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The Lion King Movie Review
The Lion King Review

"The Lion King" Overview

Rating: G
1994
Cast and Crew
Director : Roger Allers,Rob MinkoffProducer : Don Hahn
Screenwiter : Irene Mecchi,Jonathan Roberts,Linda Woolverton
Starring : Rowan Atkinson,Matthew Broderick,Niketa Calame,Jim Cummings,Whoopi Goldberg,Robert Guillaume,Jeremy Irons,James Earl Jones,Moira Kelly,Nathan Lane,Zoe Leader,Cheech Marin,Ernie Sabella,Madge Sinclair,Jonathan Taylor Thomas
One of Disney's greatest achievements, this is to my knowledge the only
animated film to be turned into a Broadway musical. (Beauty and the Beast
doesn't count, since that film had prior life outside the Disneyverse.)
The Lion King is primarily memorable because it's not based on a fairy tale or
a children's story, and thus avoids the cliches that saddle so many Disney
flicks. There's no "love conquers all" message, no moral about how trying hard
will make everything come out OK. In fact, for much of its running time, The
Lion King says the exact opposite: Hakuna Matata means "no worries," right?
It's in the past, so let it go. But The Lion King also tells us that we can
learn from the past, that tyrants should be overthrown, and that we should own
up to our mistakes in the end.
This also makes The Lion King one of Disney's most adult movies. Though it's
rated G, it features numerous scenes of peril and death -- with lion cub Simba
orphaned after his uncle kills off his dad to usurp the throne and title of
king of the jungle. But that too is part of the famed Circle of Life. Ashes to
ashes, dust to dust. Simba runs off to live in the jungle -- gettin' real, ya
know -- stricken with guilt that he (thinks he) killed his father. Eventually
he returns home to showdown with evil uncle Scar, who has been ruling the
jungle with an iron fist, disrupting the Circle of Life.
The Lion King is one of Disney's last great 2-D creations, with computers
aiding in some truly stellar moments such as the wildebeest stampede. Lots of
perspective shots and moving cameras make this one of the genre's most
film-like movies.
If there's anything annoying about the film, it's the singing, young Simba
sounds like a young Michael Jackson. On the new song added to the just-out DVD
release of the movie, the atrociously vapid "Morning Report," he sounds like a
castrato Michael Jackson. You almost don't want him to succeed, but thankfully,
Simba eventually grows up and is replaced, voice-wise, by Matthew Broderick. By
way of other extras, there's a whole second disc of goodies, including an
extensive selection of making-of footage, a deleted scene or two, an alternate
first verse of "Hakuna Matata," a special home theater audio mix (sounds good),
and about a bazillion kid-friendly features like games and singalongs.
The Lion King has rightfully spawned one of the most enduring industrial
complexes ever to come from an animated cat. Way to go, Disney.
Join the Disney Movie Club and get three free Disney
DVDs!
Ah, the majesty.
Reviewer: Christopher Null
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