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Actors & Directors
  • Roger Miller
  • Terry-Thomas
  • Brian Bedford
  • Wolfgang Reitherman
  • Peter Ustinov
  • Phil Harris
Creator: Ken Anderson

Review Robin Hood / Buena Vista Distribution Company:

A minor classic from Disney, this 1973 all-animal, all-animated musical version of the familiar story is more charming than one might expect. Perhaps it's the warm, chummy take on key relationships within the legend-the way Robin Hood (Brian Bedford) gets twitterpated whenever the subject of Maid Marian (Monica Evans) comes up or the way best pal Little John (Phil Harris voicing a variation on his own Baloo from The Jungle Book) admonishes the Sherwood Forest hero, "Aw, Rob, why dontcha just marry the girl?" (Then, of course, there's the canny "casting" of the romantic leads as foxes: Robin the sly one and Marian the, well, foxy one. ) The rest of the vocal cast is lively and eclectic: Peter Ustinov, Andy Devine, Terry-Thomas, George Lindsey. Roger Miller provides the songs and voice for the minstrel character Allan-A-Dale. The film is ably directed by Wolfgang Reitherman, whose decades of work in Disney's animation division helped create the studio's rich legacy. -Tom Keogh.

Review   / Noddy
Actors & Directors
  • Teryl Rothery
  • Katie Boland
  • Max Morrow
  • Kyle Kass
  • Sean McCann

Review Noddy:


Actors & Directors
  • Kevin Schon
  • Richard Naran
  • Cam Clarke
  • Nancy Cartwright
  • Ernie Sabella
  • Brad Neave
  • Tony Craig (II)
  • Robert Gannaway

Review Timon and Pumbaa:


Actors & Directors
  • Jason Davis
  • Andrew Lawrence
  • Ashley Johnson
  • Courtland Mead
  • Rickey D'Shon Collins
  • Chuck Sheetz

Review Recess: School's Out:

Disney's Recess: School's Out dipped in and out of theaters faster than fans of the cable TV show could snap their lunch boxes shut-kind of nice for parents whose idea of grown-up detention is sitting through such fly-by-night kiddie features. Now that home screenings are an option, though, plan for the ages 5-and-older set to settle in for reruns. Also plan to get sucked in yourself-if the screwball plot doesn't do it, the soundtrack will. While TJ and Principal Prickly (the latter the unfortunate bearer of the "saggy butt" that becomes this movie's clunkiest running gag) bust in on a crew of fiendish would-be teachers during summer break, slices of vintage grooviness-Steppenwolf's "Born to be Wild," Strawberry Alarm Clock's "Incense and Peppermints," and Robert Goulet's "Green Tambourine" among them-get you cheering along, whether you're 3 or 43. The reason for all the retro funkiness revolves around the chief bad guy, Phil Benedict, a one-time educational visionary and former Prickly schoolmate. Back in the day, Benedict was a radical school revolutionary, but his manifesto for better test scores misfired when it called for a ban on recess, a concept so barbaric it got him canned from a cushy government job. Now, undeterred in his mission to make life miserable for kids, he's hatching a switcheroo scheme that will forever pull the shade on summer and thus summer vacation. Predictably, right at trigger time, TJ, Prickly, and the gang roar in to the rescue. It's an ending that's as pat as any on the TV show, but so what-this is a movie that aims for summer-linen lightness. Just as the Fifth Dimension promise on the soundtrack, it lets the sunshine, as well as a few well-timed chuckles, in. [+]
-Tammy La Gorce.

Review   / Droids
Actors & Directors
  • Raymond Jafelice
  • Ken Stephenson
  • Clive A. Smith

Review Droids:


Actors & Directors
  • Shigeru Chiba
  • Miki Itô
  • Kariya Shunsuke
  • Kappei Yamaguchi
  • Mami Koyama
  • Hiroshi Fukutomi

Review Gunnm:

