Tumgik
#davy crockett and the river pirates
disneybooklist · 4 months
Text
8 notes · View notes
ljones41 · 1 year
Text
Favorite DISNEY STUDIOS Live Action Movies
Tumblr media
Below is a list of my favorite live-action movies from the Walt Disney Studios.  This list is in chronological order:
FAVORITE DISNEY STUDIOS LIVE ACTION MOVIES
Tumblr media
“Treasure Island (1950) - This adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson’s 1883 adventure novel starred Robert Newton and Bobby Driscoll.  Byron Haskin directed.
Tumblr media
“Davy Crockett and the River Pirates” (1956) - Fess Parker and Buddy Ebsen starred in this prequel to the 1955 movie, “Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier”.  Norman Foster directed.
Tumblr media
“The Parent Trap (1961) - Hayley Mills starred in this first version of Disney’s film about long-lost twins who scheme to reconcile their divorced parents.  Co-starring Maureen O’Hara and Brian Keith, the movie was written and directed by David Swift.
Tumblr media
“Mary Poppins” (1964) - Oscar winner Julie Andrews and Dick Van Dyke starred in this award-winning musical adaptation of P.L. Travers series of novellas about a magical British nanny.  Robert Stevenson directed.
Tumblr media
“That Darn Cat” (1965) - Hayley Mills and Dean Jones starred in this comedic adaptation of Gordon and Mildred Gordon’s 1963 novel, “Undercover Cat”.  Robert Stevenson directed.
Tumblr media
“The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin” (1967) - Roddy McDowall, Suzanne Pleshette and Bryan Russell starred in this adaptation of Lowell S. Hawley‘s 1963 novel, “By the Great Horn Spoon!“.  James Neilson directed.
Tumblr media
“Blackbeard’s Ghost” (1968) - Peter Ustinov, Dean Jones and Suzanne Pleshette starred in this comedy adaptation of Ben Stahl’s 1965 novel.  Robert Stevenson directed.
Tumblr media
“The Love Bug” (1968-69) - Dean Jones, Michele Lee, David Tomlinson and Buddy Hackett starred in an adaptation of “Car, Boy, Girl", Gordon Buford’s story about a magical Volkswagen.  Robert Stevenson directed.
Tumblr media
“Bedknobs and Broomsticks” (1971) - Angela Landsbury and David Tomlinson starred in this musical adaptation of Mary Norton’s children books, 1944′s “The Magic Bedknob; or, How to Become a Witch in Ten Easy Lessons” and 1947′s “Bonfires and Broomsticks”.  Robert Stevenson directed.
Tumblr media
“The Million Dollar Dixie Deliverance” (1978) - Brock Peters starred in this Civil War adventure about a black Union soldier and escaped prisoner of war, who helps five wealthy Northern children being held hostage from Confederate soldiers escape from their captors.  Russ Mayberry directed.
Tumblr media
“Dick Tracy” (1990) - Warren Beatty directed and starred in this adaptation of the 1930s comic strip created by Chester Gould.  Oscar nominee Al Pacino, Glenne Headly and Madonna co-starred.
Tumblr media
“The Rocketeer” (1991) - Bill Campbell starred in this adaptation of the superhero comic book series created by Dave Stevens.  Directed by Joe Johnston, the movie co-starred Jennifer Connelly, Timothy Dalton and Alan Arkin.
Tumblr media
“The Adventures of Huck Finn” (1993) - Elijah Wood and Courtney B. Vance starred in this adaptation of Mark Twain’s 1884 novel, “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn”.  The movie was written and directed by Stephen Sommers.
Tumblr media
“The Three Musketeers” (1993) - Kiefer Sutherland, Chris O’Donnell, Charlie Sheen and Oliver Platt starred in this loose adaptation of Alexandre Dumas père‘s 1844 novel.  Stephen Herek directed.
Tumblr media
“Pirates of the Caribbean:  The Curse of the Black Pearl” (2003) - Johnny Depp starred in the first film of the supernatural swashbuckler film series that was based on a Disney Park attraction.  Directed by Gore Verbinski, the movie co-starred Orlando Bloom, Keira Knightley and Geoffrey Rush.
Tumblr media
“National Treasure” (2004) - Nicholas Cage starred in the first adventure movie in this film series about a historian and treasure hunter.  Directed by Jon Turtelbaub, the movie co-starred Justin Bartha, Diane Kruger, Sean Bean and Jon Voight.
Tumblr media
“Pirates of the Caribbean:  Dead Man’s Chest” (2006) - Johnny Depp starred in the second movie of the supernatural swashbuckler film series that was based on the Disney Park attraction.  Directed by Gore Verbinski, the movie co-starred Orlando Bloom, Keira Knightley and Bill Nighy.
Tumblr media
“National Treasure 2:  Book of Secrets” (2007) - Nicholas Cage starred in the second adventure movie in this film series about a historian and treasure hunter.  Directed by Jon Turtelbaub, the movie co-starred Justin Bartha, Diane Kruger, Jon Voight, Ed Harris and Helen Mirren.
Tumblr media
“Prince of Persia:  The Sands of Time” (2010) - Jake Gyllenhaal, Gemma Arterton and Ben Kingsley starred in this action-adventure adaptation of Jordan Mechner’s video game series.  Mike Newell directed.
Tumblr media
“Saving Mr. Banks” (2013) - Emma Thompson and Tom Hanks starred in this biopic about conflict between author P.L. Travers and filmmaker Walt Disney over the development of the 1964 movie, “Mary Poppins”.  John Lee Hancock directed.
Tumblr media
“Tomorrowland” (2015) - George Clooney, Britt Robertson and Hugh Laurie starred in science-fiction adventure about a disillusioned scientist and a teenage science enthusiast embarking on a trip to a futuristic alternate dimension.  Brad Bird directed and co-wrote with Damon Lindelof.
Tumblr media
“Cruella” (2021) - Emma Stone starred as the titular character in this crime comedy about the villainess from Dodie Smith's 1956 novel The Hundred and One Dalmatians”.  Directed by Craig Gillespie, the movie co-starred Emma Thompson, Joel Fry and Paul Walter Hauser.
Do you have any favorite Disney live-action movies?  What are they?
Tumblr media
1 note · View note
court-of-angels · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Family vacation to Disneyland in 1959
22 notes · View notes
Text
Welcome!
This is the WDW attraction showdown, where we determine what is the best ride/show at Walt Disney World. This tournament will have both currently operating and defunct attractions represented, so your favorite attraction should be represented on here! I hope you enjoy the tournament!
