Showing posts with label Movie Birds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movie Birds. Show all posts

Monday, July 29, 2019

Identifying All the Birds in the Lion King (1994)

With the new Lion King burning up the theaters (?) with it's commitment to photorealism, I thought it might be a nice time to revisit the 1994 original. I'm doing this both because this was a real favorite of your amateurnithologist when he was a kid, and because Optimized Content bay-bee! My first idea was to make a bunch of wonderful .gifs to show off the beautiful animation, but then I thought why not take remake's efforts to create the most realistic possible animals and try to hold the original to the same standard. So we'll be having it both ways today, as we do our best to both show off The Lion King and identify All The Birds.

I'm going to level with you blog fans, basically 90% of the bird content in this movie comes from the opening number, the show-stopping Circle of Life. Which is fair, the movie's not called The Bird King after all.

By Charles J Sharp - Own work, from Sharp Photography, sharpphotography.co.uk, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=66179038

We open with a couple of pretty easy ID's- a trio of Marabou Storks fly to Simba's presentation ceremony. Now would be a good time to talk about where The Lion King takes place (and hence, where we're drawing our IDs from). The most common answer you find doing this research is Central-Eastern Africa. Specifically Disney's animators took a trip to Kenya's Hell's Gate National Park to prepare for the project. This is the bird list I'm going to attempt to draw from first. However, there are other signs that the movie takes place in South Africa. These very storks appear to fly over Victoria Falls a moment after this clip. Also, Simba later ends up in a desert, which doesn't really exist in Kenya. So the movie's not perfect, but it's certainly Africa, mostly Kenya, with a few incongruities. I wonder if new Lion King is more accurate..

By Yathin S Krishnappa - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=25062828

Hitting all the classics early as you can see with the group of Flamingos. These appear, from the two-toned bill, to be Greater Flamingo. Do they live in Kenya? Yes, they do! So far, so good. Maybe this blog is gonna be super easy, huh?

Vulturine Guineafowl at Samburu.jpg
By Sumeet Moghe - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=64855531
Slightly more of a challenge, but I can do this! Clearly Guineafowl, and we can narrow it down to the species that are native to Kenya (although you could make a case that animals from neighboring countries are making it to this important ceremony), the Crested, The Helmeted, and the Vulturine Guineafowl. The most accurate answer is probably Vulturine, seeing as these guineafowl have the prominent blue color and pointed breast feathers. They also lack the noticeable head ornamentation that both the crested and helmeted have. Now the wing-bar doesn't really add up, but I guess we can't be perfect.


Oh. Oh no. That's a lotta birds Disney's The Lion King. Do I gotta identify em' all? [looks at title I chose for blog that I certainly can't change now]. Ok, let's give it a go.

-An hour passes-


Ok, so these are my best guesses. To be honest with you, it became clear pretty quickly that most of these weren't *real* birds. However, the illustrator certainly had something in mind, at least in terms or family, for most of these. There are clear parrot, bird of paradise, kingfisher, flycatcher inspired shapes, and sometimes that's the best you can hope for. The truth is that this 2 second shot of an elephant with a ridiculous array of birds on his tusks is the real dark underbelly of The Lion King. Must've been the work of a rogue animator. Let's shake it off and move on, shall we?

By Atamari, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2479447
Wow, that was a lot of effort. Let's get back to something easy! Zazu, the only named bird character in the movie (offensive!) is identified as a hornbill in an upcoming musical number by Simba ("Kings don't need advice from little hornbills for a start"). What kind of hornbill is he? The internet seems really convinced that he's a Red-billed Hornbill. This fact is quoted on several zoo webpages (Oregon, Sacramento), Aviary.org, the Disney Wiki, and Zazu's own wikipedia entry. This is good enough for me, but I will register that the Crowned Hornbill might match his color pattern a little better and account for his raised crest. Whatever, you can't argue with the experts.



Speaking of "Just Can't Wait to Be King". This is where we get our Ostrich sequence. There are only two Ostrich-options, the Common Ostrich and the Somali Ostrich. Because this bird doesn't have a prominent blue neck, it's safe to call it the Common Ostrich. This one's easy. Ostrich.

