Destino (2003) Poster

(2003)

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7/10
Words fail to describe it
altec1826 March 2004
There is no other way to visually match the haunting and lyrical piece, Destino. Utilizing a stunning array of Dali's most iconic pieces, this short tells a very emotional tale. It has left me without words to describe it. Simply, it is beautiful, breath-taking, stunning, and almost lyrical in the fluid change of the figures and icons.

The melody will haunt you for days as you struggle to fully grasp this masterpiece.

However, it is at times too Fantasia-like, too Disney, and not enough Dali. It can be taken as a superficial composition, but I like to think of it as more, as though Dali knew something that we do not and this short serves to inform us of his secret.
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9/10
near perfect recreation of Dali's aesthetic mixed with Disney bravura animation
Quinoa19848 May 2015
At one time Disney and Dali wanted to collaborate for one of the former's compilation animated films (one could image this with Donald Duck, right?) and it kind of fell apart for reasons unknown. Thankfully Roy Disney picked up the mantle in the 21st century - after Fantasia 2000 the spark was reignited - and the results are rather extraordinary: it's like going into Dali's art gallery and seeing characters walk around.

One might almost be taken aback, if one knows Dali's art, how close a lot of this is to paintings he made. He is co-writer on the script, however, so I have to think this was how he intended it (a script was written for the short, it's hard to dismiss that at least). Par for the course for the co-creator of Un chien Andalou, the film has only the closest thing to a 'story' insofar as as there's a man, and a woman, and they want to be together, and passion ignites... except they're in a world full of uninhibited things, like ants which turn into men, eye-balls in tuxedo suits, and, at one (very clever) point in the background, a moon walking on spider legs.

It's not very long, only about seven minutes long, but the film never stops to amaze with how it presents its unique creature-creations and sights down long, distorted hallways with squared designs, and the distortions that can be provided by modern-day technology. The only thing holding it back from top-10-OMG-masterpiece terrain is that some, not all though, of the CGI animation isn't convincing. The characters themselves look great, as do several of the amalgamation-beings (eyeballs, insects, 'things', statues), but here and there a touch of the smooth look of CGI doesn't totally flow with the rest of the film. But this is a nitpick only for me.

What also carries this, and I have to think this was one of those elements in place when the film had its inception, is the song: Destino is passionately sung and performed, and it carries the viewer along with the images, just as the tango did in 'Andalou' - you can't really have what's on the screen without the melody, only here it's not as ironic or whimsical. It's a gorgeous experience, and I'm glad Disney decided to finish what it started, especially for a creator like Dali who had so few film projects realized in his time.
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8/10
Sweet and poignant
susevetaide30 May 2005
What a delightful combination- a hauntingly sweet song paired with Dali inspired animation. I found the animation to be more old-style Disney, not like the cookie-cutter cartoons more recently produced. It was flowing and lyric, a perfect accompaniment to the music.

The Dali fan will find countless images from his paintings, brought to life and presented in a graceful, dreamlike world. Images meld one into another in a way that Dali was not able to utilize in still art. He might give the *impression* of transformation, but in Destino, you see it come to pass.

It is an airy cruise through melancholy, romance, and longing. For me it was most thought-provoking, but not heavy or depressing. Definitely recommended!
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Just a simple love story as only Salvador Dali could tell it
Galina_movie_fan23 April 2005
I spent the day yesterday in Philadelphia Museum of Art. One of the reasons I went there was to try to see the Salvador Dali's exhibitions but the tickets have been sold until the end of April. While in the museum, I was able to see two films that Dali was a big part of. In the video Gallery of the museum, two intriguing projects have been running together in the continuous loop, the early "Un Chien Andalou" (17 minutes) and the recently released, animated Destino (6 minutes). This was the first viewing for me. I kept coming back to the gallery for few more times and I never was tired of both short films.

What would've happened if Salvador Dali and Walt Disney had decided to work together on a project? The answer is "Destino" , the 6 minutes, 40 seconds long animated film based on a Mexican love ballad entitled "Destino". Dali and Disney admired each other's work and their meeting at a dinner party in 1945, inspired the idea for collaboration. Although, the film was abandoned in 1946 due to the economic problems created by WWII, Dali's storyboards, sketches, and paintings were saved. Work began on Destino in May 2001 and in June 2003, "Destino" premiered at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival.

