Summary

  • Early Disney animations were rooted in horror, but modern Disney shies away despite Snow White's horror setpiece.
  • Live-action films sanitizes horror sequences, but Snow White's adaptation fully embraces and enhances the haunted forest scene.
  • Snow White's haunted forest sequence is objectively real, aligning with the theme of empathy changing the world around her.

Horror has long been integral to the Disney storytelling method. The earliest days of Walt Disney’s animation studio saw the team delving deep into the horror genre and mining it for maximum tension, suspense, and dread in some truly striking ways. But modern Disney? They tend to veer as far as humanly possible from any horror inclinations, seemingly for fear of upsetting potential viewers.

To this end, many of the live-action Disney remakes have taken horror-rooted sequences that were present in the original animated films and either actively downplayed their intensity or removed them altogether, which is what makes it all the more startling that the live-action Snow White presents a full-blown horror setpiece right in the middle of its first act.

2025 Snow White
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The words ‘horror’ and ‘Disney’ may not exactly seem synonymous in the current cultural lexicon, but that’s more an indictment of the present-tense efforts of the studio than anything else. In reality, Walt Disney and his original team of animators were actually masters of the horror genre. Some of the earliest Disney shorts, from 1929’s The Haunted House to 1933’s The Mad Doctor to 1937’s Lonesome Ghosts, dealt heavily with horror filmmaking. Notably, these shorts even starred Disney mascot Mickey Mouse, a character who is now handled with such delicacy that the studio seems scared to even use him at all. Clearly, the creative team saw the potential of horror to up the stakes in these stories and make the character’s inevitable triumph at the end of the film all the sweeter; if audiences genuinely feared that something might happen to Mickey Mouse in the second act, then his victory in the third act would be made all the more affecting.

This mentality and eagerness to utilize the horror genre persevered and expanded in subsequent years. The 1937 short The Old Mill showcases a remarkably articulate grasp of horror filmmaking, ratcheting up the tension alongside the crescendoing orchestral score to profound impact. It was with this refined understanding of the genre that Disney and his team moved into the medium of feature films and brought this talent with them. From the haunted forest sequence in Snow White and the Seven Dwarves to the donkey transformation sequence in Pinocchio to the demonic glee of the “Night on Bald Mountain” section in Fantasia to the Headless Horseman setpiece in The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad, the golden age of Disney’s animated feature films were filled to the brim with genuinely frightening imagery and spectacularly well-made horror.

Modern Disney's Aversion to Horror

Disney Villains Cursed Café - Launch Trailer Thumbnail

In stark contrast, modern Disney could not be less interested in the horror genre. The practice of weaponizing the horror genre against audiences in inventive ways within the context of family-friendly films has been all but entirely abandoned by the studio. As a potent encapsulation of this practice, one needs to look no further than the studio’s live-action remakes of their animated classics. The iconic experimental visuals of the “Pink Elephants” sequence in Dumbo were removed and outright scoffed at in the live-action version. The body horror of the donkey transformation scene in Pinocchio is so toned down that it is unrecognizable. The ‘hephalumps and woozles’ of Winnie the Pooh are cut out of the story of Christopher Robin. These choices served to sanitize and sauder the edges off of these works, making them feel painfully dull and weak-hearted in the process.

Considering all this, it seemed pretty obvious that the live-action Snow White would follow suit and either drastically reduce or outright remove the iconic haunted forest sequence from the new adaptation. But surprisingly, this could not be further from the case. The new Snow White not only still features the haunted forest setpiece, but it fully embraces it while also recontextualizing it into a key moment of emphasis for the film’s most prominent themes.

For additional context, it's worth noting that the highly-revered, award-winning, and storied Italian horror filmmaker Dario Argento adored the original Snow White and the Seven Dwarves. He found the film to be equally beautiful and horrifying and sought to emulate it when he made his own iconic fantastical horror film, Suspiria, in 1977. For the film, Argento utilized three-strip Technicolor film printing, a practice that was well out of style at that point, to better emulate the kaleidoscopic colors of Disney’s original film. Additionally, he staged numerous sequences throughout the film to directly mirror scenes from Snow White and the Seven Dwarves, specifically referencing the haunted forest sequences numerous times in the film. The new Snow White takes influence from both the original animated film’s version of the haunted forest sequence and from Argento’s own Suspiria in some genuinely striking ways.

Disney Embraces the Haunted Forest in Snow White

the evil queen from snow white and the seven dwarfs

In the original animated film, the haunted forest sequence is a work of cinema-of-attraction showmanship and bravado. It’s this fully realized horror sequence in which Snow White sees trees reaching out for her with claws and floating logs turning into monsters in the water, but in the aftermath of the sequence, all of this is inferred to have been the character’s subjective experience of the woods. The audience is not meant to believe that those things literally happened to her, but rather that, in the aftermath of the Huntsman revealing that the Queen wants her dead, this is what it feels like for Snow White to run through the woods. The live-action film takes this correlation and elevates it in fascinating ways.

In the live-action Snow White, the haunted forest sequence is not only included in full, but it also turns objectively real. There are a few lines of dialogue early on about the forest being magical, and so, rather than play it as a subjective experience the character is having, the forest is full-tilt alive, maniacal, and attempting to kill Snow White at this moment. Trees literally grab at her with claws; monsters literally circle around her, and the ground literally splits open like a portal to Hell beneath her feet. On top of all of this, the lighting choices and production design of the sequence are highly evocative of Suspiria, with these periwinkle blues and hellfire reds being used as stark points of contrast in every composition.

Snow White Truly Justifies the Choice

Snow White Changes From Original

In and of itself, these are gonzo choices that feel all the more shocking for how entirely removed they are from the rest of the film’s visual vernacular. And even if that was all there was to this scene, it would still warrant attention for just how unique it is that director Marc Webb managed to sneak this into his live-action Disney film. But actually, there’s an even more intelligent stroke to the work here, and that is in how the live-action film takes ownership of these choices.

One of the primary themes of the live-action Snow White is the way in which the main character’s empathy changes the world around her. In a cold, cruel world, Rachel Zegler’s Snow White regularly treats others with care and affection, and her choice to do so influences these other characters in palpable ways. The haunted forest sequence here is used as a visual encapsulation of this very theme: after Snow White crawls out of the lake, the forest is still dark and Argento-esque. But then, as she shows compassion to an encroaching creature, the forest literally lights up around her, and the creatures reveal themselves to be timid woodland critters. The scene also establishes one of the key visual motifs of the film: the fireflies, which come to represent Snow White and the way in which she literally lights up the world around her.

For all that has been said about Snow White, this is an incredibly under-discussed element of the film that absolutely rules. In the first twenty minutes of this film, there’s a Dario Argento-indebted horror sequence that pulls its own weight within the film in terms of narrative and thematic heft, gives the filmmakers the opportunity to strut their stuff on a formal level, showcases what a fantastic scream queen Rachel Zegler could be, and hearkens back to Walt Disney himself in the process.

  • Rating block community and brand ratings Image
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    Snow White
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    PG
    Family
    Fantasy
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    Release Date
    March 21, 2025
    Runtime
    109 Minutes
    Director
    Marc Webb
    Writers
    Erin Cressida Wilson, Wilhelm Grimm
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      Rachel Zegler
      Snow White
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      Gal Gadot
      Evil Queen

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    Disney is a conglomerate and media company that owns a variety of television stations like ABC, Disney Channel, and Disney XD. They are also owners of the Marvel and Star Wars franchises and own the ever-popular Disney theme parks found all around the world.

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