Full list of attractions below:
Magic Kingdom:
Walt Disney World Railroad
Main Street Vehicles
Jungle Cruise
Pirates of the Caribbean
Swiss Family Treehouse
The Magic Carpets of Aladdin
Big Thunder Mountain Railroad
Frontierland Shooting Gallery
Country Bear Jamboree
Tom Sawyer Island
Haunted Mansion
The Hall of Presidents
Liberty Square Riverboat
"it's a small world"
Mickey's Philharmagic
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
Peter Pan's Flight
Dumbo the Flying Elephant
Seven Dwarfs Mine Train
The Barnstormer
Prince Charming Regal Carousel
Under the Sea - Journey of the Little Mermaid
Mad Tea Party
Space Mountain
TRON: Lightcycle Run
Tomorrowland Speedway
Buzz Lightyear's Space Ranger Spin
Walt Disney's Carousel of Progress
Monsters, Inc. Laugh Floor
PeopleMover
Astro Orbiter
Epcot:
Spaceship Earth
Journey Into Imagination with Figment
Test Track (post-2012)
Mission: SPACE
Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind
Soarin' Around the World
Living with the Land
Awesome Planet
The Seas with Nemo & Friends
Turtle Talk with Crush
Gran Fiesta Tour
Frozen Ever After
Reflections of China
Impressions de France
The American Adventure
Remy's Ratatouille Adventure
Canada Far and Wide
Disney's Hollywood Studios:
Mickey & Minnie's Runaway Railway
The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror
Rock 'n' Roller Coaster
Fantasmic!
Beauty and the Beast Live on Stage
Indiana Jones: Epic Stunt Spectacular
Star Tours - The Adventures Continue
Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance
Millennium Falcon: Smuggler's Run
Toy Story Mania!
Alien Swirling Saucers
Slinky Dog Dash
Muppet*Vision 3D
Disney Junior Live on Stage
Disney's Animal Kingdom:
It's Tough to be a Bug!
Avatar Flight of Passage
Na'vi River Journey
Kilimanjaro Safaris
Wildlife Express Train
Expedition Everest
Kali River Rapids
Finding Nemo: The Big Blue... Beyond!
Festival of the Lion King
DINOSAUR
Triceratop Spin
Defunct Attractions:
Test Track (pre-2012)
Soarin' (original)
Journey Into Imagination (original)
Journey Into YOUR Imagination
Maelstrom
Splash Mountain
Primeval Whirl
World of Motion
Ellen's Energy Adventure
The Great Movie Ride
Davy Crockett's Explorer Canoes
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
Mr. Toad's Wild Ride
Snow White's Scary Adventures
Mickey Mouse Revue
America the Beautiful
Mission to Mars
ExtraTERRORestrial: Alien Encounter
Stitch's Great Escape!
Horizons
The Living Seas
Body Wars
Cranium Command
Captain EO
Honey, I Shrunk the Audience!
Food Rocks
Kitchen Kabaret
Innoventions
Circle of Life
El Rio del Tiempo
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire - Play It!
Sounds Dangerous!
The American Idol Experience
Studio Backlot Tour
Lights, Motors, Action!
7 notes · View notes
magickingdom1901 · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Walt Disney Pictures: 100 Years of Magic
Song of the South (1946)
Treasure Island (1950)
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954)
Davy Crockett: King of the Wild Frontier (1955)
Davy Crockett and the River Pirates (1956)
Old Yeller (1957)
The Shaggy Dog (1959)
Darby O’Gill and the Little People (1959)
Pollyanna (1960)
Swiss Family Robinson (1960)
5 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Jeff York as Mike Fink, King of the River from Davy Crockett and the River Pirates, another movie I watched as a kid that made me feel "funny." I had SUCH a crush on him!
2 notes · View notes
Text
The Many Mystery Tours of Winnie the Pooh
Tumblr media Tumblr media
What do a Disney animated movie about a stuffed bear and a Beatles album have in common?
In some articles I wrote back in my WordPress days concerning the Disney "Animated Classics Canon", I talked about how The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh - released theatrically on March 11, 1977, was more of a clipshow than it was a fully-fledged Disney animated feature.
Now, the bonus features on various home media releases of this 1977 compilation film have often insisted the opposite. Disney seems to want your average consumer and us semi-historians to know that the story goes: Walt Disney was unsure about American audiences' familiarity with A. A. Milne's bedtime stories and the stuffed animal characters within. Instead of making a feature film as planned during the early 1960s, Walt planned to make three separate shorts to get audiences acquainted with those characters... and then string those three cartoon featurettes together into a 70-or-so-minute movie later down the line...
This seems to be a well-backed up history, too. After all, the autobiography of brothers Robert and Richard Sherman, known for their many contributions to the Disney songbook including the songs for these classic Winnie the Pooh adaptations, states pretty much the exact same thing. This strategy was not dissimilar to the studio's piecing-together of the Davy Crockett episodes of Disney's anthology series (then known as Disneyland, in promoting the upcoming theme park of the same name), which spawned the 1955 theatrical release Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier and its 1956 follow-up Davy Crockett and the River Pirates... But I feel this is untrue, and has been shown to be so...
Familiarity with British characters was never a problem for Walt and his crew before, or characters from European stories in general. Mary Poppins didn't need a couple of shorts, or some episodes of a TV show to familiarize audiences with the titular nanny beforehand. One Hundred and One Dalmatians was, from start to finish, a feature film project that never detoured into short films prior to release. Peter Pan? Same thing.
Now, the Sherman Brothers autobiography states that the poor reception of Alice in Wonderland - a similarly episodic feature based on beloved and relatively plot-free British books - was what drove Walt to make this bizarre decision with Winnie the Pooh. That seems to hold some weight.
If this all was indeed the case, how come the third short - 1974's Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too - took so long to come to fruition? The third short, and the subsequent final third of the film, is very much a post-Walt affair. More than anything, it was a training picture for many of Disney's then-new animators, including a returning Don Bluth. You can tell Bluth's animation from a mile away when Rabbit gets lost in the woods, for sure, as he can't keep his tongue in his mouth. The story appears to borrow from various Winnie the Pooh story LPs that Disneyland Records released throughout the end of the 1960s. (Blustery Day also first came out in record form in 1967, a year before the animated featurette's December 1968 theatrical debut with the flop live-action film The Horse in the Grey Flannel Suit.) It is unknown what the final third of Walt's unmade Winnie the Pooh film would've been.
Lastly, it is not as if Winnie the Pooh *wasn't* known by Americans pre-1966... So that seems to render the "Walt was unsure if American audiences would see a feature about that character because he wasn't well-known by Americans" claim moot. I firmly think the real story is, "Walt Disney's Winnie the Pooh", was a lot like the original Leica reel for The Wind in the Willows that was put together in 1941. The Wind in the Willows, based on yet another British literary classic (Kenneth Grahame's story of the same name), could've been the next feature-length film after Bambi's release in 1942. Animator Frank Thomas, of course one of Walt Disney's "Nine Old Men", explained in an interview that the Leica reel ran roughly 48 minutes long and did contain story problems. That no doubt pushed it back, as did World War II's effects on the animation wing. Wind in the Willows eventually wound up as a roughly 35-minute segment of the 1949 package feature The Adventures of Ichabod & Mr. Toad.
