Pasta67 wrote:"If you look to your left, you should see the sequel to this movie on the shelf as well. Please buy that while you're at it."

Escapay
Pasta67 wrote:"If you look to your left, you should see the sequel to this movie on the shelf as well. Please buy that while you're at it."
I actually hope it looks nothing like this. The VHS cover and the DVD cover have both looked like this. I would prefer if Disney would do something new with these characters, like they did for Bambi. Give us a taste of something new that we like but still gives us that classic feel.Pasta67 wrote:I hoping it's some variation of this image, which it probably will be if that ad is anything to go by.
but the voices fit the characters perfectly so that makes up for itLazario wrote:the animal voices - Mickey Rooney playing a 'teenage' character... Considering that his biggest movie role following this was as a loony, sadistic, psycho-killer Santa Claus- I don't think so. Then Kurt Russell as teenage Copper... again, what? I could buy him in John Carpenter's The Thing for 37 years old, but this is just plain lunacy. Sandy Duncan as Vixey? Again with Disney - right sentiment, wrong actors, wrong ages - wrong wrong wrong.
I'm assuming he's in the early 70's. Considering the fact that he was also in the animated film, "The Care Bears Movie", about 4 years later. He was voiced as a trained magician, telling stories to children about Care-A-Lot and the Care Bears.anger is pointless wrote:i wonder how old micky rooney was when he played teen tod
No, they didn't. That's my point. Only the supporting characters were cast appropriately - especially the Widow, Amos, Chief, the birds, and Big Mama Owl. But like I'm saying, supporting characters can't make up for embarassingly-off cast and voiced main characters. For a movie with such bad songs and an underwhelming score, it's not appropriate that Kurt Russell's Copper is far too intense, Sandy Duncan's Vixey is so motherly that she forgets what character she was cast as and thinks she's Big Mama, and Mickey Rooney's Tod is so slow and confused-speaking, that he's practically senile! So no, I'm afraid these voices absolutely did not fit the characters perfectly, well, or otherwise.anger is pointless wrote:but the voices fit the characters perfectly so that makes up for it
I don't think that the aspect ratio was the correct one on the Gold Collection DVD. I'm pretty sure, but I might be wrong.PatrickvD wrote:wasn't there some mystery surrounding the movie's OAR? what's the correct one and what's the aspect ratio on the Gold Collection disc? My region 2 NL disc is foolscreen..
I don't think the old DVD is open matte, because if you crop it to 16:9 it seems to be missing too much of the animation on top and bottom, unlike the 60's & 70's animated films, which can be watched perfectly within the 16:9 frame.Escapay wrote:Haven't watched my copy of F&H in awhile, but I remember the review here addresses the aspect ratio issue as well, and sums up that it is possible that the picture is open-matte.