Set to the Mexican ballad, the idea behind the film was described by Disney as "just a simple love story - boy meets girl". Dali called it "a magical exposition on the problem of life in the labyrinth of time". The end result is a tender, beautiful, sad, and charming love story as only Dali could imagine it, complete with the images as only he could create by the power of his imagination - melting clocks, tuxedo-clad eyeballs without faces, ballerinas, ants that turn into bicycles, and surprising baseballs.
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10/10
Beautiful
JonBowerbank21 February 2004
Although it wasn't completely made by the original collaborators (Dali & Walt Disney), it still has their vision taken from their storyboards. This is classic Dali mixed with a female protagonist who has the familiar Disney style face.

Great story, with a wonderful somewhat tragic ending.
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10/10
outstanding
buckeyeboy-111 July 2006
I had a chance to view the Destino DVD and was highly impressed. I was impressed so much that I bought a suite (set of 6)from the time line done by Dali and Disney. The DVD captures the true surrealism that Disney (who would ever think of a talking mouse) and Dali is famous for. These two individuals that one would think we be as far apart in personalities would actually come up with one the best short films and some of the most treasured art work ever created. I am truly blessed to have seen such a work of art and truly honored to own a piece of history. If you have the chance to see the DVD or own some of the art work that has come out of this experience, jump on it. It is very rare that two famous individuals with such diverse backgrounds collaborate on such a unique piece.
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6/10
The animation inconsistencies are annoying
atenhunen12 August 2022
From animation perspective this was VERY annoying to watch when some elements look like 30-60fps CG, while others are barely 3 fps hand drawn animation with fades between the frames at the same time.
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10/10
Its brevity is only equaled by its brilliance
monolith9418 January 2004
The best film of the year might not be Lord of the Rings: Return of the King. In fact, it might not even be 90 minutes long.

The best film of the year might just be Destino, the long awaited finalization of the original collaboration between Walt Disney and Salvador Dali.

Using a seamless combination of CGI and traditional hand drawn animation, the animators of Disney's Paris studio have created something of bewildering beauty and unrivaled maturity.

In a mere five minutes, in this surreal story of two characters, I saw more pure aesthetic beauty and truth of the human condition than in most of the films I have seen here. The film's subject is desire, imagination, images and struggle. In ballet like grace, a woman, who connects herself with the shadow of a bell, becomes enraptured with a man, who emerges from rock. In the dance, they struggle with both imagery.

Destino does more than simply dazzle with its images - it imbues them with real meaning. As if that wasn't enough, it goes a step further, and adds new to dimension to Dali's entire collected works. I will never look at a Dali painting in quite the same way after watching this short film.

The animated short is an old and prestigious form. From Winsor McKay's first sketchs (which are remarkably good) to modern revelations such as "The Man Who Planted Trees", the animated short has pressed animation further, and provided audiences with stories worthy of telling and retelling. Destino continues in this fine tradition admirably. Being lucky enough to watch this on the big screen is an experience I will treasure forever.
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6/10
Dalí in motion
Horst_In_Translation10 September 2013
Warning: Spoilers
While the name Dominique Monfery is probably not known to many, the people this short film do not only include one of Walt Disney's nephews, but also the world-famous artist Salvador Dalí, who wrote it right after World War 2. And his contribution is easy to see. I am not a great expert when it comes to Dalí, but everybody knows "The Persistence of Memory", the famous Dalí painting with the melting clocks. And we don't even have to watch the film till the part where these melting clocks appear in order to identify him as way earlier, right after the start, there is already a scene which has melting faces that seem incredibly dalíesque. We also see ants crawling out of an open hand wound, a symbolism already used by Dalí much earlier when he wrote the script for the notable 1920s surreal movie "Un chien andalou".

Just like the aforementioned, this animated short film here doesn't really have a factual storyline apart from the fact that it centers on a beautiful black-haired woman from start to finish. What it does have, however, is great music (Armando Dominguez' rendition of "Destino" is a thing of beauty, especially with English lyrics towards the end.) and excellent animation. The over 50 year wait for its completion was very well worth it. I'd say the film it lost the Oscar to that year, Harvey Krumpet, is still a bit better, but the nomination was very well-deserved.
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10/10
An Artist View
Dancefloorgraphics12 February 2008
I discovered this wonderful film on a cruise this winter, it was shown by Park West Galleries as part of a seminar. For me it was love at first site and I quickly fell in love with not only the movie but the art work Salvador Dali produced as concepts for it.

