
To expand, just click the collapsed layer. Makes it easier to manage large projects.
Collapse layer - Shrinks the width of layers. Move layer left/right - Yes you can, but its easier to click-and-drag on the 'Move layer' icon. Clone layer - Clone the selected layer. Insert layer - Add a layer before the selected layer. Move layer - Click and hold, then drag left/right from here, to move the position of a layer. Color selector - When the layer contains Hue, Saturation and Color controls, you can use this to set these by working with the color selector. Effect preset - Step forward/backward through the Effects list. You can change the name of the layer using the 'Layer menu' as shown below. You can reorder layers with the menu on the right side of each layers header.ĭepending on the objects selected various controls will become available and may be automated, respond to audio or in some cases accept MIDI input. Where layers process others, layers to the right process those on their left. So it's a good idea to build your effect from the background to the foreground. The left-most layer will be the lowest layer in the stack and the right-most the top. ZGameEditor Visualizer is based on the free open source ZGameEditor that can be used to create visualization objects for the plugin. Below, read 10 facts about “Song of the South.” You can head to your preferred podcast platform to hear the latest season of “You Must Remember This.ZGameEditor Visualizer is a visualization effect plugin with movie render capability. And while the film’s legacy has been mostly buried, the Disney theme park ride Splash Mountain is modeled on this troubling movie that Longworth savvily explores.Īs Longworth discusses in the podcast, “Song of the South” smacked of minstrelsy and divided audiences in its depiction of the lives of post-Civil War plantation workers, even though it has remained commercially resonant for Disney all these years later. The film is set in the Reconstruction-era American south, just as the Civil War has concluded and slavery has ended. The latest season of film historian Karina Longworth’s must-hear podcast series “You Must Remember This” takes listeners on a deep dive into the saga of Disney’s most controversial movie, “Song of the South.” As the studio prepares to unleash reportedly all of its titles on the upcoming Disney+ streaming service, one of them is missing, and it’s the 1946 Uncle Remus adaptation with confused racial optics.