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Disney Reviews in MANY Words [Part 1 | 1940s-90s]

Last week I released my Every Pixar Movie Reviewed in 10 Words or Less video and recorded an unedited, long take of myself talking about all the Pixar films in greater depth up on Patreon. You can listen to the full Pixar reviews here, if you're interested.

Today I decided to give the same treatment for last year's Disney video along with it's Sequels! Of course, since this is nearly a hundred movies it ended up being VERY long. Nearly 2.5 hours! Because of that, I've split this recording up into two posts: One for every movie from the 1940's to the 1990s (Pre-Little Mermaid). That's this post!

Movies are reviewed in chronological and sequels are grouped with their original movies, so even though The Little Mermaid: Ariel's Beginning came out over a decade after The Little Mermaid, I still review them together. 

The first half of the audio will be public, but the second half with all the post-Little Mermaid movies until today will be for Patrons only (any amount of support unlocks the post).

You can listen to the second half here! 

Disney Reviews in MANY Words [Part 1 | 1940s-90s]

Comments

54:31 ignore this

Ellery

Think rescuers down under is more just difference of opinion and less nostalgia blind considering how the movie underperformed.

Justin Zboyovski

At least song of the south gave us splash mountain

Abanpii

Actually, all the crows in Dumbo were voiced by black men, singing and speaking (not saying it isn’t still racist, though). Also, Bambi came out in 1942.

Claudine

54:40 - just leaving myself this comment so I remember where I left off, feel free to ignore, I'll delete it when I've finished listening to this one

Jay

Maybe I'm misremembering, but I think the VHS version of Fantasia had abridged intros to each segment, while the new DVD version has the narrator go on forever. (Apparently they also had to redub his dialogue for the DVD since the original audio didn't sound too good after being remastered.)

Kruh-Daze

I like these.

ErbBetaPatched

A note on The Sword in The Stone, if no one's mentioned it yet: It's actually not just random ideas showed into an Arthurian setting. It's a sort-of-adaptation of a novel of the same name about King Arthur's childhood written in the late 30s I believe. The weird animal lessons aren't Disney's original idea, that's straight from the work they were adapting.

Bennett Brinson


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