Walt seemed to have found the Pooh stories to be too fluffy to sustain a roughly 70-minute movie, and figured releasing smaller films based on the stories was the better option. His Winnie the Pooh film was initially planned for a 1965 release, almost two years after The Sword in the Stone and two years before The Jungle Book eventually came out, which partially explains that four-year gap between those two pictures. Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree debuted in February 1966 ahead of The Ugly Dachshund, and was heavily marketed as a double bill, and to no one's surprise, the stuffed bear cartoon completely overshadowed the Dean Jones dog movie. I don't think a Pooh feature was in the cards after that, for the next film after The Jungle Book was The Aristocats, which Walt signed off on before his death in December 1966. Being short films, both Honey Tree and Blustery Day could be shown and shown again on television, which they were. They kept the character a household name, audiences didn't have to wait years for a re-issue like they had to do for longer Disney animated films.
For whatever reason the Walt Winnie the Pooh movie was cancelled, The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh is still a Frankenstein creation. The 1974 Tigger Too short is not from the Walt era and is its own entity. So in the Disney animated feature "canon", you have a film with 2/3s of it coming from an unmade Walt Disney feature released in two parts from 1966 to 1968, and another 1/3 of it from something conceived well after that. Then you have the "goodbye" ending, which reportedly was once meant for the Blustery Day short. John Walmsley, who voiced Christopher Robin in that portion, voices him here too, which seems to confirm that it was indeed meant for it. Plus, it reuses some animation from a scene in The Jungle Book, which - again - opened a little over a year before Blustery Day debuted. If Blustery Day had been the final cartoon with that ending, it would've been a fitting sendoff being Walt's final animated work that he was alive for most of.
Quite funny how this Winnie the Pooh film is a big honey clustercuss, with a strangely convoluted history... But it's always been thought that it all works together anyways, whether you know the history of the film or if you don't. Ex away the history and the Frankensteinian structure of it, it's a charming anthology of stories about these stuffed animals going on fun misadventures and a nice bittersweet ending to top it off. It works completely fine as a 74-minute animated feature film, and the stories' aimlessness make it work in its own fun way.
To make matters even weirder, in 1983, Walt Disney Productions let out another 25-minute Pooh featurette, Winnie the Pooh and a Day for Eeyore. You would think this one was meant to be a training vehicle for new animator hires, but weirdly enough, it was completely outsourced to a studio called Rick Reinert Productions. The new animators instead worked on the featurette Mickey's Christmas Carol, which debuted later that year.
It occurred to me that there's an album that I love whose assemblage is very, very similar to how the 1977 feature The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh came together...
The Beatles' Magical Mystery Tour...
Magical Mystery Tour was a surrealist television film that was made in the wake of the death of The Beatles' manager Brian Epstein. Six songs were newly conceived for this 50-or-so-minute film, which would air on the BBC on Boxing Day 1967. (That's December 26th for any Americans reading who may not be familiar with such a holiday.) Coinciding with the release was a six-song double-EP set a few weeks prior. An EP - "extended play", typically, was the same size of a single: A 7-inch record. Singles had one song on one side, and one song on the other. A-side, B-side. An EP could contain up to four songs on the record, and The Beatles were no strangers to the EP format. EPs seemed to be a much more popular kind of record in the UK, too. The Beatles' American distributor, Capitol Records, felt a two-EP record set was not viable for the US market...
Capitol Records is best known by Beatles historians for their Frankenstein-like assembling of albums. A single album in the UK like Rubber Soul could have its tracks spread across, say, THREE albums in the US. All of this mangling would eventually stop by 1967, with the seminal LP (long-player) album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band being the first Beatles album to have the same tracklisting in both the UK and the US. (With only a minor little difference between the two.) In Beatles tradition, some songs were never meant to be anything but just singles. For example, in 1966, there was The Beatles album Revolver, and a single: 'Paperback Writer' b/w 'Rain'. Two songs meant specifically for that single 7-inch 45rpm record.
In 1967, The Beatles released three singles. The first of which was 'Strawberry Fields Forever' b/w 'Penny Lane', released in February 1967. Both songs had been conceived for Sgt. Pepper, but because of a relative lull in releasing anything (Revolver had come out in August 1966, and there was - unusually - no Christmas market single release that year), it was decided to have those two songs be a single instead of tracks on the upcoming album. Next was 'All You Need Is Love' b/w 'Baby You're a Rich Man', released in July 1967, nearly two months after Sgt. Pepper. Last came 'Hello, Goodbye', on the B-side they attached the Magical Mystery Tour song 'I Am the Walrus', which later appeared on the two-EP set.
In the US, Capitol Records had all six songs from the movie put on side one of their Magical Mystery Tour LP. Side two would be the five other songs that The Beatles released in 1967, in order: 'Hello, Goodbye', 'Strawberry Fields Forever', 'Penny Lane', 'Baby You're a Rich Man', and 'All You Need Is Love'. Altogether, this is a very strong 11-track sequence. No surprise, that album shot to #1 on the charts, and it even got imported to the UK in early 1968 and charted as high as #31 - despite the EP and the separate singles existing over there. It works so well as an album, and as an equally psychedelic sequel to Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band... even if it was never conceived as such in the first place.
And the weirdest thing is, the Magical Mystery Tour MOVIE was never aired in America, even though the LP came with a picture story of the movie. The movie itself had gotten such bad critical and equally poor audience reception (I'd imagine a lot of the viewership was families tuning in on Boxing Day to watch something together, and they got a weird aimless psychedelic home movie that confused the hell out of them), that ABC opted out of broadcasting it in January 1968-ish. So, Americans wouldn't really get to see that film until midnight showings occurred in the mid-1970s, followed by belated TV airings...
Oh, and the Magical Mystery Tour movie, much like Many Adventures, is just a silly delightful parade of whimsical misadventures...
