Immerse yourself in the best-quality restoration of this classic Ludwig Von Drake segment, featuring superb Super 8mm restoration, meticulous color correction, and crystal 4K clarity—perfect for animators, students, and Disney enthusiasts.
In this legendary “Man Is His Own Worst Enemy” lecture, Professor Ludwig Von Drake breaks down how our greatest struggles are often self-inflicted—with his quirky humor and academic flair intact. Ward Kimball’s animation here is exceptional: a rare blend of emotional expression, caricature, and theatrical performance that elevates the ideas of emotion and reason to feature-film-caliber artistry.
*About this restoration:*
Super 8mm source for Von Drake segments, fully color-graded, shot-by-shot
Quietly preserved original vintage shorts where Professor’s narration continues seamlessly
Only the opening title and Walt Disney's introductions were restored from a separate digitized Tape.
Important ANIMATOR'S NOTE:
Some MILT KAHL character animations of Professor Ludwig Von Drake, which we’ve discussed before, are re-used in this show.
Ward Kimball (Animator of Von Drake in this segment as well as the segment where Emotion Meets Reason - the characters representing "Emotion" both for the lady and the gent are animated by Ward)
Born March 4, 1914, in Minneapolis; joined Disney in 1934 as an inbetweener and rose to become one of the legendary “Nine Old Men.”
Known for vivid caricature, bold staging, and outlandish energy—he brought to life Jiminy Cricket (Pinocchio), Tweedledee & Tweedledum, the Cheshire Cat, and Lucifer the Cat, among others.
Directed Oscar-winning shorts: Toot, Whistle, Plunk and Boom (1953; first CinemaScope cartoon), and It’s Tough to Be a Bird (1969).
Crafted groundbreaking television specials on space—Man in Space, Man and the Moon, Mars and Beyond—fueling public interest in exploration.
Off-screen, he was a passionate railroad hobbyist (Grizzly Flats Railroad) and Dixieland jazz trombonist, leading the Firehouse Five Plus Two band.
Retired in the early 1970s, later consulted for Walt Disney Imagineering (e.g., EPCOT’s World of Motion), and passed away in 2002.
*Why this matters:*
This is a valuable animation study piece—especially for students and professionals studying Ward Kimball’s unique style. The “Emotion and Reason” sequence exemplifies his expressive exaggeration, mood characterizing, and rhythmic staging at its finest.
Disclaimer:
Property of The Walt Disney Company and Disney Enterprises, Inc. Edited and enhanced by @borsu.animation for educational purposes only. This channel is not affiliated with or endorsed by The Walt Disney Company or any of its subsidiaries.
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