Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Review #4: Beauty and the Beast



(Originally written February 1, 2008)



It's a SNOW DAY!!! And what better way to spend it than to waste more time instead of working on essays!! Yay!

Ok! So I'm really looking forward to doing this one because this is one of my top five favourite from the bunch! I want to get it OUT of the way so I can not have it nagging in the back of my head when deciding which ones to review.

I'm sorry if this review isn't as funny as you had expected. It's difficult to make fun of something you like because it's genuinely good.

It is the second in the line of my self titled "High Period" films (see note, "Disney Movies") for good reason. The artwork is fantastic, the music is stunning and they have only just begun to use computer effects to enhance the films, so the Disney world isn't all flash and razzmatazz just yet.
The worst part about this movie was trying to remember how to take screen captures of movies by turning off the hardware acceleration. phew!

There are few high name actors in this film, because it was back in the day when they focused on style AND substance over flash in the pan actors. I WILL share with you that the woman who voiced Babette is the same woman who was the voice of Cartman's mom on South Park, before she died!

The movie opens with that classic drippy piano music that just SPELLS foreboding times, and the introduction tells the story through the way of very cool stain glass windows, such a novel idea.

So it's a classic story of "Do not judge a book by its cover" when the old guy from law and order comes to his door looking for shelter. He says no, and he turns out to be a cross dressing fairy, and serves his ass on a platter, along with his servant, who you have to feel bad for because let's face it, they didn't do anything to him/her. where's your law and order now?

My question is, where are the PARENTS in all of this? Society in the 1600's, I tell ya.

oooh he in shit now, son!


FUN FACT: The old guy i am referring to is Detective Briscoe, who actually VOICES Lumiere! True story!

As if being a monster isn't a slap in the face, the fairy drops off a magic mirror, so he gets to look at his ugly mug all day long. Salting the wounds. BUT on the bright side, he already has hairy palms, so he can also look at all the girl's lockerooms he wants.

Speaking of perversion, it's time to introduce Belle. Ah yes, the sweet and innocent girl who's more into books than she is men. ironically, they're all harlequin romance novels, so nothing in real life would match her expectation anyway.
Sadly no one shares this bizarre fanfic fetish, but the people of the town have dirty secrets of their own. The baker has a sick relationships with his baguettes (ones called Marie), the barber collects hair clippings to make himself a furry costume, and if you look very closely, during the opening number there is a boy who is constantly trying to molest a pig (no lie).


Belle would intervene if she wasn't so turned on.

Anyway, I noticed that in this town, although it has it's share of Ugmos, it also has a stack of bombshell babes, much prettier than plain ol' Belle next door.
However, she is the only one who with exchange blowjobs for books, and thus the librarian gives her her usual compensation. This one is called "Prince Charming" and is filled with sado-masochism and paper bags.

Camryn Manheim makes yet another guest appearance in the chapeau store.

Enter Gaston, the villain...who if you think about it, is really just a nice guy trying to do the town a favour by taming the village slut, cleanse the village of the town crackpot, and free the village town of the town village beast.

What a hero! I bet he comes out on top at the end!

Oh, and he's also horny for Belle.

All this "bonjouring" just reminded me that for a little town in France, they all speak a lot of English... I shall bring this up again when we meet Lumiere.

Gaston shares his wisdom early on in the story, by informing Belle that "it's not right for a woman to read. Soon she starts getting ideas, thinking," which is basically the second moral of this story: Let a woman make her own choices, and you end up falling to your death. OOP! I mean you uh... we don't know yet. Let's keep watching, shall we?

I always thought that those three blonde chicks should ended up with Gaston. They were babes.

Anyway, in typical Disney fashion, we are introduced to her boneheaded yet endearing father, who is really the catalyst for this entire disaster of a love triangle. I think Disney had some daddy issues.
Anyways, he invents electricity or something and decides "F this S," and abandons his daughter for a better life, burden free. However, that hit of LSD he took before he left starts to affect his mind, and soon he thinks he is riding a personified horse being chased by wolves, when he's really just stumbling around his backyard (which coincidentally also houses an ancient castle.)

He blames the horse of course.

