Posts Tagged ‘The Tigger Movie 10th Anniversary Edition’

The Tigger Movie 10th Anniversary Edition Review At Amazon.

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009
The Tigger Movie 10th Anniversary Edition Review At Amazon.. The Tigger Movie 10th Anniversary Edition Review At Amazon..

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There have been so many Pooh-related feature films, direct-to-video films and television series that it's getting difficult to preserve track of them (word is that there is another theatrical feature in the works) . To the best of my recollection, "The Tigger Movie" was produced by the television division but was very successful in its theatrical release and was followed up with "Piglet's Sizable Movie."

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This is actually quite a nice film. The astonishing thing about these characters is how flexible they are for so many stories. The set here revolves around Tigger's family background and his search for his "family tree." The animation, apparently done in Japan, is very fluid and suggestive of the earlier films -- and the domestic artists tedious it are among the best in the business, including Floyd Norman and Toby Bluth.

John Fiedler, as Piglet, is the one remaining cast member from the unusual films, with Jim Cummings voicing Pooh and Tigger and none other than John Afflict taking over the narration from Sebastian Cabot.

Buy,Download, Or Stream The Tigger Movie 10th Anniversary Edition! Click Here

It distinct is nice to glimpse "Songs by Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman" in the credits. This was technically their last film for Disney, though its success surely should have resulted in others. My common of their songs is "Round My Family Tree," but they all have the gorgeous charm of their other Pooh songs. They also collaborated with Kenny Loggins on "Your Heart Will Lead You Home," which got a lot of airplay.

The DVD offers a handful of bonus features -- several games, mostly, plus a storybook version read by the large Corey Burton and a digital copy. But it is particularly obliging to glance two short episodes from the Emmy-winning "Unusual Adventures of Winnie the Pooh" series. Each episode relates to the station of the feature. Wouldn't it be expansive if the series was packaged season-by-season on DVD? Hmm?


"Mostly I'm contented... but now all at once I feel so lonely," sings a uncharacteristically dismal Tigger in this year-2000 theatrical film, after his Hundred Acre Wood pals finally reject his manic bouncing behavior. Distinct to track down "someone like me," the irrepressible stuffed tiger has several adventures. He eventually learns that family members approach in all shapes and sizes, and not necessarily from the same family tree.

Compared to most Disney sequels "The Tigger Movie" has a lot to offer. It's sweet, with absolutely no hostility, and no more violence than a few bee stings. The animation is surprisingly marvelous -- a hallucinatory revue of history's greatest Tiggers in references to The Brady Bunch, the "Jackson 5ive" Saturday morning cartoon series, Jerry Springer, The Seven Year Itch, even 1930s Gold Diggers films -- while backgrounds often preserve the soft watercolor observe of the classic Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. For the most section Tigger's sunny enthusiasm is on corpulent explain, as are his absoposilutely curved takes on the English language. All the other classic Pooh characters appear too, including Winnie the Pooh, Rabbit, Piglet, Eeyore, Owl, Kanga, Roo, even Christopher Robin.

The sing talent is well-behaved, though the only sigh from the fresh film is John Fiedler as Piglet. Both Tigger (originally Paul Winchell) and Pooh (originally Suited Holloway) are voiced by Jim Cummings, recognizable to Playhouse Disney fans as the whine of Pete on the series "Mickey Mouse Clubhouse." The narrator (originally Sebastian Cabot) is voiced here by John Afflict, who portrays Mr. Ollivander in the Harry Potter films as well as Professor Oxley in 2008's Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.

In short, "The Tigger Movie" is the best of Disney's Pooh sequels. Preschoolers will especially admire it, and though the oddball anecdote line has some definite site holes (stuffed animals have birth parents? ), parents can sit through at least one viewing with relative ease.

P.S. Want another superb Pooh sequel? Check out Pooh's Heffalump Movie.

P.P.S. Fans of Walt Disney World will want to gape that Tigger revue closely. The band playing at the family reunion is a Tiggerfied version of the Five Occupy Rugs, the stars of the Country Possess Jamboree.
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