PM
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Song of the South


It's interesting that if you type "Song of the South DVD" in Google, you get
3 sponsored links for companies that are selling the DVD. At least one of
these companies makes it clear that they took a laserdisc and remastered it. I find it very Twilight Zonish that these companies have not been put out of
business by Disney. I thought Disney sued practically everyone. In this
case, maybe Disney actually likes the fact that people can watch the film.
After all, they did just release several 60th anniversary collectibles, so
they need prospective buyers. (The anniversary is on Nov. 12.)


In related news, here's a statement from Disney's CEO, which I borrowed from
www.songofthesouth.net:

Disney CEO Robert Iger: No Song of the South Yet

During the question and answer session at Disney's 2006 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders in Anaheim, CA, the question was raised by a Disney shareholder
why Song of the South has not been released. Here is a transcript:

   "My name is Howard Cromer. I live in Cypress, I'm a Disney shareholder.
I'm actually delivering a message from my son, 10. He wants to know in
recent years, in the midst of all your re-releases of your videos, why you
haven't released Song of the South on your Disney Classics?" [Applause]
"And, he wonders why. Frank Wells told me many years ago that it would be
coming out. Well obviously Frank Wells isn't around anymore, so we still
wonder why. And by the way, Mr. Iger, he thinks it was a very good choice
when they made you CEO of Disney." [Applause]

Iger: "Thank you very much. You may change your mind when I answer your
question, though. Um... we've discussed this a lot. We believe it's actually an opportunity from a financial perspective to put Song of the South out. I
screened it fairly recently because I hadn't seen it since I was a child,
and I have to tell you after I watched it, even considering the context that
it was made, I had some concerns about it because of what it depicted. And
thought it's quite possible that people wouldn't consider it in the context
that it was made, and there were some... [long pause] depictions that I
mentioned earlier in the film that I think would be bothersome to a lot of
people. And so, owing to the sensitivity that exists in our culture,
balancing it with the desire to, uh, maybe increase our earnings a bit, but
never putting that in front of what we thought were our ethics and our
integrity, we made the decision not to re-release it. Not a decision that is
made forever, I imagine this is gonna continue to come up, but for now we
simply don't have plans to bring it back because of the sensitivities that I
mentioned. Sorry."

-roger

From: David Kusumoto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: David Kusumoto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sun, 01 Oct 2006 02:55:18 -0700
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Subject: [MOPO] Song of the South

** One last thing -- I believe Walt Disney's "Song of the South," a late
1940s "fanciful distillation of live-action and animation based on the tales
of Uncle Remus" -- will NEVER be released in mass market form.  The film
that brought us the song, "Zip-De-Dee-Do-Dah" -- was last available on VHS
overseas in the 1990s.  No more.  Ask yourself whether today's black
community would accept the notion -- as presented as filmed entertainment -- that slavery was all fun and games and some plantations had a wise old slave somwhere imparting wisdom to kids. Despite the positive wisdom and goodness
represented by "Uncle Remus," some believe it's better to regard "Song of
the South" as an historical document of attitudes, and not entertainment to
be sold for profit today.

** I'd like to see it released and I can safely say I would regard it
entertaining without falling for the things others would perhaps rightly
find offensive about it today. Even in "Gone With the Wind," people still
rail about its depiction of slaves, and of course, Butterfly McQueen was
quoted as hating the role. I think intelligent people can accept the film
on its terms based on the attitudes of America or Hollywood in 1939.  You
just couldn't make a film like this or release "Song of the South" today
without pissing somebody off.

-koose.

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