Watch Walt Disney’s It’s a Small World of Fun, Vol. 1 Movie Online
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Watch Walt Disney’s It’s a Small World of Fun, Vol. 1 Movie Online.
Movie Title: Walt Disney’s It’s a Small World of Fun, Vol. 1 Walt Disney’s It’s a Small World of Fun, Vol. 1 is available for streaming or downloading. Click Here to Stream or Download Walt Disney’s It’s a Small World of Fun, Vol. 1 |
These “It’s a Dinky World” DVDs expend classic Disney cartoons to seize viewers around the world. They’re not geography lessons, but they do beget a fun complement to Disney’s “The Diminutive Einsteins.”
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Originally shown in theaters, the cartoons feature brilliant animation atop pleasing watercolors. And though they are often filled with see gags, they’re never the least bit cynical. Destinations on this “Volume 1″ disk include Argentina, the Netherlands, Australia and Africa:
A boy finds a flying donkey and enters it in a horse accelerate in the charming “The Flying Gauchito,” a cartoon the whole family will indulge in. Kids will crack up at the donkey; adults will like how the off-screen narrator controls the action — and often changes his mind.
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All ages will also like the Pluto cartoon “In Dutch.” Pluto’s expressive face is irresistible when he gets embarrassed, cries and gets a sneaky thought. When Pluto meets a cute girl dog he gets so smitten his face nearly transforms into Goofy’s! The spot has a simple arc any child can understand: Pluto and the girl are first treated unfairly by authority figures (they accidentally ring a Netherlands city’s emergency bell and earn banished from the village) but eventually become the town heroes.
Pluto steals the expose in his appearence with Mickey Mouse, “Mickey’s Down Under.” As Mickey battles an excited ostrich, Pluto tries to derive a boomerang which seems to have a mind of its bear. Once it gets stuck in his mouth, Pluto’s hilarious facial expressions will tickle a viewer of any age — even a teenager.
The other cartoons are comely fine, too. Goofy’s “African Diary” combines droll animals with even sillier seek gags (the Goof does fire his rifle point blank at a rhino, though miraculously it doesn’t gather injure) . Grandparents, or perhaps vast grandparents, will like sitting in on “A Cowboy Needs a Horse.” It’s status in a 1950s suburban home that, if you’ve been to Walt Disney World, combines the retro waiting site of the `50s Prime Time Cafe with the eye-popping color of It’s a Runt World. And everyone will succumb to the catchy theme song. The set? A young boy’s dream-like vision of what it’s like to be a cowboy.
A unusual Japanese short, “Grievance of a Starmaker” plays out like an veteran folk myth. When a gloomy starmaker (Mr. Hoshi) takes his stars out of the sky — because pollution has ruined their beauty — a young boy (Yasu) volunteers to well-organized them. As a reward, the boy gets “a future as sparkling as the stars.” The cartoon was originally produced in Japanese but you’d never know it: the only deny comes from an off-screen (and now, American) narrator. Produced by Walt Disney Television Animation in 1992, the film’s rich compositions are some of the best things that outfit has done.
The plot has one traditional link. A small elephant lives in constant worry of being killed in the scary, if slow-paced, “Goliath II,” a cartoon in which the characters search for lazily similar to those in earlier feature films. The crocodile is identical to the one in “Peter Pan.”
Disney collectors often dismiss these DVDs because the cartoons often gain dust marks and other signs of age — frustrating since the company cleaned up the shorts for the earlier “Walt Disney Treasures” series. But frankly that shouldn’t discourage you. To a preschooler — or anyone watching on a backseat DVD player — it won’t matter.
Also check out Walt Disney’s It’s a Exiguous World of Fun, Vol. 3.
Personally, I do come by the Disney Treasures tins, so for me there were only two shorts of interest in this DVD collection of 7 Disney intelligent shorts, but I decided one of those was reason enough to beget the seize. And with that in mind, I was slightly disappointed. But more on that later.