0 notes
brookston · 10 months
Text
Holidays 7.18
Holidays
Anti-Bigot Day
Billy Joel Day (New York)
Chrysanthemum Day
Constitution Day (Uruguay)
Hug a Fat Bald Person Day
Insurance Nerd Day
International Laquita Marina Day
Jane Austen Day (Indiana)
Lollapalooza Day
Make A List of the People You Love Day
National Brenda Day
National Hamiltons Day
National Dapper Your Data Day
National Monica Day
National Mortgage Brokers Day
National Peyton Day
Nelson Mandela Day (a.k.a. Mandela Day; UN)
Perfect Family Day
Perfect 10 Day
President’s Day (Botswana)
Pyramids Day
718 Day (New York)
Shawm Day (French Republic)
Tony the Tiger Day
Weinermobile Day
World Listening Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
International Brewers Day
National Caviar Day
National Sour Candy Day
St. Anou, Bishop of Metz's Day (patron saint of brewers; a.k.a. St. Arnulf, Arnould, St. Arnold)
3rd Tuesday in July
National Children’s Book Day (Philippines) [3rd Tuesday]
Independence Days
Prsänëa (Declared; 2012) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Arnulf of Metz (Christian; Saint) [brewers] *
Bobby Henderson Day (Pastafarian)
Bruno of Segni (Christian; Saint)
Camillus de Lellis (optional memorial, U.S. only)
Eadburh (a.k.a. Edburga) of Bicester (Christian; Saint)
Eid-e-Ghadir (Iran)
Elizabeth Ferard (Church of England)
Feast of Saint Arnoldus (Belgium)
Feast of Teneu
Frederick of Utrecht (Christian; Saint)
Hyacinthe Rigaud (Artology)
Leroy (Muppetism)
Marina of Aguas Santas (Christian; Saint)
Maternus of Milan (Christian; Saint)
Nebet-Het (Birthday of Nephthys, Egyptian Goddess of Beer)
Nephthy’s Day (Pagan)
Odulph (Christian; Saint)
Pambo (Christian; Saint)
Philastrius (Christian; Saint)
Rabelais (Positivist; Saint)
Symphorosa (Christian; Saint)
Theneva (Christian; Saint)
Theodosia of Constantinople (Christian; Saint)
Thomas Morton Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Vitulatio (Feast to Vitulatio, Ancient Roman Goddess of Exultation, joy & life)
Water Pistol Day (Pastafarian)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Day of Bad Omens (Ancient Rome) [1 of 2]
Prime Number Day: 199 [46 of 72]
Shakku (赤口 Japan) [Bad luck all day, except at noon.]
Unfortunate Day (Pagan) [41 of 57]
Premieres
Aliens (Film; 1986)
Arachnophobia (Film; 1990)
Bad Boys II (Film; 2003)
Bosko’s Holiday (WB LT Cartoon; 1931)
Closer, by Joy Division (Album; 1980)
Consider the Oyster, by M.F.K. Fisher (Food Essays; 1941)
Davy Crockett and the River Pirates (Film; 1956)
The Dark Knight (Film; 2008)
Entourage (TV Series; 2004)
Eureka (TV Series; 2006)
Friends with Benefits (Film; 2011)
George of the Jungle (Film; 1997)
God Only Knows, by The Beach Boys (Song; 1966)
I Love to Sings (WB MM Cartoon; 1936)
Johnny English (Film; 2003)
Jurassic Park III (Film; 2001)
Mamma Mia! (Film; 2008)
Mrs. Brown (Film; 1997)
The Nun’s Story (Film; 1959)
Planes: Fire & Rescue (Animated Film; 2014)
Porco Rosso (Studio Ghibli Animated Film; 1992)
RWBY (Anime Series; 2013)
Sex Tape (Film; 2014)
Sketches of Spain, by Miles Davis (Album; 1960)
Tweet and Lovely (WB MM Cartoon; 1959)
UHF, by Weird Al Yankpvic (Soundtrack Album; 1989)
Used Cars (Film; 1980)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice, by The Beach Boys (Song; 1966)
Today’s Name Days
Answer, Arnold, Arnulf, Friedrich, Ulf (Austria)
Emil, Emilian (Bulgaria)
Bruno, Emilija, Frederik, Ljuba (Croatia)
Drahomíra (Czech Republic)
Arnolphus (Denmark)
Eerika, Erika (Estonia)
Riikka (Finland)
Frédéric (France)
Arnulf, Friedrich, Ulf (Germany)
Aimilianos, Emilianos (Greece)
Frigyes (Hungary)
Calogero, Giusta (Italy)
Rozālija, Roze, Rozīte (Latvia)
Eimantė, Ervinas, Kamilis, Tautvilas (Lithuania)
Arnulf, Ørnulf (Norway)
Arnold, Arnolf, Erwin, Erwina, Kamil, Karolina, Robert, Roberta, Szymon, Unisław, Wespazjan (Poland)
Anna (Russia)
Kamila (Slovakia)
Federico, Marina (Spain)
Fredrik, Fritz (Sweden)
Alfie, Alfred, Avery, Federica, Federico, Fred, Freda, Freddie, Freddy, Fréddy , Freed, Frederic, Frédéric, Frederich, Federik, Frederick, Frédérick, Frederico, Fredrick, Fredy (Universal)
Fred, Freda, Freddie, Freddy, Frederica, Frederick, Frederico, Fredrick, Fredy (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 199 of 2024; 166 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 2 of week 29 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Tinne (Holly) [Day 9 of 28]
Chinese: Month 6 (Ji-Wei), Day 1 (Ding-Chou)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 29 Tammuz 5783
Islamic: 29 Dhu al-Hijjah 1444
J Cal: 19 Lux; Fiveday [19 of 30]
Julian: 5 July 2023
Moon: 1%: Waxing Crescent
Positivist: 3 Dante (8th Month) [Rabelais]
Runic Half Month: Ur (Primal Strength) [Day 5 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 28 of 94)
Zodiac: Cancer (Day 28 of 31)
Calendar Changes
荷月 [Héyuè] (Chinese Lunisolar Calendar) [Month 6 of 13] (Lotus Month)
1 note · View note
brookstonalmanac · 10 months
Text
Holidays 7.18
Holidays
Anti-Bigot Day
Billy Joel Day (New York)
Chrysanthemum Day
Constitution Day (Uruguay)
Hug a Fat Bald Person Day
Insurance Nerd Day
International Laquita Marina Day
Jane Austen Day (Indiana)
Lollapalooza Day
Make A List of the People You Love Day
National Brenda Day
National Hamiltons Day
National Dapper Your Data Day
National Monica Day
National Mortgage Brokers Day
National Peyton Day
Nelson Mandela Day (a.k.a. Mandela Day; UN)
Perfect Family Day
Perfect 10 Day
President’s Day (Botswana)
Pyramids Day
718 Day (New York)
Shawm Day (French Republic)
Tony the Tiger Day
Weinermobile Day
World Listening Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
International Brewers Day
National Caviar Day
National Sour Candy Day
St. Anou, Bishop of Metz's Day (patron saint of brewers; a.k.a. St. Arnulf, Arnould, St. Arnold)
3rd Tuesday in July
National Children’s Book Day (Philippines) [3rd Tuesday]
Independence Days
Prsänëa (Declared; 2012) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Arnulf of Metz (Christian; Saint) [brewers] *
Bobby Henderson Day (Pastafarian)
Bruno of Segni (Christian; Saint)
Camillus de Lellis (optional memorial, U.S. only)
Eadburh (a.k.a. Edburga) of Bicester (Christian; Saint)
Eid-e-Ghadir (Iran)
Elizabeth Ferard (Church of England)
Feast of Saint Arnoldus (Belgium)
Feast of Teneu
Frederick of Utrecht (Christian; Saint)
Hyacinthe Rigaud (Artology)
Leroy (Muppetism)
Marina of Aguas Santas (Christian; Saint)
Maternus of Milan (Christian; Saint)
Nebet-Het (Birthday of Nephthys, Egyptian Goddess of Beer)
Nephthy’s Day (Pagan)
Odulph (Christian; Saint)
Pambo (Christian; Saint)
Philastrius (Christian; Saint)
Rabelais (Positivist; Saint)
Symphorosa (Christian; Saint)
Theneva (Christian; Saint)
Theodosia of Constantinople (Christian; Saint)
Thomas Morton Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Vitulatio (Feast to Vitulatio, Ancient Roman Goddess of Exultation, joy & life)
Water Pistol Day (Pastafarian)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Day of Bad Omens (Ancient Rome) [1 of 2]
Prime Number Day: 199 [46 of 72]
Shakku (赤口 Japan) [Bad luck all day, except at noon.]