Wicked wicked WICKED artwork in this movie, the backgrounds and everything! yeah!

So he's still hallucinating, and he sees talking clocks and candles and yadda yadda yadda, gets thrown into prison, yadda yadda.

Gaston valiantly tries to make an honest women out of Belle, but she enjoys her life of carnal sin, and makes him wrestle himself in mud and pig urine because she doesn't know how to make jello

The horse comes back before he can show her what for and Belle goes looking for her father, who told her he was going out for a beer three weeks ago and never came back. She stumbles on his LSD stash and starts to trip out, eventually finding herself in the same castle he did.

Actually this scene is one of two that frequently gets forgotten from the movie. She bargains with the beast for her father's life in the jail. For SOME reason, she offers herself, and I'm very sure those reasons concern borderline bestiality. But since that is such an obvious gag for the nature of this film, I'm just going to skip right along.
In the version of the film I watched, they also edited and fixed some of the dialogue I remember sticking out as odd when I was little (just small fumbles, but noticeably missing).

Gaston sings about how great he is. Lefou loves Gaston.


So crazy old Maurice is always good for a laugh...

The funniest part about the end of this scene is that Gaston and Lefou walk into the foreground which leads nowhere but into a window.

Dinnertime!! Belle pisses off the beast by not coming, like the stubborn ol Alice she is (See Alice in Wonderland for a full representation of the female form).
She cuts off her nose to spite her face and ends up sneaking into the kitchen like a common thief, while Lumiere is boinking Bibette the feather duster, HOWEVER that is possible.

This would be a great time to mention that Lumiere is the only character in this entire film that speaks with a French accent. He is also the only character who is flaming. Coincidence?

Belle is on the Nicole Ritchie diet, so she only sticks her finger in the warm spot then exclaims she is full. And she is now pregnant. Luckily, in a deleted scene, Beast pushes her down a staircase. Problem solved!




"O man i can't believe she stuck her finger there!"


Once AGAIN, she disobeys orders and sneaks into the West Wing. Sadly, she sees no sign of Michael Douglas or Kristin Chenowith
and instead decides to molest herself with a rose, but is stopped before she gets a prick inside her *badum cha!*
I noticed a trend: whenever a "Disney Princess" disobeys orders, she ends up killing someone, ruining someone's life, or sentenced to die.
There's a lesson here for young girls everywhere.

She has an acid flashback of wolves and horses and awakes to find herself nursing scratches on the beast. In reality, she's patching the wounds of one kinky night of librarianism.

Back at home, Lefou, in his unrequited love for Gaston, agrees to be a snowman till the girl comes home.

Cogsworth reveals that the way to a woman's heart consists of, "Flowers, chocolates, and promises you don't intend to keep."

The beast gives belle a library and she practically creams her dress right then and there. Everyone says they, "see something there," except for chip, who, like the innocence of the child in the Emperor's New Clothes, is the only person who actually sees it as it is: s short term, non committal booty call ending in death and mayhem.

He feeds the birds, and there is just something so creepy about the venus flytrap-like claws that are attracting this little bluebird. I expected any minute to see him crushing it, feathers flying everywhere, then absorbing its nutrients into his own skin.


thats it little birdie...right into my *SQUAWK!!*


What many people don't know is that there is actually a deleted song sequence from the movie, called "Human Again," which was omitted from the film but is in the version I watched. It is all the trinkets singing about what they would do if they were human again, and it is quite a nice one that gives us insight into their personalities. I'm not sure why it was deleted, because it's not that long and really makes you connect with the pissiness that is being a trinket.
In this scene, Belle also teaches the beast how to read, which emphasizes how pathetic his life was before. It also shows more of the Wardrobe, who was an awesome character.

Anyways they dance their dance, and Belle suddenly mood swings and PMS's all over the place. The beast gets so awkward because no one knows what to do in these situations that he sends her home with full pay and sick leave. Somehow.

Anyways, one of the best scenes in the movie is coming up. They come to take her father away, and Gaston, being the shrewed negotiator he is, agrees to get him out for her smokin' bod. She kicks him in the nads and the Mob Song begins! Its such an effective song, but even better is the castle fight scene that follows.

