


Korkis also pulls back the curtain on such dubious chapters in Disney history as: * Disney's cinematic attack on venereal disease * Ward Kimball's obsession with UFOs * Tim Burton's depressed stint at the Disney Studios * Walt Disney's nightmares about his stomping an owl to death * Wally Wood's Disneyland Memorial Orgy poster * J.

What else would Disney prefer you did not know? Plenty. Through interviews with many of the artists and animators who created Song of the South, and through his own extensive research, Korkis delivers both the definitive behind-the-scenes history of the film and a balanced analysis of its cultural impact. In his newest book, Who's Afraid of the Song of the South?, Korkis examines the film from concept to controversy, and reveals the politics that nearly scuttled the project. But is the film racist? Are its themes, its characters, even its music so abominable that Disney has done us a favor by burying the movie in its infamous Vault, where the Company claims it will remain for all time? Disney historian Jim Korkis does not so. And that's why it has forbidden the theatrical re-release of its classic film Song of the South since 1986.
