Fake Disney Animated Classics
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TheValentineBros
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Fake Disney Animated Classics
You can name the fake Disney Animated movies. Rules that you need the name & the year date for it.

- singerguy04
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I'm not really sure what you're asking for?
Do you want films that everyone thinks are disney but aren't (Anastasia, Prince of Egypt, or Ferngully for example), or are you wanting cheap knock-offs (like the smaller animation companies that come out with similar titles), or are you wanting Disney films that aren't classics (like the Wild or Valiant)?
Do you want films that everyone thinks are disney but aren't (Anastasia, Prince of Egypt, or Ferngully for example), or are you wanting cheap knock-offs (like the smaller animation companies that come out with similar titles), or are you wanting Disney films that aren't classics (like the Wild or Valiant)?
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TheValentineBros
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No, just animated Disney classics on the list.singerguy04 wrote:I'm not really sure what you're asking for?
Do you want films that everyone thinks are disney but aren't (Anastasia, Prince of Egypt, or Ferngully for example), or are you wanting cheap knock-offs (like the smaller animation companies that come out with similar titles), or are you wanting Disney films that aren't classics (like the Wild or Valiant)?

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Lars Vermundsberget
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- SpringHeelJack
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I'm soooooooo confused.
Do you mean like films that are canon but not "classic" because they aren;t the same level of quality as other ones? Because if so, we could debate which ones are the apex and which are the dregs for a loooooooooong time. And I think we have.
Do you mean like films that are canon but not "classic" because they aren;t the same level of quality as other ones? Because if so, we could debate which ones are the apex and which are the dregs for a loooooooooong time. And I think we have.
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- reyquila
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WDW Trips: 1992,1997,2005,2006, 2007, 2008, 2009-10 (Disney's Port Orleans-Riverside), 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2018 and 2022.
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Disneyland Trips: 2008 (Disneyland Hotel) and 2016
Disney Cruises: 2007, 2010 (Wonder) and 2012 (Dream).
My Disney Movies http://connect.collectorz.com/users/peluche/movies/view
- Kram Nebuer
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Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001)
OR
Anastasia (1997)
OR
The Secret of Mulan (1998)
Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001)
OR
Anastasia (1997)
OR
The Secret of Mulan (1998)
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TheValentineBros
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You know, examples:
Carnival Rats (1952)
South Panthers (1957)
The Hobbit (1960)
Tlurops Bear (1965)
Tales of Panda, Bird & Mouse (1972)
Cat Fly (1974)
Doghouse Rock (1976)
All Disney Villains Ruin Jiminy Cricket & Friends (1983)
The Big House of Den & Dan (1986)
Cat Fly 2: The Grand Canyon's Cliffhanger (1987)
Dudes & Gals (1987)
A Utah Journey (1990)
Rhino's Dance (1993)
Turkey Week (2000)
Dr. Seuss' Wocket in My Pocket (2005)
Little Red Riding Hood (2006)
Stunt Rally (2008)
Spark (2010)
Super Mario Bros. (2011)
The Rabbi (2012)
Carnival Rats (1952)
South Panthers (1957)
The Hobbit (1960)
Tlurops Bear (1965)
Tales of Panda, Bird & Mouse (1972)
Cat Fly (1974)
Doghouse Rock (1976)
All Disney Villains Ruin Jiminy Cricket & Friends (1983)
The Big House of Den & Dan (1986)
Cat Fly 2: The Grand Canyon's Cliffhanger (1987)
Dudes & Gals (1987)
A Utah Journey (1990)
Rhino's Dance (1993)
Turkey Week (2000)
Dr. Seuss' Wocket in My Pocket (2005)
Little Red Riding Hood (2006)
Stunt Rally (2008)
Spark (2010)
Super Mario Bros. (2011)
The Rabbi (2012)

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TheValentineBros
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TheValentineBros
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dvdjunkie
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This has to be a very BOGUS posting. Where did you come up with those titles. They aren't even feature films released to theaters, and best as I can figure out are not even Disney.
And Kram, you listed titles that weren't even Disney to begin with. According to what they are asking, they want titles from the list of WDC that aren't really Disney classics.
This is a very bogus post, and very confusing, even to an old fart like me.

And Kram, you listed titles that weren't even Disney to begin with. According to what they are asking, they want titles from the list of WDC that aren't really Disney classics.
This is a very bogus post, and very confusing, even to an old fart like me.
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TheValentineBros
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Don't say that when I know. I'm not that stupid. You don't get it thoguh. You can make up. Do NOT ever post something with the fact that I know this.dvdjunkie wrote:This has to be a very BOGUS posting. Where did you come up with those titles. They aren't even feature films released to theaters, and best as I can figure out are not even Disney.
And Kram, you listed titles that weren't even Disney to begin with. According to what they are asking, they want titles from the list of WDC that aren't really Disney classics.
This is a very bogus post, and very confusing, even to an old fart like me.