There's chaos and anarchy and each character is matched up with a respective foil, and the music is wicked. I love that it begins with the ominous quiet castle as the objects pretend to be objects, then the whole surprise attack.


I also love that Lefou attempts to burn a candle to death.

Aaaaanyways, Gaston falls to a heroic dea- - wait? WHAT? Wasn't he supposed to be the good guy?... I lord I think I need to re-examine my life.

As punishment for killing the protagonist, the beast is transformed into the girliest, foppiest, pussiest little pussy that ever pussed. This guy makes Tom Cruise's Lestat look like Rambo.


the resemblance is uncanny. Almost as good as Jontas' down syndrome kitty


Around the moment everyone turns into humans again, chip comes to the sudden realisation that...his mother is clearly pushing 80, yet he's only 7... so that means... she... EWWWWW!!! back to the cupboard for you!



She did it with cogsworth on a cold lonely night i bet you anything

So in conclusion, this is a great and classic flick.

I don't know what my favourite song of the movie is because they're all so catchy and fun. Possibly the Mob Song though.

I give it a 9 out of 10, only because it isn't Aladdin, and it's too much of a girl movie to have openly admitted to liking when I was younger.

Would I watch it again? Of course.

Review #3: Make Mine Music /Pocahontas in English


(Originally written January 25, 2008)

Well this should be interesting. If anyone else has seen this movie, let me know!

The movie opens boasting the talents of musicians such as Benny Goodman and the Andrews Sisters, which is kinda cool, and for those who haven't heard of them, I shake my head.

The Back Cover


It is divided into musical segments, like Fantasia, but I assume this one just wasn't as popular. It starts out with Blue Bayou, a slow paced melody set n exactly as the title says. A crane walks around in the moonlit reflections of the waters.

Although peaceful, it in no way was made for the attention span of today's audience, and I just couldn't shake the image of Big Daddy throwing Raph at chief Wiggum as he gradually swims away.

Next is A Jazz Interlude, by Benny Goodman, "All the Cats Join In," which was a very funky jazzy tune featuring a jukebox and "orphan annie" type characters with no pupils. The only thing I didn't like was the lady in the background scatting. I don't really like jazz scat, it sounds like baby talk to me.

Ballad in Blue came next, a very sad blues tune.

Da Wolf!


Oh hello! Out of nowhere, Peter and the Wolf comes into the picture! I didn't even know this was originally in this movie! How delightful! The wolf is very scary, I had forgotten, but hilarious as he chases the duck first over ice, then under it. Good Lord!! He ATE the duck?!?!?!? Sonya?? Holy Jesus!! I didn't know Disney was THAT sadistic!!! That would be like Shere Kahn EATING Baloo! Holy!
He eats Sasha too! This is NOT the story I remember. Oh no, fakeout

That poor duck though!!

I find it comical that the bird spells out "Bonk" (in russian) and the narrator spells it "woll"

Oh hey. Sonya is actually alive! Good ol disney.


I'm going to skip waaaay ahead to see what the Andrews Sisters had to offer.
A story about two hats, in love. Well I sure got my hopes up. It was kinda cute though , theyre both in a dept. store window and she gets sold, leaving johnny fedora alone...but then he gets sold and "his heart becomes gay once more," (pausing in seriousness to say 'lol'). For a song about hats it was actually VERY charming. At the end they end up on horses, which I guess was the style at the time.

The came a whale who sang opera, everything from pagliacci, to Faust, to


...seamen...snicker


Tristan and Isolde. At the end it turned out the entire thing was a daydream by the conductor, who is out sailing and ends up Harpooning the singing whale to make him a star and instead ends up killing him. Pretty sad stuff.