Unfortunate Day (Pagan) [41 of 57]
Premieres
Aliens (Film; 1986)
Arachnophobia (Film; 1990)
Bad Boys II (Film; 2003)
Bosko’s Holiday (WB LT Cartoon; 1931)
Closer, by Joy Division (Album; 1980)
Consider the Oyster, by M.F.K. Fisher (Food Essays; 1941)
Davy Crockett and the River Pirates (Film; 1956)
The Dark Knight (Film; 2008)
Entourage (TV Series; 2004)
Eureka (TV Series; 2006)
Friends with Benefits (Film; 2011)
George of the Jungle (Film; 1997)
God Only Knows, by The Beach Boys (Song; 1966)
I Love to Sings (WB MM Cartoon; 1936)
Johnny English (Film; 2003)
Jurassic Park III (Film; 2001)
Mamma Mia! (Film; 2008)
Mrs. Brown (Film; 1997)
The Nun’s Story (Film; 1959)
Planes: Fire & Rescue (Animated Film; 2014)
Porco Rosso (Studio Ghibli Animated Film; 1992)
RWBY (Anime Series; 2013)
Sex Tape (Film; 2014)
Sketches of Spain, by Miles Davis (Album; 1960)
Tweet and Lovely (WB MM Cartoon; 1959)
UHF, by Weird Al Yankpvic (Soundtrack Album; 1989)
Used Cars (Film; 1980)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice, by The Beach Boys (Song; 1966)
Today’s Name Days
Answer, Arnold, Arnulf, Friedrich, Ulf (Austria)
Emil, Emilian (Bulgaria)
Bruno, Emilija, Frederik, Ljuba (Croatia)
Drahomíra (Czech Republic)
Arnolphus (Denmark)
Eerika, Erika (Estonia)
Riikka (Finland)
Frédéric (France)
Arnulf, Friedrich, Ulf (Germany)
Aimilianos, Emilianos (Greece)
Frigyes (Hungary)
Calogero, Giusta (Italy)
Rozālija, Roze, Rozīte (Latvia)
Eimantė, Ervinas, Kamilis, Tautvilas (Lithuania)
Arnulf, Ørnulf (Norway)
Arnold, Arnolf, Erwin, Erwina, Kamil, Karolina, Robert, Roberta, Szymon, Unisław, Wespazjan (Poland)
Anna (Russia)
Kamila (Slovakia)
Federico, Marina (Spain)
Fredrik, Fritz (Sweden)
Alfie, Alfred, Avery, Federica, Federico, Fred, Freda, Freddie, Freddy, Fréddy , Freed, Frederic, Frédéric, Frederich, Federik, Frederick, Frédérick, Frederico, Fredrick, Fredy (Universal)
Fred, Freda, Freddie, Freddy, Frederica, Frederick, Frederico, Fredrick, Fredy (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 199 of 2024; 166 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 2 of week 29 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Tinne (Holly) [Day 9 of 28]
Chinese: Month 6 (Ji-Wei), Day 1 (Ding-Chou)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 29 Tammuz 5783
Islamic: 29 Dhu al-Hijjah 1444
J Cal: 19 Lux; Fiveday [19 of 30]
Julian: 5 July 2023
Moon: 1%: Waxing Crescent
Positivist: 3 Dante (8th Month) [Rabelais]
Runic Half Month: Ur (Primal Strength) [Day 5 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 28 of 94)
Zodiac: Cancer (Day 28 of 31)
Calendar Changes
荷月 [Héyuè] (Chinese Lunisolar Calendar) [Month 6 of 13] (Lotus Month)
1 note · View note
vidoggytv-blog · 1 year
Text
Davy Crockett est-il un film Disney ?