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Wonderlicious
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I think that TheValentineBros wants us to believe that there were many more Disney animated classics released throughout the years, and we've got to list them. If that's what you mean, here's some of the ones that I found existed when I went through the Disney vaults:
The Most Incredible Thing (1957)
A fairy-tale about a young man who wins the heart of a princess thanks to a magic clock. The Hans Christian Andersen original is pretty obscure, and that most likely contributed to the obscurity of Disney's version.
Gulliver's Travels (1965)
Lemmuel Gulliver (voiced by Dick Van Dyke) gets washed up on an island called Lilliput after the ship that he was on sinks, to find that the human residents are in fact little people! On his desperate journey home, he finds himself stranded in countless other unusual lands, including a land of kindly giants and a land where humans act like beasts and beasts act like humans. The fact that a highly stereotypical Japan was one of the lands that Gulliver visited caused great controversy, and the Disney studio were forced to withdraw the film after four days in release, and have since never rereleased it. It is often thought to have been destroyed.
The Magic Finger (1975)
Adaptation of Roald Dahl's amusing story about an anti-hunting girl who uses the magic pointing power of one of her fingers to switch her hunter neighbours' lives with those of the ducks who they want to hunt. However, due to the controversial connotations with the title, it was kept from wide release and re-edited (with new footage) into 1976's No Deposit, No Return.
The Story of Rapunzel (1983)
Musical version of the classic fairy-tale, in which a girl named Rapunzel (naturally, considering the title of the story) with long golden hair is locked in a tower by her witch foster-mother, only for the handsome Prince Christopher to come and rescue her. Regarded by many of the animators at the time to be a possible way to rescue Disney from bankruptcy, the executives felt that it was too childish, unlike the potential blockbuster The Black Cauldron, so they had it, along with all the artwork, scripts and music burned after a two week engagement at a small town picture house in Nebraska. It will be remade by Glen Keane, who animated the Witch and Rapunzel's pet fawn Rea in the original film.
The Naughty Husband (1987)
In order to appease the animators who had worked in vain on The Story of Rapunzel, the executives gave them a fairy-tale that they felt would speak to a modern audience. Based upon Charles Perrault's tale Bluebeard, The Naughty Husband told the story of Count Bluebeard and how he murdered all his wives, yet was foiled by his latest wife Jeanette and her liberal-thinking family and pets. Disney animation's first slasher horror film, it was completed in quick time, with it going past the point of no return before Eisner came in. Eisner, Wells and Katzenberg not knowing what to do with it, released it under the Touchstone banner, where it flopped.
The Wizard of Oz (1993)
Dorothy is swept far away from home by a tornado, and finds herself in a magic land east of the sun and west of the moon, where scarecrows and lions talk and shoes can be used to wish upon. Disney had made various new fairy-tale films in the early 90s, and it was feared that the novelty would wear off considering that three had already been made. So, The Wizard of Oz was shown only at the Cannes Festival (for one screening), whilst the Disney summer release in the US was changed to a re-release of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.
The Wild (2006)
Is it an animated classic or is it not?
The Most Incredible Thing (1957)
A fairy-tale about a young man who wins the heart of a princess thanks to a magic clock. The Hans Christian Andersen original is pretty obscure, and that most likely contributed to the obscurity of Disney's version.
Gulliver's Travels (1965)
Lemmuel Gulliver (voiced by Dick Van Dyke) gets washed up on an island called Lilliput after the ship that he was on sinks, to find that the human residents are in fact little people! On his desperate journey home, he finds himself stranded in countless other unusual lands, including a land of kindly giants and a land where humans act like beasts and beasts act like humans. The fact that a highly stereotypical Japan was one of the lands that Gulliver visited caused great controversy, and the Disney studio were forced to withdraw the film after four days in release, and have since never rereleased it. It is often thought to have been destroyed.
The Magic Finger (1975)
Adaptation of Roald Dahl's amusing story about an anti-hunting girl who uses the magic pointing power of one of her fingers to switch her hunter neighbours' lives with those of the ducks who they want to hunt. However, due to the controversial connotations with the title, it was kept from wide release and re-edited (with new footage) into 1976's No Deposit, No Return.
The Story of Rapunzel (1983)
Musical version of the classic fairy-tale, in which a girl named Rapunzel (naturally, considering the title of the story) with long golden hair is locked in a tower by her witch foster-mother, only for the handsome Prince Christopher to come and rescue her. Regarded by many of the animators at the time to be a possible way to rescue Disney from bankruptcy, the executives felt that it was too childish, unlike the potential blockbuster The Black Cauldron, so they had it, along with all the artwork, scripts and music burned after a two week engagement at a small town picture house in Nebraska. It will be remade by Glen Keane, who animated the Witch and Rapunzel's pet fawn Rea in the original film.