Well, I'm cutting this review short because I don't think any of you have seen this. I would definitely recommend it though, but waring: it is NOT for those with low attention spans. It is very charming and the drawings, as preclassic Disney are, are just superb and full of character.

~~~

Oh ya, My review of Jontas in English!

Pocahontas in English sucked.

The end.

Review #2: Alice in Wonderland

(Originally written January 19, 2008)

Well! It seems the fastest way to watch a video is to get the actual DVD from home, not download it. And this is the first one I pulled out.

Since the advent of the novel, people have referenced this story in almost every imaginable way possible. Since American McGee's Alice, little emo gothkids everywhere have been stealing the image of the cheshire cat and a twisted alice to show how cool the bastardization of precious memories can be (I liked the game though, so I probably fall into that category).

In any case, here come dis review:

So one of the first few things to note is the stunning background artwork of this film. Right from the opening scene, the artist's hand is clearly visible in producing environment, and although the cell shading of the characters themselves are flatly 2D, they are still great illustrations. In later scenes, this movie could certainly give Tim Burton a run for his money with some very off the wall and stylized graphics.


The American Accent. Not as tasty as apple pie.


The second thing is the voice talent, which is charming for the sole reason that this movie was made when many Americans still had colonially English accents, not the crass rasping of what I would translate visually as shoving a toilet brush up someone's butt and twisting.

The movie starts out with Alice, a tween girl (who, strangely for Disney, LOOKS like a tween girl, not an unageable adult). Alice, as we have all assumed, is cracked out on only the finest peyote, and is babbling about "her world" much to the confusion of her cat, who's default face is "wtf," and the chagrin of her older sister. Older sister's just don't understand.



IMA MUNCH YOU GOOD LOLCATZ


By the way, Alice clearly has the munchies and is eyeing her cat very disturbingly.

She sings a song about talking flowers and rabbits and basically everything she is about to see when she gets to Wonderland. So...the end, I just basically got everything thats going to happen. But I'll keep watching anyway, I guess.

Woaah! Introducing the white rabbit! With his famous "I murdered my wife" line. Wait..what? That wasn't it? Wrong movie. So Alice, like a typical naughty girl, runs away from her lesson. Her sister told her to concentrate on her lessons, but like a typical girl, she doesn't listen. When Alice falls down the bunny hole, she is so stoned that she really doesn't give a shit. She picks up a book and starts reading!

Bored with Academia, Alice decides to start exploring her sexual prowess and molests a doorknob. Unfortunately she is too young to realise that turning, and turning on, are two completely different actions. And that tweaking someone's nose, no matter how phallic like, probably won't leave them pleased. Having failed to seduce the Doorknob, Alice decides to commit suicide by drinking poison, because the bottle told her to. I wonder if she always responds to the command "eat me".

In any case, the one time she does as she's told, it backfires, and she cries like a baby. As she's drowning in her tears, she's completely nonchalant!



She's totally thinking of Zac Efron right now. You know she is. That's her O face


This movie is pretty much the epitome of the average american tween girl. She's disobedient, stoned out of her mind, puts strange things in her mouth and is completely bipolar. (she also starts to wig out at every small thing, but that comes later). This is what we in psychology like to call, "buttfuck insane".

Anyway she happens upon a Dodo leading a caucus race, and I have no idea what that is. I think it involves the fact that the dodo is trying very hard to drown the runners but he isn't very good at it. She runs away and into the clutches of tweedle dum and tweedle dee, who scold her for not having manners, and rightly so! Through this whole movie she's been a rotten little brat, molesting knobs and running over innocent starfish. She'll have no part in their etiquette and tells them to sod the hell off. As punishment they tell her a very boring story of a carpenter and my grade 11 classics teacher. This is nothing special, we've all tricked an entire population into being our dinner, so I'll just skip this.




Mr Reddin.

