Product Description
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To commemorate the 35th anniversary of an original classic,
Disney proudly presents a special 2-movie collection featuring
all-time family favorites, THE RESCUERS and THE RESCUERS DOWN
UNDER. Join two of the world's bravest mice -- Bernard and Bianca
-- as they set out on two thrilling rescue missions full of comic
adventure while soaring through the Devil's Bayou and flying sky
high in the Australian outback. Buckle up for the ride of your
life as these tiny heroes with great big hearts outrun and outwit
their rivals to save the day. Brimming with lovable characters
and unforgettable music, this 2-movie collection is high-flying
fun for the entire family!|The Rescue Aid Society, an
international organization of mice with headquarters in the
basement of the United Nations building, receives a plea for help
from a little orphan girl named Penny who has been kipped by
an evil woman, Madame Medusa. Medusa intends to use her to
retrieve a fabulous diamond, the Devil's Eye, from a pirate cave.
The case is taken by lovely Bianca and Rescue Aid Society
custodian Bernard, who becomes her shy assistant. Together, after
avoiding two brutish alligators, enlisting the help of the local
swamp folk, and turning Medusa and her henchman Snoops against
themselves, they rescue Penny and the diamond.|A Mickey Mouse
watch can be seen on the wall of the Rescue Aid Society, the
international organization of mice headquartered in the basement
of New York City's United Nations.|The film was four years in the
making with the combined talents of 250 people, including 40
animators who produced approximately 330,000 drawings; there were
14 sequences with 1,039 separate scenes and 750 backgrounds.|The
film was one of the last Disney classics to be animated by
members of Walt Disney's "nine old men," the affectionate
nickname he gave his top artists at the time.|Animation
historian/critic John Culhane was the role model for the
character Mr. Snoops. According to Culhane, he was visiting the
Disney lot when he noticed the animators taking a more-than-usual
interest in him!
.com
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After Walt Disney's death in 1966 and the release of The Jungle
Book (1967), his studio seemed to be walking, producing
films that were beautifully animated but lacked compelling
stories. The Rescuers (1977) was a welcome bright spot. The first
collaboration between the animators who had been working for
Disney since the days of Snow White and a cadre of young artists,
the film displays an energy and a charm that had been sorely
missing for nearly a decade. Based on a series of children's
books by Margery Sharp, The Rescuers sends the intrepid mouse
Miss Bianca and her reluctant companion Bernard to the rescue of
the orphan girl Penny. Among the highlights of the film are Ollie
Johnston's animation of Rufus, an aged cat who was essentially a
self-caricature, and Milt Kahl's wonderfully flamboyant
villainess, Madame Medusa. More than three decades after its
release, it's still easy to see why The Rescuers scored a hit
with audiences and critics, outdrawing Star Wars in France and
Germany. The Rescuers Down Under (1990) is the forgotten film of
the Disney renaissance of the '80s and '90s. The first sequel in
the studio's history and the first non-musical since Victory
Through Air Power in 1943, Down Under brought back Eva Gabor and
Bob Newhart as the voices of Bianca and Bernard. The dauntless
agents of the mouse Rescue Aid Society go to Australia to help
Cody, a boy who's been kipped while trying to save a giant
eagle from a wildlife poacher. The film includes some thrilling
aerial sequences of Cody and the eagle, inspired by the work of
Hayao Miyazaki. But Cody isn't a terribly interesting character
and much of the story feels by-the-numbers. Although The Rescuers
Down Under was eclipsed by The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the
Beast, which came before and after it, no fan of Disney animation
will want to miss this delightful double bill. The color on the
Blu-ray transfer is somewhat oversaturated, especially on the
older film, so technically minded viewers will want to adjust
their TVs accordingly. (Rated G: cartoon violence, some y
situations, alcohol use) --Charles Solomon