Sleeping Beauty , Pinocchio , Mary Poppins , Cinderella , Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs , s Re-release. Facebook , opens in a new tab. Twitter , opens in a new tab. Pinterest , opens in a new tab. Instagram , opens in a new tab. Join the mailing list. Send an email. Ninjaturtles Posted 13 years 3 months ago. Haven't seen either in a very long time, have they been released on dvd, or did disney do that stupid Disney vault with them and hide them away for years.
Do you know what year that was released in theaters? This is me as far as the Disney animated movies go. I enjoy alot of them. My personal favorite is also Dalmations. All my life though, I have never wanted to ever watch three of them: Beauty and the Beast, Cinderella, and Sleeping Beauty the Disney Princess thing was just not my thing with their ballroom gowns, and the enchanting themes.
The only theatrical re-release I've ever seen was the 3 Star Wars movies that my Dad took me and my sister to see in Oh you're right they have been rereleasing NBC! I forget because the theater near me has been playing it every year for a while anyways, without an official re-release. The oscar contender re-release usually is more like when an oscar contender got a limited initial release and then the studios decide to do a broad release, which isn't the exact same thing as a typical re-release.
Well I for one, really hope they pick up the trend of rereleasing movies again, because that's the best. I don't care how frequently I could watch, say, Halloween, at home on dvd or cable, I would jump at the chance to see it on the big screen. Goblyn while you're right in that they don't do that many rerelases of films anymore, they do rerelease serious, Oscar contender movies that were shown earlier in the year, again right around the Academy Awards.
And last yer they did a brief rerelease of Dirty Dancing for th 20th anniversary. They also rereleased A Nightmare Before Christmas last year. Manuel Posted 13 years 3 months ago. There is a naked lady in one clip in a flying seen in the city you need to pause it. CeciliaFett Posted 13 years 3 months ago. Its just very hard to spot, and even harder to find since the 99 reissue was pulled off shelves pretty fast. And the people who held on to them won't give them up without a decent amount of cash.
Incidently, I just spotted something. You included the Rescuers Down Under in a re-release article! The only time it was shown was when it was a double feature with the Prince and the Pauper.
Actually, I think Disney just didn't want to release on videotape because it was easily pirated. I know for a fact they released titles on MCA Discovision in the late 70s. So it's not like they were completely against home video, but they were very slow to make them available for sale. For a while, the videotapes were available for rent only and only through Fotomat, I think. They didn't start selling them until around They also made them ridiculously expensive at first.
AzumaReiji Posted 13 years 3 months ago. What was the name of that cinema where you first saw Cinderella, and why did it close?
I have a good number of them right now, but I still have a ways to go. I wish they still did theatrical rereleases of movies. I think the last one I recall having gone to was The Exorcist when they reedited it slightly to make "the version you've never seen" , which if I remember correctly, was a huge hit.
So it just goes to show you, the studios are spending relatively little money, and people will pay to go back to see the movies again and again on the big screen. There is a theater near me that, during the summer, plays kids movies every day, and I have since gotten to see Labyrinth, The Wizard of Oz, Fantasia, and The Nightmare Before Christmas on the big screen again. However, I would think that massive rereleases of some really great movies would make the studios so much money, they'd absolutely want to rerelease them.
Maybe they're just lazy, or maybe they're worried that there will be one less screen devoted to "The Love Guru" or "You Don't Mess With the Zohan" or some other shit they churn out. I saw the last half of Star Wars in theaters Not at once in ProphetSword Posted 13 years 3 months ago.
So, could be they were just trying to cash in. This is much better than your last article. Thumbs way up. I remember seeing alot of the classic Disney movies when they were re-released in the late 70's and early 80's. I also remember seeing a re-release of Star Wars in the early 80's and a re-release of ET in the mid to late 80's. You must keep in mind the re-releases occured during the time before VCR's or during the early days of VCR's before every movie was mass produced on that format.
Sidney Franklin was contracted as a consultant for three-and-a-half years, but thanks to his respect for Walt, he continued to be invloved until Bambi reached the screen in Franklin our sincere appreciation for his inspiring collaboration.
More photos and even motion-picture film was shot by other photographers throughout California, Oregon, and Washington. This incredible film inspired Walt to create his award-winning True-Life Adventures live-action series, for which he commissioned nature photographers to shoot as-it-happened life in the wild. During production, the great impresario also became aware of the talents of Marc Davis.
Walt decided he wanted to see my drawings on the screen. And so I was to learn to be an animator. There are only about words of dialogue in Bambi. The translation was by Whittaker Chambers, by then already a member of the American Communist Party, and the man who would later be a key—and dubious—witness in the spy trial of Alger Hiss. A fresh translation of Bambi is due in January —that date is convenient, as I explain later—from the Princeton University Press.
No one imagined an animation production given other work of the time. Franklin experimented with the film for years and finally sold the rights on to Disney in for a never-disclosed sum. Disney had a lot of peculiar ideas that led the studio down dead ends and some rather beautiful ones that never made it in, as with those leaves noted earlier.
There was a war on, after all. Many reviewers and essayists gave it a negative reception because of its stronger twinge of anti-hunting sentiment than found in the original.
Bambi did become increasingly more popular each time it was re-released in movie theaters over the following decades. Pre-orders for its first home-video release in were for nearly 10 million copies.
Disney also produced two other Salten works: the live-action The Shaggy Dog , loosely derived from his novel, The Hound of Florence ; and Perri , a fictionalized entry in a documentary series, from his The Younger Days of Perri the Squirrel. Bambi gave voice to inchoate and diffuse values residing in a midcentury American society characterized by a profound sense of unease and anxiety.
Although not deliberately designed as such, Bambi is perhaps the most effective piece of anti-hunting propaganda ever produced. But no controversy over the story or its outcomes in any version in any country was as complicated and long-lasting as the history of its copyright.
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