The rabbit totally BITCHES out Alice, calling her Marianne, and save short of telling her to get in the kitchen and bake a pie. Alice sniffs his underwear and grows several sizes, as she is gender confused (speaking of which, I couldn't help but notice the pink triangles on the rabbit's front gate of his pink house. It's all making sense now). The Dodo is up to his tricks again, sending a gecko to his grave by sacrificing him to the Alice monster. This guy is totally getting off on mass suicides and I'm pretty sure the rabiit is enjoying it too. Bill the gecko is rocketed into the air, and Dodo suggests he burns the house down, adding arson to his list of turn ons. This guy is seriously messed.

Alice shrinks once again, and stumbles into the land of singing flowers. There is only one male flower and he is some sort of bear thing like Animal from the muppets, so I think hes like... one of those hairy gay flowers you hear about. Unfortunately they are all menopausal, and freak out on her when she ruins their song by hitting the wrong note. They sniff her hair and call her "weed", so they're on the right track there.

Alice buggers off and comes across everyones old favourite, the Caterpillar, dragging on opium. What I like is that back then, Disney didn't care about whiny uppity PC fun police and showed overt uses of drugs and drinking (re: Dumbo). I love this scene. The 'pillar totally shows her up. I also love that he doesn't have any control of his own other limbs, and the fact that he has human hands. He also coined the term, "exacitically". Actually, I think I find a lot of myself in this character. Mainly the fact that he gets so pissed off at the slightest thing and then explodes into a puff of smoke and flies off as if nothing were wrong.

Alice takes her anger out on a mama bird and does 'shrooms some more.

Chesire cat time! Or is it tigger? or is it winnie the pooh? or is it the wizard bear from Gummi bears? Oh who cares, they're all great! The chesire cat does the best rendition of Jabberwocky in his little song. I've never been able to place a tune on that poem, but Disney does a good job getting one out of it.
When they talk about madness, I REALLY wish they had kept the original lines:
"Everyone is mad here, I'm mad, you're mad-"
"I'm not mad!"
"Of course you are, or you wouldn't be here!"
It's such a good one that pretty much rounds out the movie.

Now me move onto the hardest secret place to get to in Kingdom Hearts: the Mad Hatter's party. I remember finding it and not knowing how I got there. Note to self; play this game again sometime soon. They all scold Alice for being rude and sitting where she is not invited. They poison her tea with a doormouse. This scene also educated an entire generation on the dangers of mercury poisoning: if you are in contact with dangerous amount of mercury, you have the superhuman ability to eat ceramics with no physical injury. And keeping in the vein of enjoying other people's misery, they destroy the rabbit's watch and toss him on his keister. Alice, growing accustomed to S&M, find's this all too erotic and leaves before she messes herself.

Ok, so she gets lost- -wait a second. I just noticed something. Alice's thighs are like wow. I mean thunder thighs to the extreme. You could crack nuts between them, and I'm sure she often does, while on crack.



She cries like a baby again. She is blossoming into a lovely young lady. With mental problems. Everyone else is brought to tears because their ears are bleeding. Then something happens...they all start disapparating? This scene is actually really sad, as her imagination starts to die out and disappear altogether.

Anyway she takes some uppers and is on her way to see the queen, only to stop and spy on some very effeminate playing cards, painting roses red. I'm guessing the paint is actually the blood of decapitation victims.






This next scene is one of the coolest in the movie. The playing cards to a trippy dance music sequence. Unfortunately it's really similar to the pink elephant scene in Dumbo, so it doesn't get props for originality.

Enter the Queen! (reluctantly:)...and the King...

It is just so deLIGHTful that Cameryn Manheim has a secure spot with Disney, predating her Ratcliffe role (see last review). The king is played by the same woman who does 'Granny' from sylvester cartoons.

Anyway, the croquet game: evidently this movie predates PETA, as it involves smacking the crap out of small animals with bigger animals. And when she doesnt get her way, she executes a card! Boy what a life. Alice tries to mount a croquet stick.

Alice, 'choking the pink flamingo'.

Stuff happens, and another classic line:
Queen: "What do you know of this unfortunate affair?"
March Hare: "Nothing"
"Nothing whatever?"
"Nothing whatever!"
"THAAAAAAATS VERY IMPORTANT!!!"