As previously stated, this first volume of Disney’s 4 volume (so far) “It’s a Cramped World of Fun” line is a collection of seven short Disney cartoons. Six of these cartoons are theatrically released classics. The seventh is a first-see for Americans, “Grievance of a Starmaker” from 2002, and was the result of a Japanese story-writing contest. The winner’s account was made into a Disney bewitching short, and this DVD is the first and only contrivance for Americans to currently peer the short. Now, the thought slow the title of this DVD line and how the shorts were selected for it is that each short represents a different section of the world. Naturally, the line title is taken from that very common Disney theme park ride/song, “It’s a Microscopic World (After All) “. Unfortunately, the song is not featured anywhere on the disc, not even on the menu, which would have been nice.
Here is the line-up:
1. “The Flying Gauchito” (South America) : This short was originally fragment of the 1944 feature “The Three Caballeros”, but was released as a solo short the next year. It is the chronicle of a dinky boy who captures a winged, flying Donkey and tries to spend him to collect a horse accelerate and bag rich. A very luscious short, but the major flaw of this collection because the print ragged looks like something you’d acquire on a $1.00 DVD of a public domain cartoon. The characterize is shaky and loaded with artifacts. You’re better off getting this one in the context of Three Caballeros, which is a fabulous film anyway. Luckily, the rest of the shorts on this disc are of kindly quality.
2. “In Dutch” (Holland) : This 1946 Pluto cartoon presents his romance with Dina the Dachshund as a setup for disaster. Pluto’s mistake of an accidental spurious apprehension causes their village to simply not pay attention to him later when the nearby dyke really springs a leak and only he and Dina know!
3. “Goliath II” (India) : All Jungle Book fanatics like myself should devour this 1960 treat about a limited diminutive elephant who is a distress to his herd until the day comes when he is the only one who can do it. Trustworthy Holloway provides his always charming narration.
4. “Mickey Down Under” (Australia) : From 1948, this classic Mickey cartoon features Pluto’s problems with Mickey’s boomerang and Mickey’s troubles with an enraged mother ostrich.
5. “African Diary” (Africa) : Goofy heads out on safari accompanied by narration until a run-in with a rhino sends him packing! Hilarious Goofy antics from 1945.
6. “A Cowboy Needs a Horse” (U.S.A.) : Brimming with 50’s nostalgia, this musical treat is a boy’s fantasy of being a cowboy and done in some delightfully stylized animation from 1956. A longtime well-liked of mine.
7. “Grievance of a Starmaker” (Japan) : From 2002, this short tells the anecdote of a puny boy who wonders where all the stars have gone. He sets out to salvage the stale starmaker, and when he does, he befriends him. It seems the starmaker is upset that pollution has dirtied his stars and no one seems to care, but through hard work, the cramped boy cleans all the stars and earns them relieve for the world. It’s a cute diminutive fable, but feels rather rushed and while some like the animation style old-fashioned, it looked rather like simple Flash animation to me (or one of those home computer styles, I’m really not an expert on them) and not really all that charming. Not unpleasant though.
So, there you have it. If you don’t have these shorts, this is definitely worth owning. Not that I would pay too grand, as it’s only around 55 minutes and has no bonus features. Incidentally, I do like the shimmering camouflage art, but a silly side stamp is that pictured on the serve as a scene from “The Flying Gauchito” is actually a scene from a totally different cartoon not even on this situation, “Pedro” (the exiguous airplane) from Saludos Amigos, ha (Pedro’s short is actually on It’s a Cramped World of Fun volume 2) . As for my personal issues, like I said, I already had many of these but bought it for two: The Flying Gauchito and Grievance of a Starmaker. Truth is, since I fill The Three Caballeros, I didn’t care mighty about getting the short version of Fying Gauchito but saw it as a bonus. I mainly bought this for Grievance. But that doesn’t excuse the unpleasant quality in which Gauchito was presented, for which I’ll be docking this disc one star. But I was more disappointed in Grievance due to both how rushed and how short it was (4 minutes and 4 seconds, I contain) and how cheap the animation appeared. Stylized is one thing, but to me this fair looked cheap. Nevertheless, I do not regret buying this DVD. As a Disney completist, I had to pick up Grievance for my collection, and I certainly don’t mind having backups/quicker access to the other shorts on here than fumbling through my Treasures sets. So, if you don’t possess these shorts, this is worth getting, but if you have all the Treasures collections and Three Caballeros, you’ll have to determine for yourself if you are a completist or not and NEED “Grievance of a Starmaker”.
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