By hyper7pro - Flickr: Vulture, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=17194438

Time for another challenge! When fortunes have turned for Simba and he ends up wandering through a mystery desert, he is beset by Vultures. Do we have vulture options? Yes friends, we do. These vultures are drawn in the traditional Disney house-vulture-style, so we're looking for a bald headed bird that is black on top, white from underneath, ideally with a bit of fluff around the neck. I'm going to go with White-headed Vulture- even though they're not totally bald, they do have the best color matching of the options (if you wish to make your own decision, I was also considering Ruppel's Vulture, Lappet-faced Vulture, Hooded Vutlure, and African White-backed Vulture). Please note that Pumba calls these buzzards when he disperses them ("Bowling for Buzzards!"), but that shouldn't change anything about our ID, as he is clearly not even a hobbiest bird watcher.

Left: By Alandmanson - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=52834294
 Right: Me
After this, the action of the movie picks up, and there's largely not time for random birds any more. I know I was hoping for some action during the Hakuna Matata sequence, but no dice. They do appear one more time, right before the end title card pops up. Here Simba stands with Nala and presents his baby to the world, and once again, birds are in attendance. This scene may finally be where I throw in the towel.


As you can see a number of little white birds fly up to circle the young family. If we ZOOM and ENHANCE we can see at least a featured Egret, but the other birds look a lot like white doves, aka. Release Doves, aka. specially bred Rock Doves. And while Africa does have Rock Doves, they probably would not all coincidentally be white. It is theoretically possible that Rafiki went and bought some Release Doves from the magician store as a special treat for this presentation ceremony. If we were gonna go nature, the Emerald Spotted Dove is probably the lightest dove you could get around here. As for the Egret, Cattle Egret is the only choice that makes sense given the yellow-ish feet and beak.

Phew! We did it! And it only took like a whole day that I could've done other things during. Still, my conclusion is that the original animators definitely had really birds in mind when they created this Disney masterpiece, and perhaps most importantly to our core question, I felt they were identifiable. For the most part it's a testament to the expressive and suggestive powers of animation as an art. The original captures the essence of a thing without necessarily needing to recreate it perfectly. My only real gripe would probably be with Zazu, who is way too blue. I wonder if they fixed this in the new Lion King..


Oh! Well there you have it, never mind all that stuff I was saying before. The remake is officially better than the original! Goodnight folks.

Saturday, November 18, 2017

Just a Bunch of Bird .gifs from Labyrinth

Hello blogfans. You know how sometimes you have a couple of busy weeks, and then the day before you go on vacation to Mexico you realize you haven't updated your bird blog in a while, and you feel kinda bad about it? And then how you remember that one of your half finished ideas is to post bird .gifs from movies? And you just watched Labyrinth starring David Bowie and a young Jennifer Connolly and holy smokes are the bird gifs amazing in it? Well, dear readers, if you do, in fact, know 'that feel', we have something in common this week. So here, presented hastily, and without further comment, are a bunch of bird .gifs I made from the movie Labyrinth. Part 1 of 1.

 Aw yeah, you know you're in for a wild ride when a movie starts like this. I knew at this point I would be .giffing Labyrinth. I would recommend using this .gif to invite people to a Labyrinth viewing party, or maybe if you created an actual labyrinth and wanted to welcome people to it.
 They really let you get a good look at that CGI owl, and it's a good thing too, cause it turns out that owl is very plot-important. Use this .gif if you're having any kind of owl-themed conversation.
 Seamless. This .gif might be useful for making fun of someone for rapidly changing on an issue. Or it could be like a 'me, heading into the weekend on friday' kind of thing, I don't know.
 Yes, the owl is David Bowie. Use this .gif to get all pumped for 80's night at the club, or maybe ironically for #relationshipgoals
 The other significant bird action is a little bit of high quality chicken action in the Magic Dance scene. You could use this .gif if someone online is mad, and you made them mad, thereby winning online debate.
 I don't think they kicked an actual chicken for this scene. If you look carefully you can see the real chicken directly to the right of the kicked object and a much more obvious puppet chicken to the left. Why does the goblin lair contain so many chickens? Anyway, this .gif is for when you've had it with someone's bullshit. (Sorry for the cuss)
Aaaaand also there's this. I think this is like a 'me, listening to my own dumb ideas' .gif. See you next week, hopefully with some great Mexican birds (pajaros)

Bonus: