![]() Efforts to have his scenes restored are currently underway through fan communities. The reason for his removal was allegedly due to him being too ' scary for children' during the US test audience screenings, which is odd given that the secondary antagonist was an evil diesel with a claw! This cut was so close to the release of the movie that trailers and promotional material still alluded to him. Thanks to the removal of Boomer, plots driven by him went unexplained. Boomer (played by Canadian actor Doug Lennox), who was the main driving factor to the concern felt by Burnett Stone in the movie. The main villain of the movie was a human character named P.T. ![]() The perceived laziness in the plot of Thomas and the Magic Railroad stems from the fact that a major character was removed from the film thanks to Executive Meddling.A single hiccup is all that remains of Blanc's performance in the film. He was cut out not because the character was taken out but because they decided to keep him silent to capitalize on the popularity of the similarly-silent Dopey in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. In his only work for Disney (if you don't count Who Framed Roger Rabbit), Mel Blanc originally recorded dialogue for Gideon the cat in Pinocchio.If the role was replaced with someone else it's The Other Marty. See also Demoted to Extra, when a character's screentime is simply cut to the point of insignificance. Occasionally the consequences can be tragic. This trope is what happens when a Deleted Scene also removes an entire actor from the product.įor actors this can be extremely disheartening - while they will generally still get paid, no one likes to see their hard work considered redundant to the finished product and cut out, and it can have negative effects on their career due to their industry visibility being reduced. Occasionally, whole characters fall victim to cutting. Editing can have a particularly dramatic impact, with the director and editor being able to shape the footage at their own whim. Between casting, rewrites, various production quibbles and the like, the final product could easily be completely different than what the people involved thought they were working on. “Where there’s wool, there’s also a woman who will spin it, even if it is just to pass the time.” What this wool headed gentleman must have never envisaged is a more progressive time like the present when women have voices, paintbrushes, tablas, ghungroos, guitars and wads of cash in the other hand, where men themselves are vocal about the freedom women naturally deserve.īut we still have a long way to go, and the more determined we are, the lesser fear we carry, the fewer doubts our daughters and sons will harbour about what wonders women are capable of.It can be nearly impossible to tell exactly what will happen between script and screen. The German painter Oskar Schlemmer spoke of female artistry in this dismal manner. Women are known to be more harsh and judgemental of themselves, indulging in doubt, destroying their own confidence, something that is such a disservice to oneself and ones potential. The best of us would flounder under the glare of such derision. The consequence is that in the face of constant criticism and scepticism, many women bowed out. ‘She isn’t a crowd puller.’ The list is varied and entertaining. ‘They don’t fetch enough audiences’, ‘The art doesn’t get a good price’. ![]() How they arrive at these conclusions and what irrefutable and fantastic research they base this opinion on remains a mystery but is a popular one. “Women don’t make great artistes”Ī lot of male artists have publicly claimed that women don’t make great artists, of any kind. There are still many countries, even in this day and age that have strict laws against women performing anywhere. The men wouldn’t mind dressing up as and playing women, but allowing women to play themselves was an absolute impossibility. Or perhaps that was just a ruse to keep them at home. ![]() “Safety”Įven in the field of dance, theatre and music, the stage was a dangerous place for women. Some, driven by an invisible guilt, bowed out of their own accord. Some defiant women writers managed to break the taboo and write under pseudonyms, but there are millions of nameless, faceless, talented women who were the wind beneath the wings of their scholarly husbands who soared to the skies while these women quietly toiled away at home. Never miss real stories from India's women. ![]()
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