This film contains graphic violence and brief nudity. Known as Gunnm in Japan and then Battle Angel Alita to Western manga readers, Battle Angel (in all of its incarnations) is now part of the canon of Blade Runner-inspired anime cyberpunk. The film version follows a "Hunter Warrior" and cyborg healer named Ido. Ido formerly lived in the floating land of Zalem (Tiphares in the book), the paradise that hovers over the refuse heap of Scrap Iron City in which he now resides with his former lover, Chiren. In his travels as a bounty hunter (killing spine thieves in a world in which human nerve tissue has become the most precious commodity), Ido one day discovers and repairs the remnants of a cyborg whom he names Gally (Alita in the manga). Though possessing the body of a young woman, Gally embodies Ido's most sophisticated and lethal cybernetic skill. In the first episode on the DVD, "Rusty Angel," Gally challenges Chiren's own creation, Greweicia-a brain-eating gladiator-to a death match. In "Tears Sign" Gally discovers that her first love, Yugo, has put himself in the employ of the spine trader Vector so that he can earn his way, he thinks, to Zalem. Gally confronts her fellow bounty hunters to protect Yugo, only to watch him horribly wounded in a plot to capture her for Vector. Yukito Kishiro's finely detailed line drawings in the original manga (like a cleaner version of Miyazaki's style in the Nausicaa books) are impossible to translate into film. [+]
What the film loses in detail, however, it makes up for in its intense action sequences and shadowy mixtures of color and a darkly cinematic soundtrack. Anime fans should be prepared for some pretty graphic violence-including some horrific scenes of decapitation. Also, the action keeps the plot moving at breakneck speed, so character development often seems to happen in leaps; you'll want to read the books to learn more about Gally/Alita and her world. For English speakers, the DVD is best watched in the original Japanese with subtitles. The dubbing seems to raise the pitch of everyone's voice, changing the mood of the film from tragic-cool to slightly comical. Gally's English is especially annoying. With her original Japanese voice (sometimes childlike and sometimes a seductive whisper), she is a perfectly deadly heroine with a leather-clad style that anticipates The Matrix. -Patrick O'Kelley.

Actors & Directors
  • Tony Goldwyn
  • Minnie Driver
  • Brian Blessed
  • Chris Buck (II)
  • Nigel Hawthorne
  • Kevin Lima
  • Glenn Close

Review Tarzan:

After viewing Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Edgar Rice Burroughs wrote to Walt Disney about adapting his novel of an ape-man into a feature animated cartoon. Sixtysome years later, the tale is finally told with brilliant design work that looks unlike any previous animated film. The story is a natural for Disney since the themes of misunderstood central figures have been at the heart of its recent hits. Disney's Tarzan doesn't wander far from the familiar story of a shipwrecked baby who is brought up by apes in Africa. What gives the film its zing is its clever use of music (the songs are sung by Phil Collins himself rather than onscreen characters) and the remarkable animation. Deep Canvas, a 3-D technology, was developed for the film, creating a jungle that comes alive as Tarzan swings through the trees, often looking like a modern skateboarder racing down giant tree limbs. The usual foray of sidekicks, including a rambunctious ape voiced by Rosie O'Donnell, should keep the little ones aptly entertained. The two lead voices, Tony Goldwyn as Tarzan and Minnie Driver as Jane, are inspired choices. Their chemistry helps the story through the weakest points (the last third) and makes Tarzan's initial connection with all things human (including Jane) delicious entertainment. Disney still is not taking risks in its animated films, but as cookie-cutter entertainment, Tarzan makes a pretty good treat. [+]
(Ages 5 and up) -Doug Thomas.

Actors & Directors
  • Erica Yohn
  • Nehemiah Persoff
  • Phillip Glasser
  • Amy Green
  • Dom DeLuise
  • Don Bluth

Review An American Tail:

Don Bluth's An American Tail is based on the story of a young Russian mouse who is separated from his family in America and who later heads with his reunited kin out to the American West. It's pleasant, though not spectacular, and has its greatest problems in story development. Steven Spielberg produced with an eye toward creating animation hits outside of Disney, and he and Bluth certainly took a big step in that direction here. Kids like it a lot, and adults will warm to the sound of various familiar voices, such as Dom DeLuise as Tiger and Madeline Kahn as Gussie Mausheimer. It's also the source of the pop single "Somewhere Out There. " -Tom Keogh.

Review   / David Copperfield
Actors & Directors
  • Kelly LeBrock
  • Joseph Marcell
  • Howie Mandel
  • Julian Lennon
  • Don Arioli
  • Sheena Easton

Review David Copperfield:


Review   / Mickey's House of Villains
Actors & Directors
  • Russi Taylor
  • Wayne Allwine
  • Tress MacNeille
  • Jamie Mitchell
  • Tony Anselmo
  • Bill Farmer

Review Mickey's House of Villains:

If you think a gaggle of big-screen goons like Cruella, Jafar, and Captain Hook can muscle Mickey off Disney's House of Mouse stage, guess again. Here, the leader of the pack proves he's made of more than Swiss cheese in a Halloween battle to bounce the bad guys-banded together for the first time-from the belly-laugh-generating hot spot where he pulls host duties. Best of all, the classic-character misadventures keep rolling amid the maelstrom: Donald gets the short end of the broom when a busybody witch blows in, Goofy bungles a once-in-an-afterlife time shot at being a ghost, etc. By the time the mouse houselights go up, the evil cadre's out on its cartoon ear with only a song-the showstopping "It's Our House Now!"-to its credit. The hospitality's not so hot, but the frantic, feature-length dice of shorts and devious doings will find Disney devotees dancing in the aisles. -Tammy La Gorce.