In the end I purchased a set of seven lithographs that Dali created and to my joy the set came with a copy of the film Destino. I can say that am am undoubtedly a proud owner and love the great addition to my collection.

Some have called this film uninteresting, to this I am at a loss for words. to see the brain child of Walt Disney and Salvador Dali come to life is incredible. I admit, children and those who view Dali's work as 'weird' will probably not enjoy this short masterpiece.

If you ever get a chance to see the film do not hesitate to do so. Even if you do not like the premise the film is a tribute to the brilliant minds of both Walt and Salvador.
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10/10
History...Today
patraallen12 July 2006
This was a fantastic example of the good that technology brings.I was delighted by it and I am thrilled that this dream was brought to fruition.

Who ever thought Dali and Disney would collaborate. A must see it is moving art, song, and poetry! And a huge credit to the art world. If you are an art enthusiast, Or if you are enthralled by Disney's darker side, find a way to see it. The imagery is classic Dali. I understand many could be turned off by some of the images brought to screen by Dali in the past i.e. the Andilusian Dog, but Disney's influence is clearly visible. The musical score is haunting and at times Very indicative of Classic Disney scores. If you like animated shorts, the art of Dali, and are open minded you will enjoy this one.
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5/10
A unfinished treasure that should have remained unfinished
dbborroughs6 March 2004
The idea of Disney and Dali working together seems as weird as one of Dali's paintings. A play off Broadway several seasons ago imagined Dali's effect on the Disney Studio and Alice in Wonderland which was in production at the same time and was quite funny.

The reality of situation was something else and ended after lots of sketches and paintings had been done (many later stolen) but for all the work only several seconds of film had actually been animated. For 50 years there was always a feeling of "what if it all had worked out" to the project. Now 50 Years later Roy Disney picks up where Uncle Walt left off and completed the project.

The result was better in the realm of "what if".

There is nothing really wrong with the film, except its not really interesting. I saw it as part of a children's film festival and most of the kids seemed puzzled. Most of the adults just took the odd images in stride. It was well animated but nothing special to look at, its really more a collection of paintings that move than an actual film. Yes there is a romance of sorts with a surrealist twist, but its nothing compelling.

The film was nominated for best animated short, but having actually watched the entire film I think it was more a favor to Roy Disney than to any Oscar quality of the film.

If you get the chance see it, but its not worth going out of your way to see. Nor do I think it will be worth the price of Disney's proposed DVD release featuring a documentary on the making of and the film itself. If they charge anything over ten bucks they truly will have be as mad as Dali himself.
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A touch too Disney but still engaging and visually distinctive film that matches Dalí's original designs
bob the moo1 October 2007
Originally conceived as a joint project between Disney and Dalí back in the 1940's, this short animation never got to the stage of being completed for various reasons and instead existed as paintings and storyboards Dalí made with Disney animator John Hench. These were on display at the Tate Modern as part of the exhibition "Dalí & Film" and I did like the fact that I could see the creation of the film and then step next door to watch it and see how close it came to the original design from over fifty years before.

Watching it is a strange but enjoyable experience because it is at once Disney and Dalí and this is a combination that I didn't think sat all that well together thematically or visually. I did get used to it but it did jar with me to see a woman with a typical modern Disney face, suddenly becoming part of a Dalí's creation. Perhaps this was the intension but it did feel a bit like someone was flicking a switch somewhere to go Dalí then Disney then back again – not so much a combination of styles as the two being placed next to one another in one piece. This feeling aside though, it is a quiet engaging and enjoyable film that I enjoyed immensely visually. Dalí's vision is brought to life really well and the images from his storyboard and paintings generally are instantly recognisable.

Again I did wonder if the film would have been quite so "Disney" if it had been made in 1946 with the man himself directly involved – at times I did feel that I was watching Pocahontas and it did take away from the experience a little bit. Fortunately the storyboards prevent it going too far from the original images and as such it is interesting and imaginative; the CGI is a blessing and a curse though. On one hand it makes all this possible but on the other it seems significantly less real than Dalí's actual paintings – I'm not sure quite why but I think the colours are too simple and the imagery lacking in the detail that some of his work has.

