The upcoming Disney+ streaming service will reportedly include the “entire Disney motion picture library,” and will allegedly open up the famed Disney Vault, bringing all of its animated classics to the streaming service.

Loading

Loading

Loading

Reported by Polygon , Disney CEO Bob Iger confirmed the whole motion picture library will come shortly after the service launches later this year.As most every '90s (and probably ‘80s) child knows, the Disney Vault is an iconic and frustrating system where Disney only made certain animated classics available for home video at a time, meaning if you wanted to buy Pinocchio on Blu-Ray, you’d have to be lucky enough that it happened to be out of the vault at that point in time. After every copy of any given movie had been sold though, it would go back into the vault.In an investor meeting held in St. Louis, Iger reportedly said "The service... is going to combine what we call library product, movies, and television, with a lot of original product as well, movies and television. And at some point fairly soon after launch it will house the entire Disney motion picture library, so the movies that you speak of that traditionally have been kept in a ‘vault' and brought out basically every few years will be on the service."If these words are anything to go by, that means at some point Disney+ will include all 57 feature films produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios, beginning with 1937’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs and continuing with the most recent entry, Ralph Breaks the Internet. Iger also reiterated that original movies and shows will be produced for Disney+, including the anticipated Star Wars series The Mandalorian from Jon Favreau a Loki series starring Tom Hiddleston , and more. However, the service reportedly won’t include R-rated content. “It’s going to combine both the old and the new,” said Iger. “All of the films that we’re releasing this year, [starting] with Captain Marvel, will also be on the service.”While Disney+ is set to begin sometime in 2019 , its exact release date is currently unknown.

Colin Stevens is a news writer for IGN. Follow him on Twitter