New and exclusive Disney+ shows and films for 2022/23 revealed

There are some great titles

Disney+
Author: Anna Sky MagliolaPublished 24th Jun 2022
Last updated 24th Jun 2022

Subscribers to Disney+ are in for a treat over the coming months as the streaming platform has revealed what new and exclusive shows and films are joining the line-up.

Titles starring Ryan Reynolds, Steve Carell, Gemma Arterton, Richard E. Grant, David Beckham, Chris Hemsworth and Eddie Izzard, are all coming to Disney+ in 2022 and 2023.

Whether you're looking for a title for the whole family or just adults there's bound to be a show or film just right for you. Coming up, the new titles include the psychological thriller starring Steve Carell and Domhnall Gleeson, The Patient, as well as Fleishman is in Trouble, starring Jesse Eisenberg, Lizzy Caplan, Claire Danes, and Adam Brody.

There's also Welcome to Wrexham, a docuseries starring Rob McElhenney and Ryan Reynolds, and Mike, telling the dynamic and controversial life of boxing icon Mike Tyson.

Take a look through some other titles that are being added to Disney+.

Science Fair: The Series

The new docuseries Science Fair: The Series will also be added to the streaming service, inspired by the Sundance Festival favourite Science Fair. The series follows a group of inspiring teens who represent a group of International Science and Engineering Fair hopefuls.

Maggie

For those who prefer a bit of romance with a difference, Maggie might be right up your street. The TV show follows the title character Maggie who has a gift that allows her to see the future of her relationships with her friends, family and of course potential boyfriends. As to be expected things get a bit complicated!

National Geographic

If you're interested in documentaries, National Geographic will be adding several titles including Limitless with Chris Hemsworth, Dance the World with Derek Hough, Extraordinary Birder and Farming is Life.

Here is the full list of titles to be added to Disney+:

American Horror Stories (Season 2)

Culprits

Dance the World with Derek Hough

Extraordinary

Extraordinary Birder

Farming is Life

Fleishman is in Trouble

Limitless with Chris Hemsworth

Little Demon

Maggie

Mike

Nautilus

Not Okay

Prey

Reservation Dogs (Season 2)

Rosaline

Save Our Squad

Science Fair: The Series

Solar Opposites (Season 3)

The Ballad of Renegade Nell

The Full Monty

The Old Man

The Patient

The Princess

Wedding Season

Welcome to Chippendales

Welcome to Wrexham

How can I watch Disney+?

You can sign up for Disney+ for only £7.99 per month. 18+. Subscription required. Ts & Cs Apply.

Now take a look through facts you didn't know about Disney:

1) Walter Disney's original name

Walter Disney's original moniker was d'Isigny, showing his French roots. While d'Isignyland might not have such a ring to it, Walt d'Isigny might have lent Paris-set animations like The Aristocats and Ratatouille a certain je ne sais quoi.

2) Wall-E was named after Walt

Everyone's favourite rubbish-compactor, Wall-E, was named after Walter Elias Disney.

3) Yen Sid's name is also familiar...

The sorcerer in Fantasia is called 'Yen Sid', which may ring a bell if read backwards.

4) Ariel and Belle were modelled off a real-life person

If you thought Ariel and Belle's perfect proportions were too good to be true, think again, because they're based on real-life model Sherri Stoner, a writer and producer for animations including Animaniacs and Caspar the Friendly Ghost.

5) Does the voice from Lilo and Stitch sound familiar?

The voice of Lilo, from Lilo and Stitch, is Daveigh Chase - the same girl who haunts our dreams as Samara Morgan in The Ring.

6) Lilo and Stitch love Elvis

Lilo and Stitch also features more Elvis Presley songs than any of his own films. Talk about treading on his blue suede shoes!

7) Disney held the patent for Technicolor

For a couple of years Disney held the patent for Technicolor, making him the only animator allowed to make colour films

8) Disney love to hide classic characters in new films

Those Disney animators are tricksy folk, and love to hide classic characters in the background for newer films. For example, in the opening scenes of the Little Mermaid the eagle-eyed may spot Goofy, Mickey and Donald Duck in the audience at King Triton's concert.

9) Joss Whedon came up with Rex from Toy Story

Joss Whedon was part of a team of writers brought in to perk up the Toy Story script, and came up with the character of Rex, the cowardly dinosaur.

10) Aladdin's trousers took inspo from M.C. Hammer

To capture the movement of Aladdin's low-cut baggy pants, animator Glen Keane watched M.C. Hammer videos. That was his excuse, anyway.

11) Sulley has LOTS of hair

Sulley from Monsters Inc. has more than 2.3 million individual hairs, which are all carefully animated. This explains why a single frame of the big blue fella took an average of 12 hours to produce.

12) Clarence Nash did more than just voice Donald Duck

Clarence Nash, aka the voice of Donald Duck, created the dog barks for 101 Dalmatians. While we're on the subject of animal noise, tiger roars were used for the Lion King, as lions weren't deemed loud enough.

13) Did you spot these cameos?

The Hunchback of Notre Dame features tiny 'cameos' from Belle, Aladdin's magic carpet and even Pumbaa, who is trussed up ready for cooking.

14) Prince Charming's name is not actually revealed...