The Naughty Husband (1987)
In order to appease the animators who had worked in vain on The Story of Rapunzel, the executives gave them a fairy-tale that they felt would speak to a modern audience. Based upon Charles Perrault's tale Bluebeard, The Naughty Husband told the story of Count Bluebeard and how he murdered all his wives, yet was foiled by his latest wife Jeanette and her liberal-thinking family and pets. Disney animation's first slasher horror film, it was completed in quick time, with it going past the point of no return before Eisner came in. Eisner, Wells and Katzenberg not knowing what to do with it, released it under the Touchstone banner, where it flopped.
The Wizard of Oz (1993)
Dorothy is swept far away from home by a tornado, and finds herself in a magic land east of the sun and west of the moon, where scarecrows and lions talk and shoes can be used to wish upon. Disney had made various new fairy-tale films in the early 90s, and it was feared that the novelty would wear off considering that three had already been made. So, The Wizard of Oz was shown only at the Cannes Festival (for one screening), whilst the Disney summer release in the US was changed to a re-release of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.
The Wild (2006)
Is it an animated classic or is it not?
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TheValentineBros
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Bingo. That's what I wanted.Wonderlicious wrote:I think that TheValentineBros wants us to believe that there were many more Disney animated classics released throughout the years, and we've got to list them. If that's what you mean, here's some of the ones that I found existed when I went through the Disney vaults:
The Most Incredible Thing (1957)
A fairy-tale about a young man who wins the heart of a princess thanks to a magic clock. The Hans Christian Andersen original is pretty obscure, and that most likely contributed to the obscurity of Disney's version.
Gulliver's Travels (1965)
Lemmuel Gulliver (voiced by Dick Van Dyke) gets washed up on an island called Lilliput after the ship that he was on sinks, to find that the human residents are in fact little people! On his desperate journey home, he finds himself stranded in countless other unusual lands, including a land of kindly giants and a land where humans act like beasts and beasts act like humans. The fact that a highly stereotypical Japan was one of the lands that Gulliver visited caused great controversy, and the Disney studio were forced to withdraw the film after four days in release, and have since never rereleased it. It is often thought to have been destroyed.
The Magic Finger (1975)
Adaptation of Roald Dahl's amusing story about an anti-hunting girl who uses the magic pointing power of one of her fingers to switch her hunter neighbours' lives with those of the ducks who they want to hunt. However, due to the controversial connotations with the title, it was kept from wide release and re-edited (with new footage) into 1976's No Deposit, No Return.
The Story of Rapunzel (1983)
Musical version of the classic fairy-tale, in which a girl named Rapunzel (naturally, considering the title of the story) with long golden hair is locked in a tower by her witch foster-mother, only for the handsome Prince Christopher to come and rescue her. Regarded by many of the animators at the time to be a possible way to rescue Disney from bankruptcy, the executives felt that it was too childish, unlike the potential blockbuster The Black Cauldron, so they had it, along with all the artwork, scripts and music burned after a two week engagement at a small town picture house in Nebraska. It will be remade by Glen Keane, who animated the Witch and Rapunzel's pet fawn Rea in the original film.
The Naughty Husband (1987)
In order to appease the animators who had worked in vain on The Story of Rapunzel, the executives gave them a fairy-tale that they felt would speak to a modern audience. Based upon Charles Perrault's tale Bluebeard, The Naughty Husband told the story of Count Bluebeard and how he murdered all his wives, yet was foiled by his latest wife Jeanette and her liberal-thinking family and pets. Disney animation's first slasher horror film, it was completed in quick time, with it going past the point of no return before Eisner came in. Eisner, Wells and Katzenberg not knowing what to do with it, released it under the Touchstone banner, where it flopped.
The Wizard of Oz (1993)
Dorothy is swept far away from home by a tornado, and finds herself in a magic land east of the sun and west of the moon, where scarecrows and lions talk and shoes can be used to wish upon. Disney had made various new fairy-tale films in the early 90s, and it was feared that the novelty would wear off considering that three had already been made. So, The Wizard of Oz was shown only at the Cannes Festival (for one screening), whilst the Disney summer release in the US was changed to a re-release of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.
The Wild (2006)
Is it an animated classic or is it not?