More stuff happens and it all turns out it was a dream, and Alice has to wake herself up lest she be torn to shreds by a lynch mob. Having given up all hope, she tries to masturbate with the doorknob one more time. This seems to do the trick, but awkwardly she wakes up to see her sister, who pretends nothing happened and tells her to come to tea, which she has poisoned. The End.


One thing I like about this movie, that was rather different, was that there was no love interest! I mean, Alice must have CLEARLY had a thing for the bunny, but since Disney is anti beastiality (except for Beauty and the Beast, The Lion King and all Air Bud movies), they downplay that romantic twist.
Having watched this on DVD, I was fortunate enough to see the bonus features, which included commentary by Catherine Beaumont, the original voice of alice. Charming!

The most memorable song in this movie? I'm not sure, none of them stand out fantastically, but the 'Painting the roses red' is probably the most recognized. This song isnt known for it's music, but it's still a music in every sense.

I give Alice in Wonderland a 7.5 out of ten, only because they didn't have any really smashing songs. It's a wonderful film from the late classic era.

Would I watch again?
Most definately!


Review #1: Pocahontas

(Originally written January 17th 2008)

Well, I never said these were going to be in order.

As a predictum, I must note that on nearly every single occaision trying to write the main characters name, I began to write "Mulan". In several cases I did and didn't realise it until later. So if you catch a Mulan here or there, I mean Pocahontas.

I start my list with a Disney movie that I have never seen before, because I always thought it would be a terrible movie. Well I was surprised in many ways. However, I'm not going to scrutinize this for historical accuracy. It's Disney, it's gonna fudge anything, so I accept that and applaud it.

The most predominant feature of this film had to be the definate disability of being completely in Spanish. Or German. I couldn't really tell, but I assumed it was Spanish because they rolled their r's a lot and I felt really sleepy watching it. But the fact that I still managed to get the general plotline was a complete testimony to the lack of subtly within the script.

Luckily the movie did have some really neat visual imagery, and the Spanish version of "colours of the wind" can only be what I would call an improvement. It gave it the sophistication of an opera rolled into the visual parallels of Pocahontas to a cat with downs syndrome.




Uncanny!


Something about hearing "Escuchaste aullar los lobos a la luna azul" was actually quite romantic and I recommend if you can find it, watch the song, I really liked it.

One of the major flaws of this film was the very formulaic approach to characters, villains specifically. Just as Jafar had his Iago, Gaston had his Lefou, Governor Ratcliffe had his Wiggins, a sexually ambiguous dunderhead of a henchmen. He was my least favourite character in the movie and had none of the charm of previous henchmen. To the credit of someone though, they were both voiced by the same person, which was neat to learn! Cameryn Manheim is really stretching her abilities.




Remember her from The Practice?


Speaking of sexual ambiguity, there are several suspicious scenes in the movie that allude to deviant sexual behavior of many characters. As pointed out in a previous note of mine, Pocahontas has a knack for watersports, and shares her naughty fluid swapping ways with a young girlfriend in the beginning of this movie, whom she abandons later to romp with John Smith.



Disgusting, just disgusting!


A second error was in the depiction of the natives in the beginning. The ululation in their songs are actually of African origin, and there isn't any evidence, as far as my research goes, to show ululation within native music or celebration.

Alright, now we get into the meat of the movie. Poshajontas, as she is known by her Spanish bretheren, has to marry big chief Bangum Onbak, who seems to be more interested in wrestling um paleface than boinking 'Jontas. Confused, she seeks advice from that tree in Peanuts that always used to eat charlie browns kite. Hungry for more than the dreams of children, she asks Jontas to fondle her leaves, and upon doing so, she spies the ships of the spanish approaching the shore.

She goes back to the village and something happens, im not really sure, but I think it involved the shaman drinking some magic ju-ju juice and hallucinating like dumbo in that one scene.

Then ratcliffe arrive and starts blowing the shit out of everything. I mean everything. Rocks, trees, his own dog, just to find gold. Here is a man you have to admire. His work ethic risks the life of his own team to reach the ends, but never puts his own life in danger. That is management material my friends.