While we know him as Prince Charming, the dapper chap who steals Cinderella's heart (and slipper) is never actually named during the film.

15) The Lion King's Simba and Bhalu

Simba is Swahili for 'lion', while Bhalu (Baloo) is Hindi for 'bear'.

16) Dumbo is Disney's quietest central character

Dumbo is an elephant of few words - none, in fact - which makes him the quietest central character of them all. Hot on his heels is Aurora from Sleeping Beauty, who gets a mere 18 whole lines of dialogue, and just 18 minutes of screen time in her own film.

17) It's rumoured that Walt Disney had a phobia of mice

While this is hard to prove, it is a fact that his big-eared creation was named 'Mortimer', until his wife persuaded him that 'Mickey' had a better ring to it…

18) Snow White and the Seven Dwarves Oscars

Walt Disney was presented with one normal-sized honorary Oscar and seven little Oscars for Snow White and the Seven Dwarves in 1938.

19) Walt Disney's last written words were 'Kurt Russell'

Walt's final words - written rather than spoken - were, rather cryptically 'Kurt Russell'. No-one, including the actor himself, has any idea why.

20) Mickey's Hollywood Star was a first!

Mickey Mouse was the first animated character to receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. We imagine he'd rather have had a cheese wheel, but you can't always get what you want.

21) Monsters Inc.'s Boo's real name is Mary

Adorable Monsters Inc. character Boo's real name in the film is Mary - named after her voice actress Mary Gibbs. You can see it written on a drawing in her room during the movie!

22) The Little Mermaid storm took a LOT of work

The two-minute storm in The Little Mermaid took 10 special effects artists over a year to finish.

23) Walt Disney once played Peter Pan in a school play

The decision to create an animated version of Peter Pan stemmed from Walt's own childhood!

24) Mickey Mouse was the first animated character to talk

His first words, in 1929 cartoon The Karnival Kid, were 'Hot dog!'

25) The Beast is made up of loads of different animals

Tasked with creating the Beast, supervising animator Glen Keane took inspiration from the zoo, blending the mane of a lion, the horns and head of a buffalo, the eyebrows of a gorilla, the tusks of a wild boar, the upper body of a bear, and the legs and tail of a wolf to create the rather likeable Beast.

26) Walt's favourite character

Walt Disney's personal favourite character was tie-wearing dog Goofy.

27) Bruce was not a random name

Bruce, the 'vegetarian' great white shark of Finding Nemo, was named after the mechanical shark used in Jaws, which, in turn, was named after Steven Spielberg's lawyer!

28) Walt Disney's final film

The final film Walt personally oversaw was The Jungle Book, before his death from lung cancer in 1966.

29) Billy Crystal turned down a previous role

Billy Crystal may be immortalised in the Disney cannon as Mike Wazowski, but prior to that he turned down the role of Buzz Lightyear in Toy Story, a role that eventually went to Tim Allen. After watching the finished film, he described his decision as one of his biggest regrets, but has said that Mike is his favourite ever role.

30) More cameos!

Several doggy characters from Lady and the Tramp appear in a pet shop window in 101 Dalmatians. According to someone with waaay too much time on their hands, the film also contains 6,469,952 black spots.

31) A productive lunchtime resulted in four HUGE films

The ideas for Wall-E, Monsters Inc., A Bug's Life and Finding Nemo came from a single lunchtime brainstorming session in 1994, before the first Toy Story film was even finished. What did you accomplish over sandwiches today?

32) Snow White changed its spelling

Though commonly referred to as seven 'dwarves', the films actual title is Snow White and the Seven 'Dwarfs'. This is because in 1938 when the film was released, 'dwarfs' was the accepted plural. Blame JRR Tolkien for the change.

33) Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was make-or-break for Disney

Costing his studios $1.4m to make, it was widely derided as Disney's Ruin, by people subsequently proved non-psychic. Adjusted for inflation, it's one of the ten highest-grossing films of all time. To achieve a natural skin tone for Snow White, real rouge was applied to the animated cells.

34) Mickey's four fingers

Mickey only has four fingers on each hand because animators thought he looked strange with five. The fact that he's a clothed mouse apparently didn't seem strange to them at all.

35) Did you recognise Sid's carpet in Toy Story?

Bully boy Sid from Toy Story has a hallway carpet which has the same design as the nightmarish corridors of The Shining. Chalk this one up to Toy Story editor (and Toy Story 3 director) Lee Unkrich, who adores the Kubrick film.

36) Disney recycled a lot of film

If sections of classic films give you a sense of dèjá vu, you're not alone. The company recycled much of its early animation in a technique called rotoscoping, invented in 1915, in order to cut costs. Large parts of the 1973 film Robin Hood were taken from Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs (1937), The Jungle Book (1967) and The Aristocats (1970).

37) Mickey and Minnie were really married!

Wayne Anthony Allwine, who was the voice of Mickey Mouse for 32 years, got hitched to Russi Taylor, who played Minnie, in 1991. The two remained happily married until his death in 2009.

38) The Lion King had a name change...

The Lion King was originally called 'King of the Jungle', before some bright spark noted that lions don't tend to inhabit jungles.

Now read:

Disney reveal Pinocchio live-action remake release date in teaser trailer

All the details we know so far about Disney's upcoming live-action remakes

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