Tumblr media
Davy Crockett , King of the Wild Frontier est un film d'aventure de 1955 produit par Walt Disney Productions. En conséquence, Davy Crockett est-il sur Disney plus? Davy Crockett est une série en cinq parties qui a été diffusée sur ABC de 1954 à 1955 dans des épisodes d'une heure, sur la série Disneyland. Walt Disney Home Video a sorti les deux films théâtraux sur DVD sous le nom de Davy Crocket - Two Movie Set, le 7 septembre 2004. Deuxièmement, qui était l'ennemi juré de Davy Crockett dans Davy Crockett and the River Pirates ? Se déroulant en 1810, la première moitié de l'histoire traite d'une course fluviale vers la Nouvelle-Orléans entre Davy (Fess Parker) et son ami Mike Fink (Jeff York). La question est également de savoir quand le film Davy Crockett a-t-il été réalisé ? 25 mai 1955 Que faisait Davy Crockett en 1955 ? Davy Crockett : King of the Wild Frontier ( 1955 ) Le pionnier américain Davy Crockett combat dans la guerre des Indiens de Creek, est élu au Congrès américain et se bat pour le Texas à l'Alamo. Disney plus aura-t-il tous les films Disney ?   Disney Plus est conçu pour être le seul endroit où vous pouvez diffuser tous les films de Disney sortis en salles , à commencer par Captain Marvel et Avengers : Endgame au lancement et le reste de sa liste 2019 plus tard.   Disney plus va-t-il avoir des amis ?   Disney offrira aux abonnés Disney +, Hulu (avec publicités) et ESPN + dans un forfait pour 12,99 $ par mois. HBO Max, qui comprend toutes les émissions HBO standard ainsi que plus de contenu de WarnerMedia comme "Big Bang Theory" et " Friends ", coûte 14,99 $ par mois, le même prix que HBO "régulier".   Y aura-t-il une troupe de goof sur Disney plus?   Ensuite, pour compléter sa bibliothèque, les utilisateurs peuvent se gaver de milliers d'heures d' émissions télévisées animées Disney comme " Goof Troop ". Pour les adultes qui apprécient l'animation en tant que forme d'art, presque tous les longs métrages d'animation Pixar et Disney les attendent sur Disney Plus .   Qu'est-ce que Disney plus aura?   Disney Plus comprend tout le contenu familial de Disney et une grande partie de son tarif grand public – en gros, tout ce qui est conçu pour un public jusqu'à une cote PG-13. Il a du contenu de Disney proprement dit, Marvel, Lucasfilm (donc, Star Wars), Pixar et National Geographic.   Quoi de neuf sur Disney+ ?   Tous les originaux de Disney Plus à venir en 2020 - La saison 2 de Mandalorian. - Wanda Vision. - Le faucon et le soldat de l'hiver. - Star Wars : La Guerre des Clones Saison 7. - Lizzie McGuire. - Muppets maintenant. - Le film Phineas & Ferb : Candace contre l'univers. - High School Musical : La comédie musicale : La série : Saison 2.   Comment obtenir Disney+ ?   Comment obtenir Disney+ - Votre première option consiste à acheter le pack Disney directement auprès de Disney. Le forfait est une bonne option pour ceux qui veulent également Hulu et ESPN +, mais des mises en garde s'appliquent. - La deuxième option est pour ceux qui ont déjà des abonnements Hulu et ESPN+.   Que dois-je regarder en premier sur Disney+ ?   Assurez-vous de faire correspondre vos réponses ci-dessous pour voir quelle émission vous devriez regarder en premier ! Vous voulez plus d'actualités Disney+ ? Cliquez ici pour rester à jour avec ce qui est en streaming ! Si vous avez répondu… - B) Je me détends à la maison. - D) Mickey Mouse. - A) Jouer à des jeux de société. - A) Glace. - B) Comédie—J'ai besoin d'un bon rire ! - A) Curieux. - C) Rouge. - A) Binger.   Quel était le vrai nom de Davy Crockett ?   David Croquet   Davy Crockett est-il une vraie personne ?   David Crockett (17 août 1786 - 6 mars 1836) était un héros populaire américain, pionnier, soldat et homme politique. Il est communément désigné dans la culture populaire par l'épithète "King of the Wild Frontier". Il a représenté le Tennessee à la Chambre des représentants des États-Unis et a servi pendant la Révolution du Texas.   Qui était le meilleur ami de Davy Crockett ?   George Russel   Comment Davy Crockett est-il réellement mort ?   Tué en action   Qui a joué la femme de Davy Crockett ?   Le 14 août 1806, après avoir été abandonné par sa première fiancée, Crockett épousa Mary (Polly) Finley. Le couple a eu trois enfants et a déménagé dans le comté de Franklin, dans le Tennessee, dans une ferme Crockett nommée "Kentuck". Après la mort de Polly en 1815, Crockett épousa la veuve Elizabeth Patton.   Qui a chanté Davy Crockett King of the Wild Frontier ?   Bill Hayes   Où est né Davy Crockett ?   Calcaire, Tennessee, États-Unis   Quand Davy Crockett s'est-il marié ?   1815 (Elisabeth Patton) 16 août 1806 (Polly Finley)   Qui est mort à l'Alamo ?   L'armée mexicaine de Santa Anna a tué la quasi-totalité des quelque 200 Texans (ou Texians) défendant l'Alamo, y compris leurs chefs, les colonels William B. Travis et James Bowie , et le légendaire pionnier Davy Crockett .   Qui a joué Mike Fink ?   Jeff York Read the full article
0 notes
farlydatau · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
Davy Crockett and The River Pirates T-Shirt
1 note · View note
disneybooklist · 6 months
Text
Davy Crocket and The River Pirates -1956
Tumblr media
David Crockett
Tumblr media
0 notes
everydisneymovie · 4 years
Text
Review #32: Davy Crockett And the River Pirates
Post #35
7/16/2020
Next up is 1956′s Davy Crockett And The River Pirates,
And technically the first sequel on this list!
Tumblr media
Enjoyment : [4]
I am not if sure how I feel about this movie. Parts of it are genuinely fun and it feels like the prototype for a lot of better movies down the line. Over and over, this movie threatens to be interesting, then retreats back into boring mush. It runs good plot points into the ground and glosses over potential character development in favor of overly silly gags. This movie is less grounded historical fiction and more ‘Live action looney tunes episode.’ In my notes I pointed out that this movie ‘This has more jokes that the first movie, but the same amount of laughs.”
Quality : [4]
This movie looks fine. There are a lot more practical effects to set up the visual humor, and they actually raced around on real enough looking boats. A lot of the stuns were impressive and there was some very good physical acting for the most part. The movie is flatly shot and while there are many different locations, those locations are mostly just rivers, caves and generic forests. Once again this is a movie was initially several TV episodes edited together for theatrical release. This damages the overall structure since they say heartfelt goodbyes to a certain character, only to have that same character to reappear moments later. You can almost feel the commercial breaks and that drags down the pacing.
Hold up : [3]
This movie is still very hostile towards Native Americans, but it is SLIGHTLY better than the first movie. In the last movie, Davy Crockett waxed poetically about the suffering of Natives, only to turn around and murder twenty of them without any visible remorse. In this movie, he is actively trying to help a tribe of Natives prove their innocence when they are framed for robbery. The Native Americans are still portrayed as ‘savages’ but there is tiny amount of effort put in to frame them as sympathetic. Once again the gross stench of ‘Manifest Destiny’ is soaked into the bones of this movie, but it is a much milder stink than the first movie. Davy is just trying to sell some furs this time, not participating in a genocide and I hate that this counts as progress for Disney.
Risk : [5]
I will give the movie this: It took a risk. Davy is less of a magical flawless mountain man this time around. He has a rival who challenges him and makes question his own skill. He is shown struggling against the mighty Mike Fink, and that builds tension. I mentioned that this movie was way more cartoony than the first movie, and while I didn’t personally like that choice, it DID give the movie more of an identity and I can respect that. I think the shift from gritty realism to slapstick comedy helped me buy into the tone of the movie more. I wasn’t watching historical revisionism, I was watching a wacky adventure down the river with some fun goofy guys. While the silly tone didn’t feel like an artistic decision, it DID end up with some positive results. Accidental risk still counts as a risk.
Extra Credit : [2]
I liked that the villains were shown to be using harmful myths about Native Americans for their own benefit. It ALMOST felt like commentary on how pioneers used ‘savage’ rumors to hide the violence they committed against Native Americans. It was almost clever.
