101 Dalmatians (Limited Issue)
Walt Disney Video
| List Price: |
$34.99 |
| Amazon Price: |
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| Lowest New Price: |
$14.00 |
| Lowest Used Price: |
$6.69 |
| Total New: |
20 |
| Total Used: |
33 |
DVD Details:
- Starring: Rod Taylor, Betty Lou Gerson, Cate Bauer, Lisa Daniels, Ben Wright
- Director: Clyde Geronimi, Hamilton Luske, Wolfgang Reitherman
- Format: Animated, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, THX, NTSC
- Rated: G (General Audience)
- Studio: Walt Disney Video
- Theatrical Release Date: Nov 21, 1961
- DVD Release Date: Nov 09, 1999
- Run Time: 79 minutes
- ASIN: B00001QEE3
- UPC: 717951003973
- Sales Rank: 28297
Editorial Review from Amazon.com:
Back in 1961, Walt Disney got a little hip with I101 Dalmatians/I, making use of that flat Saturday morning cartoon style that had become so popular. The result is a kitschy change in animation and story. Pongo and Perdita are two lonely dalmatians who meet cute in a London park and arrange for their pet humans to marry so they can live together and raise a family. They become proud parents of 15 pups, who are stolen by the dastardly Cruella De Vil, who wants to make a fur coat out of them. Cruella has become the most popular villain in all of Disney; she's flamboyantly nasty and lots of fun. But it's the dalmatians who shine in this endearing classic, particularly those precocious pups. Telling the story from the dogs' point of view is a clever conceit, a fundamental flaw of the live-action remake. I--Bill Desowitz/I
Amazon Customer Reviews:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
    One Hundred and One Dalmatians, 2008-11-19
Walt Disney's "One Hundred and One Dalmatians" is one of the best loved family films of all time, however, when lined up against greats like "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" and "Pinocchio", it is easy to see its shortcomings. Standing alone, it is a highly entertaining adventure that can be enjoyed by anyone and if released today, I believe it would create the same sensation it caused when it premiered in 1961.
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br /The story revolves around two Dalmatians, Pongo and Perdita, and their owners, Roger and Anita, who occupy a modest flat in urban London. Not long after Perdita gives birth to a litter of fifteen puppies, they are abducted by the evil Cruella De Vil, an old schoolmate of Anita's who lusts for a coat made of Dalmatian puppy fur. While the humans mourn, Pongo and Perdita utilize the "Twilight Bark", a canine gossip chain, which leads them to Hell Hall, a deteriorating manor house in the English countryside where the puppies, along with eighty four others are being held captive by Cruella's bumbling assistants, Horace and Jasper. In order to save their children, Pongo and Perdita must seek help from an assortment of neighboring animal friends including Colonel, a sputtering Old Enlglish Sheepdog and a brave cat named Mr. Tibbs, but as time runs out and Cruella's suspisions intensify, the fate of the puppies grows more and more uncertain.
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br /While this all sounds very thrilling, at times the story can be quite dull and uneventful. The entire first act drones along like an infomercial for Prozac and the animation, especially the scenes in Roger and Anita's flat, looks bland and too two-dimensional.
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br /It isn't until the arrival of Cruella De Vil that the plot truly begins to boil. She is the saving grace of the picture and quite frankly, the sole reason to see it. With Betty Lou Gerson's smokey vocal stylings and animator Marc Davis's graceful hand and observant eye, they create one of the great screen villainesses of all time. It is much more than a performance - it is life on the screen.
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