Overall though, it is still an enjoyable and enchanting film and a chance to see Dalí's images flowing across the screen. Perhaps a little too Disneyified for my tastes, it is still well worth seeing for the chance to enter a Dalí painting and follow a story about loss and love.
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10/10
Out of Dali by Disney and worth watching more than once
llltdesq25 February 2014
Warning: Spoilers
This short was nominated for an Academy Award for Animated Short. There will be spoilers ahead:

This is the latter-day result of an unlikely collaboration between Salvador Dali and Walt Disney begun in the 1940s and ultimately set aside and forgotten until rediscovered by Roy Disney and completed almost 60 years later.

It's impossible to mistake this as anything but a collaboration between Dali and Disney. While it reminds one of Fantasia, it's likely that the short would have disappeared without a trace had it been completed as originally scheduled. If anything, it's even more esoteric and artistically inclined than Fantasia and Fantasia was widely seen as a flop. As a short it would have set the studio back far less financially than Fantasia did as a feature, but Disney was already starting to have trouble making back the costs of its shorts because Walt Disney had such high expectations from even his shorts. That financial pressure was part of what put this in mothballs in the first place.

It would have been interesting to see what the Disney studios would have made of this in the late 1940s-early 1950s. As it is now, this looks for all the world like a series of Dali paintings brought to life and set in motion. Half melted objects, a likeness or two of Dali and other Dali trademarks given the Disney touch make this a fascinating curiosity and the quality of the backgrounds and character designs is magnificent.

This is available on the Blu-Ray release of Fantasia 2000 and looks beautiful, particularly in HD. There's also a feature length documentary on the project on the same disc which I haven't seen but which looks to be very good itself. Well worth watching. Most recommended.
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10/10
A beautiful dream Warning: Spoilers
A fascinating, completely atypical short from Disney.

Words are not enough to describe the breathtaking beauty from this animation, which explores in a whimsical, totally dream-like way several themes and motifs displayed by the art works done by Salvador Dalí. If "Fantasia" was able to turn music into animation, "Destino" turns both the music and the animation into poetry, reaching a level of lyricism that hardly could be achieved by other kind of format.

"Destino" is the kind of short that cannot be described, it must be seen to understand what makes this so great. "Destino" is another proof of the possibilities that the animated medium have, being able to express wonderfully the most abstract concepts into a visual format, the most poetical way that somebody could imagine.

A must-see.
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8/10
So CLOSE!
xconwombats5 February 2022
A very interesting short film. I got a little lost, but it was thoroughly entertaining! Wish we could have seen it if Disney and Dali had finished their version.
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8/10
magnificent!
framptonhollis27 November 2017
Disney and Dali collaborated to create the brief surrealist trip known as "Destino", and it seems that this film had some long production history that I'm just not going to get into because it's somewhat irrelevant to my views on the film itself. Whatever the original intentions may have been, whatever technical issues may have occurred throughout the years before this film was finally released...they do not matter nearly as much as the fact that this film is absolutely fantastic!

The music, the visuals, the plot less odyssey of ecstasy and passion...it's all perfectly placed and constructed from beginning to end, and it makes for a beautifully experimental experience that has moments of love, moments of moving emotional power and wacky surrealist humor. It's short, sweet, and surreal...a real treat! If one of Dali's most brilliant paintings were to come to life, this is exactly what it'd look like, and was obviously probably somewhat of the film's original intention and, no matter how things may have played out over the years leading up to its eventual release, the final product of "Destino" is a blazing rocket ride round the peaks of imaginative, boundless, unbreakable madness, color, and creativity!
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10/10
A pleasant surprise before the showing of "The Triplets of Belleville"!
rhkratz1 February 2004
What a wonderful surprise to see such a delightful short! Beautiful graphics and very creative story development. The singing was emotional but unintelligible (to me).
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5/10
It could be something good
The-Axe-Of-Eugene19 July 2016
But no. It has two problems, and in a short film where the only important thing it's the visual style and how it looks (the animation style), this film isn't good enough.

OK, the visual style it's really cool, because you know, Dali style. Whatever, it doesn't success in the same way in the animation, being sometimes fluid and smooth, and others just rear too look at, and not in a good way. It looks like a transition between a photo and one of those in which an image fades slowly to result in the other, and this doesn't match at all. Besides that, it look awful.

The other problem with the animation it's the use of CGI, when the movie will be far better only with a traditional style, or at least being just in 2D.

In the end, nothing really interesting, maybe if you're a fan of Salvador Dali.
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Short Review of Destino
ccircosta200220 October 2004
I had the privilege to see Destino at the Salvador Dalí Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida.