Final thoughts:
This movie isn’t good, but darn it tries. The previous movie was a lot more somber, which fit since in that movie Davy deals with his wife’s death, and later his own. This movie is a fun wacky adventure, and it doesn’t try to be anything more. Did I enjoy this movie more? I think I did. There were more memorable gags, fights and character moments. There wasn’t really any notable increases in quality, but they were more memorable and thats about all I can give it. I actually really liked the character of Mike Fink, since he was a chaotic neutral to Davy’s chaotic good. Having an interplay between characters who force each other to grow is a million times more interesting than Davy just winning at everything forever with no obstacles like the first movie.
Total Score: 18/50 Previous Installment: 15/50
Is this movie better than the previous installment?: YES
<- First <- Previous 32 out of 431 Next ->
the list
12 notes · View notes
Link
This is a rarity, especially for Disney: a sequel that’s better than the first!  Mike Fink has to be seen to be believed.
0 notes
pulpsandcomics2 · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Four Color
#631 - Walt Disney’s Davy Crockett Indian Fighter      May  1955
#639 - Walt Disney’s Davy Crockett At The Alamo       July 1955
#664 Walt Disney’s Davy Crockett in the Great Keelboat Race   November 1955
#671 Walt Disney’s Davy Crockett and the River PIrates      December 1955
27 notes · View notes
flis-posts · 3 years
Text
List of Disney Films
From Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs to our latest box-office smashes, here’s a complete list of Disney films. Click here find out more about all things Disney-from A to Z.
1. 1937: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (G)
2. 1940: Pinocchio (G)
3. 1940: Fantasia (G)
4. 1941: The Reluctant Dragon
5. 1941: Dumbo (G)
6. 1942: Bambi (G)
7. 1943: Saludos Amigos
8. 1943: Victory Through Air Power
9. 1945: The Three Caballeros (G)
10. 1946: Make Mine Music
11. 1946: Song of the South (G)
12. 1947: Fun and Fancy Free
13. 1948: Melody Time
14. 1949: So Dear to My Heart (G)
15. 1949: The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad (G)
16. 1950: Cinderella (G)
17. 1950: Treasure Island (PG)
18. 1951: Alice in Wonderland (G)
19. 1952: The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men (PG)
20. 1953: Peter Pan (G)
21. 1953: The Sword and the Rose (PG)
22. 1953: The Living Desert
23. 1954: Rob Roy, the Highland Rogue
24. 1954: The Vanishing Prairie
25. 1954: 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (G)
26. 1955: Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier (PG)
27. 1955: Lady and the Tramp (G)
28. 1955: The African Lion
29. 1955: The Littlest Outlaw
30. 1956: The Great Locomotive Chase
31. 1956: Davy Crockett and the River Pirates
32. 1956: Secrets of Life
33. 1956: Westward Ho the Wagons!
34. 1957: Johnny Tremain
35. 1957: Perri (G)
36. 1957: Old Yeller (G)
37. 1958: The Light in the Forest
38. 1958: White Wilderness
39. 1958: Tonka
40. 1959: Sleeping Beauty (G)
41. 1959: The Shaggy Dog (G)
42. 1959: Darby O’Gill and the Little People (G)
43. 1959: Third Man on the Mountain (G)
44. 1960: Toby Tyler, or Ten Weeks with a Circus (G)
45. 1960: Kidnapped
46. 1960: Pollyanna (G)
47. 1960: The Sign of Zorro
48. 1960: Jungle Cat
49. 1960: Ten Who Dared
50. 1960: Swiss Family Robinson (G)
51. 1961: One Hundred and One Dalmatians (G)
52. 1961: The Absent-Minded Professor (G)
53. 1961: The Parent Trap
54. 1961: Nikki, Wild Dog of the North (G)
55. 1961: Greyfriars Bobby
56. 1961: Babes in Toyland
57. 1962: Moon Pilot
58. 1962: Bon Voyage
59. 1962: Big Red
60. 1962: Almost Angels
61. 1962: The Legend of Lobo (G)
62. 1962: In Search of the Castaways (G)
63. 1963: Son of Flubber (G)
64. 1963: Miracle of the White Stallions
65. 1963: Savage Sam
66. 1963: Summer Magic
67. 1963: The Incredible Journey (G)
68. 1963: The Sword in the Stone (G)
69. 1963: The Three Lives of Thomasina (PG)
70. 1964: The Misadventures of Merlin Jones (G)
71. 1964: A Tiger Walks
72. 1964: The Moon-Spinners (PG)
73. 1964: Mary Poppins (G)
74. 1964: Emil and the Detectives
75. 1965: Those Calloways (PG)
76. 1965: The Monkey’s Uncle
77. 1965: That Darn Cat! (G)
78. 1966: The Ugly Dachshund
79. 1966: Lt. Robin Crusoe U.S.N.(G)
80. 1966: The Fighting Prince of Donegal
81. 1966: Follow Me, Boys! (G)
82. 1967: Monkeys, Go Home!
83. 1967: The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin
84. 1967: The Happiest Millionaire (G)
85. 1967: The Gnome-Mobile (G)
86. 1967: The Jungle Book (G)
87. 1967: Charlie, The Lonesome Cougar
88. 1968: Blackbeard’s Ghost (G)
89. 1968: The One and Only, Genuine, Original Family Band
90. 1968: Never a Dull Moment (G)
91. 1968: The Horse in the Gray Flannel Suit
92. 1969: The Love Bug (G)
93. 1969: Smith!
