Warning: Minor SPOILERS for Disney's live-action Snow White remake.Disney's live-action how the Evil Queen dies. But the biggest change is the inclusion of an almost entirely new soundtrack.
Like many Disney remakes, however, the most recognizable songs couldn't reasonably be excluded without causing backlash. And given the already long list of Snow White controversies, the last thing the remake needed was to upset fans even more by ditching their favorite melodies. For nearly 90 years, one particular song — that is included in the remake — has reigned above all others as the original animated movie's most enduring classic. Ironically, it's also one of the most mised Disney songs of all time.
Many Mis The "Heigh-Ho" Lyrics From Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs
They Should Be Easy To Given The Context Of The Song
It's no big surprise that "Heigh-Ho" made it into the Snow White remake soundtrack. While the titular phrase has existed as an expression among the work-weary since the mid-16th century, most modern audiences exclusively associate the phrase with Snow White's seven friends returning home from the gem mines. Except that's not technically how they the lyrics at all, since the Mandela effect has long caused many to sing the lyrics as "off to work we go."

Dwarfs vs Dwarves: Is Disney Right Or... Am I Just Too Much Of A Lord Of The Rings Fan?
Despite the many controversies surrounding Disney’s Snow White, a more light-hearted topic of debate pertains simply to the proper plural of “dwarf.”
To be fair, those lyrics aren't absent from the original film. However, they're only uttered in the background toward the end, right before Snow White's encounter with the Evil Queen and her poisoned apple. But the lyrics used in the song's iconic first instance are actually "home from work we go" as the dwarfs return from a long day in the mines. Luckily for those who primarily the Mandela version, the Snow White remake's seven dwarfs cleverly find a way to incorporate the mised version to which many fans have grown accustomed.
Disney's Snow White Remake Expands "Heigh-Ho" To Incorporate Both Versions Of The Lyrics
The New Version Serves As An Extended Introduction To The Dwarfs
One of the best changes in the Snow White remake is its extended version of "Heigh-Ho." Paying tribute to the lyrics everyone fondly misre, the new version of "Heigh-Ho" begins with the dwarfs arriving for their shift at the mine. The song then proceeds to introduce their core personality traits, such as having Dopey (Andrew Barth Feldman) repeat his classic diamond-eyed gag from the original film and Sleepy (Andy Grotelueschen) nearly falling from a cliff to his death on the jagged rocks below. They then return to their cottage with the original "home from work" along with visual callbacks to the 1937 movie.

How Every Snow White Character Looks In Live-Action vs Animation
Disney has brought another of its animated classics to life with a live-action remake of Snow White, but how do each of the main characters compare?
Not all changes to the dwarfs have gone over as well. Many voiced explicit disapproval of their uncanny valley CGI, and there are undoubtedly some who dislike that Dopey talks in the remake. But Snow White gives audiences a little bit of time to get used to the new dwarf designs with this extended version of "Heigh-Ho," and that was an extremely necessary change. The CGI is still discomforting, but at least the dwarfs' longer introduction gives audiences a chance to adjust while enjoying a classic song.

Snow White
- Release Date
- March 21, 2025
- Runtime
- 109 Minutes
- Director
- Marc Webb
- Writers
- Erin Cressida Wilson, Wilhelm Grimm
- Producers
- Callum McDougall, Marc Platt
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