Beauty and the Beast (1991) Movie Review
Beauty and the Beast (1991) Review

"Beauty and the Beast (1991)" Overview

Rating: G
1991
Cast and Crew
Director : Gary Trousdale,Kirk WiseProducer : Don Hahn
Screenwiter : Linda Woolverton
Starring : Paige O'Hara,Robby Benson,Richard White,Jerry Orbach,David Ogden Stiers,Angela Lansbury,Bradley Pierce,Rex Everhart,Jesse Corti,Hal Smith,Jo Anne Worley
Often considered the best animated film ever -- and the only one to ever be
nominated for Best Picture -- on a return viewing ten years later, Beauty and
the Beast doesn't seem to be quite the masterpiece we once thought.
Though it's still good, pop this Special Edition DVD into your player and
you're instantly greeted with a crash of noise. Beauty lets you know right
from the start that it is not a subtle film, full of bluster and fire and
singing and talking everything. (And everything talking at the top of its
lungs.)
Dig through the cacophany, though, and you will indeed find one of the better
animated experiences of the pre-Pixar era. The story is of course straight
from the classics. Mean monster living in big castle apprehends young lass,
and she will love him! Of course, he's under a spell and if he finds true love
before his 21st birthday, he'll reveal his true self -- a prince -- and the
couple will live happily ever after. But what woman will fall in love with a
monster like The Beast?
For a typically Disney "modern woman," our Belle is awfully provincial,
willingly accepting a life as the Beast's semi-slave (which of course gives her
the chance to love him) while an animatronic candle and coatrack clean him up
so he can properly woo her. The movie's presumed high point comes during a
semi-computer-animated dance in a large ballroom while Angela Lansbury croons
the title song (which actually won an Oscar). Ah, the suckers we were back in
1991.
It's writ large and supremely cartoony, but at least Belle recognizes the
impossibility of the menagerie of singing, animatronic furniture and cutlery
(most Disney heroines see nothing wrong with a song-and-dance flounder), but
she goes along in good spirits. And it's that sense of fun in Beauty that
makes it worthwhile, even today. There are even moments of greatness in the
film -- notably the finale, in which the Beast and Belle's evil other suitor do
battle on the castle's rooftop. And when Angela Lansbury isn't singing, the
songs aren't too shabby, either.
If you find yourself wanting ever more Beauty and the Beast, nothing more than
the new two-disc DVD set will do. Featuring an extended cut of the film, you
get one extra song and a bit more narrative. There's also a bazillion extras,
including the "work in progress" version shown to audiences at the 1991 New
York Film Festival, a commentary track, tons of kids' games, and the usual
behind-the-scenes goodies. A nice collection of stuff and a must-have for
Disney freaks.
Join the Disney Movie Club and get three free Disney
DVDs!
Cake and candle?
Reviewer: Christopher Null