It's the only place in the world where it plays on a regular basis.

It six minutes I believe.

I thought it was beautiful.

Enchanting.

If you can, see it.

I absolutely loved it.
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8/10
True to Dali & Walt Disney
Imdbidia11 January 2017
Destino is a beautiful Mexican old bolero song that speaks of destiny, timing and love, and the thread of this film. Although created in 2003, this was a joint project of Salvador Dali and Walt Disney, started in 1946 but never finished because of lack of funds. Disney, the company, decided to have it finished to include it in Fantasia 2000. The short fits perfectly with the original Fantasy, in spirit, style, themes and mood, something remarkable because the original creators are no longer with us.

Like other pieces in Fantasia and Fantasia 2000, Destino is a symbolic piece that links the music, the visuals and the narrative in very artistic ways. It has many levels of reading and it is up to you what in the story speaks to you, or what the story is about. It was never meant to mean only one thing because, although Dali certainly projected his main themes and visuals into the story and imagery (the world of the oneiric, the subconscious, the Psyche, the Freudian) Walt Disney saw it mostly as a romantic love story. Destino is a contemporary ballet with an exploration of the male and female psyche expressed in a mythic romantic drama.

The movie uses 2D animation and is wonderfully Disneyan (what Disney was before it became too commercial), with a beautifully lyric piece that stays true to the soul of the creators and feels as if they had carried it out to the end. Dominique Monfery has achieved something wonderful, magic and respectful to what the piece meant to be.

A short film like this might have been mind-blowing in the 1950s, as planned, because the format, language and themes were very hot and innovative at time. They are not as much nowadays, so the freshness is perhaps gone, it feels like a wonderful Disney vintage piece, and that is remarkable, but it didn't touch or move me.
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10/10
Breathtaking
Hitchcoc2 April 2019
This is a woman's surreal journey. She dances her way through transitional scenes created by Salvador Dali. The images are magnificent and pull us along. The colors leap to the screen. The music is haunting, promising destiny and love. There is a kind of spark when images carom off one another. Excellent.
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10/10
If you Love Dali and Disney, this is a MUST SEE! :D
midnitepantera10 December 2020
OMG!!! I ran across this short film about 5 years ago and fell in love with it instantly!! I've loved Disney since I was a kid and Dali since I was a teenager learning about art. It's absolutely GORGEOUS and STRANGE!!

Dora Luz, has the voice of an angel and the song is just so heart-breakingly lovely. The love story is fantastic. The one thing I wonder is why did Disney continue to shelve this after the war??? Jealousy maybe??? You can see that the artwork is heavily Dali influenced. It obvious that they both held each other in very high esteem as artists when they agreed to start this project. I'm so glad it was found and completed and shared with the world finally.

For all you Dali fans, there is a wonderful 360 degree video called Dreams of Dali . You can literally enter Dali's artwork and immerse yourself in a surrealist dream of super weirdness that will leave your mouth agape. It can be found on Youtube. It actually allows you to enter Dali's famous paintings from different angles and is just really a fun trip for the whole family to enjoy from the comfort of your home without having to buy VR Goggles. Especially during this horrible Pandemic, but if you get the chance in the future, you can view it in person at a Dali Museum in Florida or Spain and they have the VR Goggles there. Check this short film out and then go play in Dali's breathing artwork, it's the closest you will get to being Alice through the Looking Glass! Cheers !! ;D
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8/10
If you can feel the art
AnonymousbutDilpreet00220 August 2020
It's understood that cinema is art and art doesn't necessarily have a meaning.

Destino is collection of pictures drawn by Salvador Dali, in motion. They don't form a story when put together, or if they do, it's not easily interoperabile.

The dream like film looks good visually. It is very unlike Disney to say true.

Stunning piece of art.
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10/10
bootleg copies
hawaiianjazz517 August 2006
After reading all of the reviews of "Destino" and doing some searching for downloads of the movie I decided to search in some torrent engines. I was searching through a bunch of torrent search engines and didn't find "Destino" anywhere. (A torrent is just a compressed file that you can download with some free software.) Then I started thinking; if somebody could go to the Disney museum, which has a constant destino movie playing, and record it, then put it up for torrent download we could all get a bootleg copy. Either that or the Disney Corporation needs to make "Destino" publicly availible. Please contact me if you do obtain a bootleg copy.
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