Anyways, john smith runs off and meets Jontas in the forest, and while theyre presumably playing 'hide the sausage', Ratcliffe his pummeling the shit out of her people. this goes on for a while and we now know what kind of stamina john smith is capable of. The kite eating tree likes to watch.

After sex, Jontas likes to threaten her friends.




Scream and you die, bitch!


Some more stuff happens, her fiancee gets so overcome with man on man lust that he tries to molest Smith, but meets an untimely end by Smiths previous lover as Jontas looks on the entire thing in confusion.


A little lower and he would have died a happy little indian


Smith is blamed for all of this for some reason, and in sentenced to death. Masturbating in front of the Kite Eating tree, Jontas gets the brigth idea to free him.

Meanwhile, a red cloud and a purple cloud clash in the sky and lightning strikes. Subtle as fuck, Disney.

As Smith is about to be beheaded, Jontas runs up and declares her love. ...In an instant, Big Chief's heart melts and is all, "lol ok then", but in a failed assassination attempt, Ratcliffe misses JFK by about 300 years and accidentally shoots John Smith, which for some reason makes the chief cry.

Suddenly, out of nowhere, Smith's spanish boy-lover, whom the indians have renamed "Little Wanker Flog a Log" somehow becomes the leader and like...sends Ratcliffe away? This is where watching in english would have come in handy, because maybe he was like the King's son or something, I dont know. Anyways hes pretty choked up about Smith's death.



Umm so the guy in green is like..the king in disguise or something?

Oh and Smith doesnt die... and then it ends.

Ummm...soo...yeah!

My overall take on the movie is I think I would have actually liked it were it in English, but definitely not as much as the previous bunch. This was a good herald in marking the decline.

The art was definitely a large step down from its direct predecessor, the Lion King, and it had way to many side characters for a movie that focused primarily on two people.
Also, having a loveable animal companion may have worked for Abu, but it sure as shit didn't work for this movie. The dog pissed the hell out of me, and Wiggens may as well have been a dog, since every scene he was in pretty much left it to your imagination to see him receiving on all fours. Jontas companions would have done better in the sidelines, instead of having their own side story rivalry with the dog.

The music wasn't GREAT, but it wasn't terrible either. I did like Colours of the Wind, especially in Spanish, I would say that was the best song in the film and did deserve whatever acclaim it got, although I think it was little.

On a very nitpicky scale, I give this movie a 6.5 out of ten. It was a good effort, but missed the mark by just that much.

Would I watch it again? Only if it wasn't in Spanish.







Fifty Two Reviews

(Originally written January 1, 2008)

I thought this would be interesting to everyone.

Here is a list of disney movies in order (some I took out because let's face it, theyre not all classics. This includes sequels, TV movies and live action). At the end of the list are the latest Pixar animated ones. I also put them into categories according to what I think are epochs in their achievement:

Early Disney/The Classic Period
1. Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs
2. Pinocchio (REVIEWED)
3. Fantasia
4. Dumbo
5. Bambi
6. Saludos Amigos
7. The Three Caballeros
8. Make Mine Music (REVIEWED)
9. Fun And Fancy Free
10. Melody Time
11. The Adventures Of Ichabod And Mr. Toad
12. Cinderella

The Early High Period
13. Alice In Wonderland (REVIEWED)
14. Peter Pan
15. Lady And The Tramp
16. Sleeping Beauty (REVIEWED)
17. 101 Dalmatians
18. The Sword In The Stone
19. The Jungle Book (REVIEWED)
20. The Aristocats (REVIEWED)
21. Robin Hood (REVIEWED)
22. The Many Adventures Of Winnie The Pooh
23. The Rescuers
24. The Fox And The Hound
25. The Black Cauldron
26. The Great Mouse Detective
27. Oliver & Company (REVIEWED)

High Disney/The Masterpiece Period
28. The Little Mermaid (REVIEWED)
29. The Rescuers Down Under
30. Beauty And The Beast (REVIEWED)
31. Aladdin
32. The Lion King

The Disney Decline Period
33. Pocahontas (REVIEWED)
34. The Hunchback Of Notre Dame (REVIEWED)
35. Hercules (REVIEWED)
36. Mulan
37. Tarzan
38. Fantasia/2000
39. The Emperor's New Groove

The Crapulence Period
40. Atlantis: The Lost Empire
41. Lilo And Stitch (REVIEWED)
42. Treasure Planet
43. Brother Bear
44. Home On The Range

The Pixar Period/The Renaissance
45. Toy Story
46. A Bug's Life(REVIEWED)
47. Toy Story 2
48. Monsters, Inc.
49. Finding Nemo
50. The Incredibles
51. Cars
52. Ratatouille (REVIEWED)

As I type, I am downloading over 52 of disney's best and brightest movies, which I hope to review one by one, so stay tuned.