Actors & Directors
  • Tom Bosley
  • Jane Woods
  • Richard Dumont
  • A.J. Henderson
  • Ernest Reid (II)
  • Barbara Pogenmiller

Review David the Gnome:


Review Scooby Doo:

"I would've gotten away with it if weren't for you meddling kids!" Equal parts remake and spoof, this tongue-in-cheek live-action resurrection finds the old Saturday-morning-cartoon gang reunited to investigate the zombie teens of a haunted amusement park. Frantic action and big-screen special effects stand in for logic, but for a while it makes for a spirited send-up. Freddie Prinze Jr. , under a blond hairdo and an ascot, turns Fred into a preening pretty boy, and Sarah Michelle Gellar plays with her own Buffy image as eternal damsel-in-distress Daphne (in magenta mini-dress and maxi-boots, no less), but this show belongs to gangly Matthew Lillard, who is the adenoidal beatnik Shaggy. His loyal-to-the-end friendship with the computer-animated Scooby-Doo is the most convincing relationship in the whole two-dimensional goof. Some of the supernatural nasties may be scary for young kids and the humor careens from winking self-awareness to Scooby doo-doo gags, but otherwise this is as harmless as a Saturday-morning chapter and as substantial as a Scooby snack. -Sean Axmaker.

Actors & Directors
  • Adam Wylie
  • Kenny Thompkins
  • Dee Bradley Baker
  • Rob Paulsen
  • Elizabeth Daily
  • Charles Adler

Review Jungle Cubs:


Actors & Directors
  • Yasunori Matsumoto
  • Hirotaka Suzuoki
  • Tomohiro Nishimura
  • Rebel Joy
  • Hideki Takayama
  • Kôichi Yamadera

Review Chôjin densetsu Urotsukidôji:


Actors & Directors
  • Rolf Leenders
  • Mark Griffin
  • Richard Cox
  • Joely Collins
  • Dale Wilson

Review Action Man:


Actors & Directors
  • Jennifer Darling
  • Cam Clarke
  • Barry Gordon
  • James Avery
  • Peter Renaday

Review Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Series:


Review Bug Bites: An Ant's Life:


Review   / The Lion King
Actors & Directors
  • Roger Allers
  • Jonathan Taylor Thomas
  • Rob Minkoff
  • Jeremy Irons
  • Matthew Broderick
  • Moira Kelly
  • James Earl Jones

Review The Lion King:

Not an ideal choice for younger kids, this hip and violent animated feature from Disney was nevertheless a huge smash in theaters and on video, and it continues to enjoy life in an acclaimed Broadway production. The story finds a lion cub, son of a king, sent into exile after his father is sabotaged by a rivalrous uncle. The little hero finds his way into the "circle of life" with some new friends and eventually comes back to reclaim his proper place. Characters are very strong, vocal performances by the likes of Jeremy Irons, Nathan Lane, and Whoopi Goldberg are terrific, the jokes are aimed as much (if not more) at adults than kids, the animation is sometimes breathtaking, and the music is more palatable than in many Disney features. But be cautious: this is too intense for the Rugrat crowd. -Tom Keogh Anybody who struts around with Simba's hard-won authority deserves this royal DVD read-along from Disney. Kids can recoil at Uncle Scar's dastardly deeds en español and discover that "hakuna matata" sounds pretty much the same in Spanish, French, Italian, or German. And should the dynamic storytelling fail to thrill your 4- to 12-year-old fan, a flurry of other interactive options await. Toggle to "Songs" for sing-along renditions of movie hits, including "I Just Can't Wait to Be King," and on to "Music Videos," where Elton John roars soundtrack favorites "Circle of Life" and "Can You Feel the Love Tonight" and Jimmy Cliff and Lebo M groove to "Hakuna Matata. " The "Vocabulary" feature allows for see-and-say mastery of a list of wildlife, while the "Game" section allows players to match paw and hoof prints to the proper beast and reassemble the scattered skeletal remains of an elephant. [+]
Original cast voices are featured, and grownups will be pleased by the package's reading component. -Tammy La Gorce.

Review Gran:


Actors & Directors
  • Michael Hordern
  • Joel Grey
  • Barry Leith

Review Paddington Bear:


Models & Brands:
Robin Hood, Noddy, Timon and Pumbaa, Recess: School's Out, Droids, Gunnm, Tarzan, An American Tail, David Copperfield, Mickey's House of Villains, David the Gnome, Scooby Doo, Jungle Cubs, Chôjin densetsu Urotsukidôji, Action Man, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Series, Bug Bites: An Ant's Life, The Lion King, Gran, Paddington Bear

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