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The Little Mermaid
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Disney's The Little Mermaid was the first in a series of blockbusters that restored the venerable firm's reputation as the world's premiere animated-feature factory. The title character is a precocious teenager named Ariel, the daughter of Triton, king of the Sea. Against her dad's wishes, Ariel journeys beyond her own world to the surface, where she falls in love with Prince Eric, a handsome human. Foolishly, the little mermaid enters into an agreement with evil sea witch Ursula in order to become human herself. The wistfully melancholy ending of the original Hans Christian Andersen story is dispensed with in favor of a joyously happy ending-but not before a spectacular climactic confrontation between Ursula and Triton. The obligatory Disney comic relief is handled by such freshly minted characters as Sebastian the Crab, who, courtesy of voiceover artist Samuel E. Wright, sings the film's Oscar-winning "Under the Sea." Other voices are provided by Broadway star Jodi Benson (as Ariel) and such Hollywood reliables as Buddy Hackett, Pat Carroll, Kenneth Mars, and Rene Auberjonois. The enormous box-office take of The Little Mermaid made possible such future Disney cartoon ventures as Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, Pocahontas, and The Hunchback of Notre Dame. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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gambrel83gambrel83 Re:Movies for Animals
by gambrel83 in Movie Games
liked it.
"My dog, Marat, would likely enjoy the following: All Dogs Go to Heaven Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey Snow Dogs The Little Mermaid Eight Below " [More]
pbcoolx2pbcoolx2 Delete me too
by pbcoolx2 in pbcoolx2 Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"http://qa.spout.com/films/2053 8/default.aspx Originally posted on:PammyK " [More]
JakeStevensJakeStevens Little Girls Everywhere STILL R ...
by JakeStevens in JakeStevens Blog
liked it.
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"The 80's were not kind to Disney, as most of their animated films during that period didn't become the classics I'm sure they were intended to be. But then along came Disney's interpretation of Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid; you couldn't get away from this movie if you tried. Toys stores, McDonald's, backpacks, Jell-O...everywhere you looked, there it was. I enjoyed it mostly because those damn songs (written by the dynamic Alan Menkin and Howard Ashman) absolutely would not leave me alone, and I had thoroughly enjoyed their work on Little Shop of Horrors three years previous to this film being released. I find myself watching it every few years and, no matter how much my taste in films have changed over the years, it still brings a smile to my face. Fun for the whole family! " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Disney: Recycled Images, Recycl ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"This series of side-by-side comparisons of frames from various Disney films (via WIRED's Underwire blog) is meant to show how Disney recycles frames from one 2D animated flick to another in order to save time, money and labor value. But more impressively, it's also solid proof of the animation factory's tendency to recycle themes across decades. The tableau above tracks the "nubile nymph dances for plump (read: impotent) male onlookers" theme, first seen in 1937's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, and then resurrected 36 years later for Robin Hood. And surely there are more examples of such a scene playing out across the Disney ouevre--it's been at least 17 years since I've seen it, but The Little Mermaid immediately comes to mind. For all the films collecting dust in the Disney vault, there are really only three or four stories being told--young males, abandoned my their families, turn to nature; stubborn young women find themselves through the action of civilizing one man or a ... " [More]
ellimilleellimille I love you... no. I meant to sa ...
by ellimille in Introduce Yourself
loved it.
"Hi!I am Elli. New in Spout. I found Spout watching the Four Eye Monster -movie in Youtube. This is a place for me. Movie fanatic like the rest.Genres are great. I guess I mostly enjoy good comedies with a sparkle of darkness/drama. Like Little Miss Sunshine, Garden State or Lost in Translation. But I get trully excited with good action scifi stuff like the marvelous Sunshine or the first The Matrix. I love to spend time with good animation like the old Disneys The Little Mermaid or The Lion King or Japanese creations like Miyazaki`s Sen To Chihiro No Kamikakushi. When I want something really romantic I watch Before Sunset. I regard Clueless as a classic. Fabuleux destin dÁmelie Poulain makes me smile, some Bollywood movies and Moulin Rouge (in the end) makes me cry and Quentin´s Kill Bills makes me want to go jogging. Horror I cannot watch because with my over active imagination I get nightmares. Usually I prefer to see a movie I haven´t yet seen over a good mov ... " [More]
animerionanimerion A Modern Disney Classic
by animerion in Movie Musings
liked it.
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"After 17 years, I have finally had a chance to take in one of my favorite Disney films, The Little Mermaid, on DVD This film was the first in a line of Disney that defined the studio during the early to mid 90s in a line of popular animated films such as The Lion King and Aladdin. I was excited yet a bit cautious to take this film after so many years because nostalgia has a way of making memories more pleasurable that what they really are. The rose-tinted glasses effect as they say. This really was no the case with this film and I really enjoyed revisiting this film again.When you are younger one really doesn’t care about the technical aspect of any film, but one of the first thing that I noticed about this film is that the character designs seems very expressive for a Disney film. There aren’t many traditional human character designs in this film, obviously, but the human elements of the characters’ faces are over exaggerated, almost like those found in anime ... " [More]
xtinkerbellbethxxtinkerbellbethx ACE!
by xtinkerbellbethx in xtinkerbellbethx Blog
loved it.
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"I love the little mermaid. You can watch it whatever age you are and still love it!! The music is fab and the happy ending just leaves you with a :) !!! " [More]
PammyKPammyK Re: Favorite Song?
by PammyK in The Official Disney Group
liked it.
"I like "A Whole New World" from Aladdin and "Under the Sea" from The Little Mermaid. " [More]
KamiKami Re: Favorite Disney Movie?
by Kami in The Official Disney Group
hasn't rated it.
"Hands down, The Little Mermaid " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
Welcome back, Disney. After numerous colossal missteps by its animation department during the 20 years since The Jungle Book, arguably its last unqualified hit (though some would support The Rescuers from 1977), the studio realized the key to regaining relevance would be an old-fashioned romantic fantasy that would seize the hearts of young girls. And did it ever -- the target audience looked up to Ariel so completely that numerous dolls, pets, and babies coming into being circa 1990 were given her name. Of course, having been mired in dark and expensive misfires like The Black Cauldron for much of the previous decades, Disney didn't have all the details right just yet. For one, a number of critics carped that Ariel was little more than a weakly developed pretty face who relied too heavily on men. The characterization of Ursula, the imaginative but utterly grotesque sea monster villain, added some fuel to the fire. But gender bias has been a knock on Disney for years, and The Little Mermaid boasts enough other strengths for this complaint to fade into the background. Chief among them is the odyssey of aquatic colors that brings bursting life to Ariel's underwater family of happy fish and crustaceans. The two Oscar-nominated songs, "Under the Sea" (which won) and "Kiss the Girl," became the standard bearers for the grand-scale production numbers in numerous Disney films to come. In fact, the delightfully accented lead vocals by Sam Wright (as Sebastian the crab) are so intoxicating, and the corresponding visuals so rich, that these evolve beyond classic soundtrack songs to the level of classic songs, period. They alone justify a viewing of the film that revived one of the 20th century's most powerful enterprises. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 



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