Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1938)

Disney’s first animated feature and an early Technicolor triumph, Snow White transforms fairy-tale fantasy into a timeless painterly masterpiece. <em>Part of the series <a href="/technicolor-series">The Wonderful World of Technicolor</a>, a seven-week celebration of Technicolor’s most dazzling achievements, showcasing the films that define cinema’s golden age of colour. The Tuesday evening screening will be introduced by series curators Adam Cook and Hilary Jay.</em> No Technicolor series would be complete without this Disney classic, the first ever feature-length animation, and one of the first films made using the groundbreaking three-strip colour process. Beneath its status as an enduring family favourite lies a work of remarkable formal sophistication—from the lush romanticism of its musical sequences to the bold expressionism of the forest chase. Its exquisitely hand-painted cels, photographed through Disney’s pioneering Multiplane Camera, give the film a depth, richness, and emotional warmth that still feel miraculous nearly a century later. While countless animated features have followed, few have matched the ambition and artistry of <em>Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs</em>, which remains a touchstone of cinematic imagination.FantasyPT1H23MRated G2026-01-30
Adriana Caselotti
Lucille La Verne
Harry Stockwell
Ben Sharpsteen
Wilfred Jackson
David Hand
William Cottrell
Perce Pearce
Larry Morey
Walt Disney
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1938)"Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1938)"

Showtimes

The Screening Room Movie Theatre