Tarzan 1999 Archive -

Disney Renaissance

Released on June 18, 1999, Disney’s Tarzan served as the high-flying grand finale of the . As the 37th animated feature in the Disney canon, it remains a landmark achievement for its technical innovation and its departure from the studio's traditional "musical" formula. Production and Development

Part 4: The Phil Collins Vault (Audio Archives)

Alternative Climax

: A deleted ending featured a high-stakes battle on a riverboat involving gunfire and explosions. Filmmakers cut it because they wanted the jungle itself, rather than human machinery, to be the cause of the villain Clayton’s demise.

In the summer of 1999, as the world braced for the Y2K bug and the nu-metal soundtrack of The Matrix , Walt Disney Feature Animation released an outlier. Tarzan was the studio’s 37th animated feature, and in many ways, its last traditional masterpiece. Sandwiched between the mythological grandeur of Hercules (1997) and the digital revolution of Dinosaur (2000), Tarzan represented a high-water mark for hand-drawn artistry, Philadelphia-born rock music, and emotional storytelling. tarzan 1999 archive

Tarzan 1999 Archive

One of the most sought-after sections of any is the collection of deleted sequences. The film famously cut ten minutes of footage before release. Here is what the archives reveal:

For graphics programmers, exploring this archive is akin to studying a lost language of cinematic art. Disney Renaissance Released on June 18, 1999, Disney’s

Directed by Kevin Lima and Chris Buck, Tarzan began pre-production in 1995. The creative team sought to create an immersive jungle that felt truly three-dimensional. To achieve this, the animation team traveled to Uganda and Kenya to study gorilla behavior firsthand, leading to more authentic character movements and family dynamics.

The "Tarzan 1999 archive" also extends into early digital culture. The PlayStation and PC game Disney’s Tarzan , developed by Eurocom, was a marvel of isometric platforming. Its source code—leaked in 2018—revealed debug menus, unused gorilla playable skins, and a lost "Jungle Run" mode. Likewise, the official Disney Tarzan website (archived via the Wayback Machine) is a pristine time capsule of Flash animations, RealPlayer behind-the-scenes clips, and a chatroom where fans could ask "Gorilla Guru" questions about primate anatomy. Filmmakers cut it because they wanted the jungle

"The Elephant Graveyard"

– An early draft had Tarzan discovering a massive fossil bed, mirroring his own existential fear of mortality. Rough pencil tests show a young Tarzan touching a giant skull as Kala explains loss. The scene was cut for pacing, but fifteen seconds of it appeared in a 2002 documentary.




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