Oliver And Company -
The film’s most striking innovation is its setting. Dickens’ London was a maze of industrial gloom and institutional cruelty; Disney’s New York is a neon-lit jungle of stark contrasts. The opening sequence, a montage set to Billy Joel’s “Once Upon a Time in New York City,” immediately establishes a city divided. Skyscrapers (the Chrysler Building, the World Trade Center) pierce the clouds above while desperate animals forage in subway tunnels and trash-filled alleys. This vertical stratification literalizes economic class: the wealthy live in penthouses (the Foxworth residence), while the impoverished live below street level.
The climactic chase across the Brooklyn Bridge and into the subway tunnel serves as the film’s moral crucible. Sykes’s vehicle—a black, armored, driverless car—is a machine of pure capital: indifferent, unstoppable, and ultimately self-destructive when it collides with a subway train. By contrast, the animals navigate the tracks on foot, relying on agility, trust, and shared risk. The villain is destroyed by the very system of impersonal power he worships; the heroes survive through interpersonal warmth. Oliver and Company
Released during a transitional period for Walt Disney Feature Animation, Oliver & Company (1988) arrived between the modest success of The Great Mouse Detective (1986) and the industry-redefining triumph of The Little Mermaid (1989). Often overlooked in the canon, the film represents a bold, if flawed, attempt to contemporize Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist by transplanting its Victorian social critique into a vibrant, gritty 1980s New York City. By replacing orphaned boys with anthropomorphic animals and Fagin’s pickpocket gang with a multi-species crew of scavengers, Oliver & Company explores enduring themes of economic disparity, loyalty, and the definition of family. Ultimately, the film argues that survival requires neither pure self-interest (as embodied by the villain Sykes) nor passive dependence (as seen in the pampered pet class), but rather a chosen community built on mutual obligation. The film’s most striking innovation is its setting