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Goofy movie childhood nostalgia
Goofy movie childhood nostalgia








  1. Goofy movie childhood nostalgia movie#
  2. Goofy movie childhood nostalgia series#
  3. Goofy movie childhood nostalgia tv#

If you saw the very underrated The Rescuers Down Under in theaters in 1990 (as I did, at the Crossroads Mall in San Antonio, Texas), you got an extra treat: this lushly animated adaptation of Mark Twain's The Prince and the Pauper, starring Mickey as the title character(s), alongside Donald, Goofy, et al.

Goofy movie childhood nostalgia movie#

(The boy returns from his maiden voyage and many years have passed, although he looks the same age.) Grease filmmaker Randal Kleiser, who appears elsewhere on this list (don't you worry), is keenly aware that centering the film around the kid and his obviously complicated emotions is the only way to ground a film that can get very far-out, resulting in a movie much better, and more rousing (that Alan Silvestri score!), than you remember.

goofy movie childhood nostalgia

You might only remember snippets of the movie, but they're probably pretty vivid - the voice of the spaceship laughing like Pee-Wee Herman (since he's voiced by Paul Reubens, who would voice a similar character a year later for Star Tours), a cuddly but still sort of creepy alien creatures (wonderfully puppeteered), and lots of talk about time travel. This movie is certifiably nuts, a kind of reverse E.T.that finds a young boy ( Joey Cramer) abducted by a spacecraft near his Florida home and traveling across the cosmos. Part of why you'll only half-remember Flight of the Navigatoris because it already has a dreamlike quality to it, a c an-this-really-be-true sensibility.

goofy movie childhood nostalgia

It might not be as hip to enjoy as DuckTales or Darkwing Duck, but Adventures of the Gummi Bears has just as much ambition and artistic merit as those other shows. Watching even a few episodes, especially in those early seasons, you can tell he succeeded in this goal. He reportedly wanted to bring feature-quality animation to television and was inspired (and this is true) by his son's love of Haribo gummy bears.

Goofy movie childhood nostalgia series#

This was the first fully Disney animated series under the Michael Eisner regime. The historical importance of Adventures of the Gummi Bears cannot be overstated, by the way.

Goofy movie childhood nostalgia tv#

Not to the vaguely medieval setting of the show, but to the late 1980s or early 1990s, sitting in front of the TV after school with a half-eaten bag of Cool Ranch Doritos. Just put on an episode, by the second verse of the iconic theme music (written by Michael and Patty Silversher, who also did the theme song for TaleSpin and contributed to a number of the Disney Afternoon shows), you'll be transported back in time. Adventures of the Gummi Bears lasted for six seasons and ran a whopping 65 episodes. So you'd probably assume that the show, a high fantasy adventure about a young boy and a band of bouncing anthropomorphic bears, was some flash in the pan, lasting for a few seasons and quietly sputtering out. When new merchandise is released based off of the beloved Disney Afternoon cartoon series, Adventures of the Gummi Bears rarely makes the cut. If you want a straight line to not only nostalgic feels but also holiday cheer, then fire Mickey's Christmas Carol up and get ready for your jaw to hit the floor. Joining him on the animation were a cavalcade of Disney all-stars, including (but not limited to) Mark Henn, Glen Keane, Dale Baer, Randy Cartwright and future Pixar head honcho John Lasseter. This was largely to do with the fact that Walt Disney Feature Animation, in the early 1980's, didn't have much to do, which is why a seemingly insignificant project like this one (with your favorite Disney characters "playing" parts in the Charles Dickens-derived story) was overseen by Disney Legend Burny Mattinson (who came back to work on the similar "The Prince and the Pauper" a few years later), who co-wrote, produced and directed.

goofy movie childhood nostalgia

Originally attached to the theatrical exhibition of The Rescuers in 1983 but with arguably a longer shelf life than that movie thanks to the many seasonal broadcasts and home video releases, Mickey's Christmas Carol is, hands down, the most gorgeously animated Christmas short you're ever going to see. There are, admittedly, a ton of great Disney Christmas movies on Disney+ (spoiler alert: Noelle is not one of them) but few can give you the kind of hallucinogenic flashbacks that watching just a few seconds of Mickey's Christmas Carol will provide.










Goofy movie childhood nostalgia