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Director : David Hand
Producer : Walt Disney
Screenwriter : Larry Morey, Perce Pearce
Starring : Hardie Albright, Stan Alexander, Peter Behn, Tim Davis, Donnie Dunagan, Sam Edwards, Sterling Holloway, Fred Shields, Bobby Stewart, John Sutherland, Paula Winslowe
I'm willing to wager that most of you remember Bambi as a different film than
it really is. It is incidentally the first movie I can recall seeing (though
that memory's gone haywire), during some early-1970s reissue.
Bambi is a simple, simple story: 70 minutes digesting the life of a deer in the
forest, primarily through song. Bambi (voiced by five different actors through
her (her, right?) various stages of life, learns to walk, befriends a rabbit
and a skunk, survives a forest fire, and loses mom to hunters (off camera, but
we know what happened). And that's about it.
Bambi's lessons are simple and speak to our desire to return to a state of
innocence -- and even oblivion about the changing world around us. Frolic in
the flowers and sing songs with a mischievous bunny? You bet. After Fantasia,
Bambi is one of the few true examples of children's escapist fare we have. (If
you don't catch my meaning, consider the heavy-duty messages of a film like
Pinocchio.)
It's puzzling then why Bambi has such a treasured place in our collective
hearts, given that it's really not about anything except -- maybe -- when it
tries to tell us that hunting is, you know, bad and stuff. Shrug. Bambi has an
ace up its sleeve that guarantees a permanent spot on the classic animation
shelf: People just really like cuddly animals, and there's not a dang thing you
can do about it.
Catch Bambi on a two-disc DVD, with storyboard versions of a pair of deleted
scenes, archival material, and a bunch of kiddie stuff.
Join the Disney Movie Club and get three free Disney
DVDs!
Skunk: It's what's for dinner.
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" Good "
Rating: G, 1942