94. 1969: Rascal
95. 1969: The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes
96. 1970: King of the Grizzlies (G)
97. 1970: The Boatniks (G)
98. 1970: The Aristocats (G)
99. 1971: The Wild Country (G)
100. 1971: The Barefoot Executive (G)
101. 1971: Scandalous John (G)
102. 1971: The $1,000,000 Duck (G)
103. 1971: Bedknobs and Broomsticks (G)
104. 1972: The Biscuit Eater (G)
105. 1972: Napoleon and Samantha (G)
106. 1972: Now You See Him, Now You Don’t (G)
107. 1972: Run, Cougar, Run (G)
108. 1972: Snowball Express (G)
109. 1973: The World’s Greatest Athlete (G)
110. 1973: Charley and the Angel (G)
111. 1973: One Little Indian (G)
112. 1973: Robin Hood (G)
113. 1973: Superdad (G)
114. 1974: Herbie Rides Again (G)
115. 1974: The Bears and I (G)
116. 1974: The Castaway Cowboy (G)
117. 1974: The Island at the Top of the World (G)
118. 1975: The Strongest Man in the World (G)
119. 1975: Escape to Witch Mountain (G)
120. 1975: The Apple Dumpling Gang (G)
121. 1975: One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing (G)
122. 1975: The Best of Walt Disney’s True-Life Adventures (G)
123. 1976: Ride a Wild Pony (G)
124. 1976: No Deposit, No Return (G)
125. 1976: Gus (G)
126. 1976: Treasure of Matecumbe (G)
127. 1976: The Shaggy D.A. (G)
128. 1977: Freaky Friday (G)
129. 1977: The Littlest Horse Thieves (G)
130. 1977: The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (G)
131. 1977: The Rescuers (G)
132. 1977: Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo (G)
133. 1977: Pete’s Dragon (G)
134. 1978: Candleshoe (G)
135. 1978: Return from Witch Mountain (G)
136. 1978: The Cat from Outer Space (G)
137. 1978: Hot Lead and Cold Feet (G)
138. 1979: The North Avenue Irregulars (G)
139. 1979: The Apple Dumpling Gang Rides Again (G)
140. 1979: Unidentified Flying Oddball (G)
141. 1979: The Black Hole (PG)
142. 1980: Midnight Madness (PG)
143. 1980: The Last Flight of Noah’s Ark (G)
144. 1980: Herbie Goes Bananas (G)
145. 1981: The Devil and Max Devlin (PG)
146. 1981: Amy (G)
147. 1981: The Fox and the Hound (G)
148. 1981: Condorman (PG)
149. 1981: The Watcher in the Woods (PG)
150. 1982: Night Crossing (PG)
151. 1982: Tron (PG)
152. 1982: Tex (PG)
153. 1983: Trenchcoat (PG)
154. 1983: Something Wicked This Way Comes (PG)
155. 1983: Never Cry Wolf (PG)
156. 1984: Splash (Touchstone) (PG)
157. 1984: Tiger Town (G)
158. 1984: Country (Touchstone) (PG)
159. 1985: Baby…Secret of the Lost Legend(Touchstone) (PG)
160. 1985: Return to Oz (PG)
161. 1985: The Black Cauldron (PG)
162. 1985: My Science Project (Touchstone) (PG)
163. 1985: The Journey of Natty Gann (PG)
164. 1985: One Magic Christmas (G)
165. 1986: Down and Out in Beverly Hills (Touchstone) (R)
166. 1886: Off Beat (Touchstone) (R)
167. 1986: Ruthless People (Touchstone) (R)
168. 1986: The Great Mouse Detective (G)
169. 1986: Flight of the Navigator (PG)
170. 1986: Tough Guys (Touchstone) (PG)
171. 1986: The Color of Money (Touchstone) (R)
172. 1987: Outrageous Fortune (Touchstone) (R)
173. 1987: Tin Men (Touchstone) (R)
174. 1987: Ernest Goes to Camp (Touchstone) (PG)
175. 1987: Benji the Hunted (G)
176. 1987: Adventures in Babysitting (Touchstone) (PG-13)
177. 1987: Stakeout (Touchstone) (R)
178. 1987: Can’t Buy Me Love (Touchstone) (PG-13)
179. 1987: Hello Again (Touchstone) (PG)
180. 1987: Three Men and a Baby (Touchstone) (PG)
181. 1987: Good Morning, Vietnam (Touchstone) (R)
182. 1988: Shoot to Kill (Touchstone) (R)
183. 1988: D.O.A. (Touchstone) (R)
184. 1988: Return to Snowy River (PG)
185. 1988: Big Business (Touchstone) (PG)
186. 1988: Who Framed Roger Rabbit (Touchstone) (PG)
187. 1988: Cocktail (Touchstone) (R)
188. 1988: The Rescue (Touchstone) (PG)
189. 1988: Heartbreak Hotel (Touchstone) (PG-13)
190. 1988: The Good Mother (Touchstone) (R)
191. 1988: Ernest Saves Christmas (Touchstone) (PG)
192. 1988: Oliver & Company (G)
193. 1988: Beaches (Touchstone) (PG-13)
194. 1989: Three Fugitives (Touchstone) (PG-13)
195. 1989: New York Stories (Touchstone) (PG)
196. 1989: Disorganized Crime (Touchstone) (R)
197. 1989: Dead Poets Society (Touchstone) (PG)
198. 1989: Honey, I Shrunk the Kids (PG)
199. 1989: Turner & Hooch (Touchstone) (PG)
200. 1989: Cheetah (G)
201. 1989: An Innocent Man (Touchstone) (R)
202. 1989: Gross Anatomy (Touchstone) (PG-13)
203. 1989: The Little Mermaid (G)
204. 1989: Blaze (Touchstone) (R)
205. 1990: Stella (Touchstone) (PG-13)
206. 1990: Where the Heart Is (Touchstone) (R)
207. 1990: Pretty Woman (Touchstone) (R)
208. 1990: Ernest Goes to Jail (Touchstone) (PG)
209. 1990: Spaced Invaders (Touchstone) (PG)
210. 1990: Fire Birds (Touchstone) (PG-13)
211. 1990: Dick Tracy (Touchstone) (PG)
212. 1990: Betsy’s Wedding (Touchstone) (R)
213. 1990: Arachnophobia (Hollywood Pictures) (PG-13)
214. 1990: Ducktales: the Movie, Treasure of the Lost Lamp (Disney Movietoons) (G)
215. 1990: Taking Care of Business (Hollywood Pictures) (R)
216. 1990: Mr. Destiny (Touchstone) (PG-13)
217. 1990: The Rescuers Down Under (G)
218. 1990: Three Men and a Little Lady (Touchstone) (PG)
219. 1990: Green Card (Touchstone) (PG-13)
220. 1991: White Fang (PG)
221. 1991: Run (Hollywood Pictures) (R)
222. 1991: Scenes from a Mall (Touchstone) (R)
223. 1991: Shipwrecked (PG)
224. 1991: The Marrying Man (Hollywood Pictures) (R)
225. 1991: Oscar (Touchstone) (PG)
226. 1991: One Good Cop (Hollywood Pictures) (R)
227. 1991: What About Bob? (Touchstone) (PG)
228. 1991: Wild Hearts Can’t Be Broken (G)
229. 1991: The Rocketeer (PG)
230. 1991: The Doctor (Touchstone) (PG-13)
231. 1991: V. I. Warshawski (Hollywood Pictures) (R)
232. 1991: True Identity (Touchstone) (R)
233. 1991: Paradise (Touchstone) (PG-13)
234. 1991: Deceived (Touchstone) (PG-13)
235. 1991: Ernest Scared Stupid (Touchstone) (PG)
236. 1991: Billy Bathgate (Touchstone) (R)
237. 1991: Beauty and the Beast (G)
238. 1991: Father of the Bride (Touchstone) (PG)
239. 1992: The Hand That Rocks the Cradle (Hollywood Pictures) (R)
240. 1992: Medicine Man (Hollywood Pictures) (PG-13)
241. 1992: Blame It On The Bellboy (Hollywood Pictures) (PG-13)
242. 1992: Noises Off (Touchstone) (PG-13)
17 notes · View notes