---
product_id: 4679221
title: "Pinocchio (Two-Disc 70th Anniversary Platinum Edition)"
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reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.co.uk/products/4679221-pinocchio-two-disc-70th-anniversary-platinum-edition
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region: United Kingdom
---

# Pinocchio (Two-Disc 70th Anniversary Platinum Edition)

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## Description

This Disney masterpiece from 1940 will hold up forever precisely because it doesn't restrain or temper the most elementalemotions and themes germane to its story. Based on the Collodi tale about a wooden puppet who wants to become a real boy, Pinocchio is among the most magical, mythical, and frightening films to come from the studio in its long history. A number of scenes make permanent impressions on young minds (just ask Steven Spielberg, who quoted the film more than once in Close Encounters of the Third Kind ), and the songs ("When You Wish upon a Star") can't be beat. --Tom Keogh Stills from Pinocchio (click for larger image) Product Description Celebrate the 70th anniversary of Walt Disney's Pinocchio. The legendary masterpiece that inspired millions to believe in their dreams has reawakened with an all new, state of the art digital restoration that shines brilliantly on 2-disc DVD. Now, for the first time ever, the richly detailed animation, unforgettable award winning music When You Wish Upon A Star and heartwarming adventure filled story comes to life like never before. Plus, all-new dazzling bonus features transport you into Pinocchio's fantastic world! Join Geppetto's beloved puppet with Jiminy Cricket as his guide on a thrilling quest that tests Pinocchio's bravery, loyalty and honesty, virtues he must learn to become a real boy. The one and only Pinocchio will live on forever in the heart of anyone who has wished upon a star. Bonus Features include: Pinocchio Knows Trivia Challenge, All New Making Of Pinocchio, The Sweat Box, and more. Many film historians describe the film as the most beautifully realized and technically perfect of all the Disney animated features. The film cost $2.6 million in 1940, but using the same techniques and processes, it would cost well over $100 million today. The film required the talents of 750 artists, including animators, assistants, layout artists, background painters, special effects animators, and inkers and painters, who produced more than 2 million drawings and used some 1,500 shades of paint for the Technicolor production. In the book the movie is based on, the character of Jiminy Cricket was unnamed, appeared in only a few chapters, and was squashed by Pinocchio. Some believe the Blue Fairy was modeled after Marilyn Monroe but Monroe was only 14 at the time. The real-life model was Marjorie Babbitt, a dancer who had earlier enacted the part of Snow White for the animators. Story concept for the movie was difficult. One day Walt Disney decided to scrap five months' work including animation and start over because it wasn't right. The movie is based on the serialized stories of journalist Carlo Lorenzini written in 1881 for a children's illustrated weekly in Florence, Italy. Two years later, the stories were compiled into a book, The Adventures Of Pinocchio Tale Of A Puppet. Jiminy Cricket became the film's most popular and enduring character appearing in subsequent Disney films and television shows, including Fun and Fancy Free and the Mickey Mouse Club. Gustaf Tenggren, an award-winning illustrator, was assigned to the production to give the film the kind of lavish European storybook flavor that Walt Disney envisioned. The movie won an Academy Award for best score and best song, When You Wish Upon A Star. --Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment

Review: My longest review yet - When it was first released in 1940, Walt Disney's Pinocchio failed at the box office. And it is quite a strange circumstance, as it was the studio's follow-up to the groundbreaking smash hit Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, released only two years previously. Some critical reviews of the film called it even better than its predecessor, and that is mostly the consensus opinion of today: that Pinocchio is indeed a better film than Snow White in almost every way. Its contributions to the art and cinematic form of animation are undeniably enormous, and only a very small number of animated cartoons have come anywhere close to equaling its breathtaking artistry. It is quite strange that Disney did not follow the success of Snow White with another fairy tale. Many were considered, including Sleeping Beauty, The Little Mermaid, and Beauty and the Beast. But these stories proved to be a challenge to not only the team of artists, but also to Walt himself. It was one of the studio's great animators, Norm Ferguson, who brought the attention of Carlo Collodi's The Adventures of Pinocchio to Disney's attention. For story problems and other issues, the studio halted work on Bambi (released in 1942) and production began on Pinocchio. Carlo Collodi's original story is one of the darkest children's stories ever written, and so Disney was obviously dealing with some very difficult subject matter. In the original story, Pinocchio is a bad kid from the very beginning. He does many bad deeds throughout the course of the first few chapters, and of course it's highly unappealing for a children's cartoon; so major changes were made to the title character that simply worked for the best: he is bright-eyed, curious, easily manipulated, and unbelievably forgetful; most young children should be able to relate to him, and so should adults who remember what it was like to be Pinocchio's age. It has often been said that Pinocchio is one of the darkest of all Disney animated features. And it is true in ways that are both obvious and subtle; a mixture of both works quite well. Take the scene for example, when Pinocchio is running home and stumbles into Honest John and Gideon for a second time: the Fox and the Cat, pretending to be his friends, see an "illness" in the puppet that ultimately leads to the conclusion that he needs a vacation on Pleasure Island, "where every day is a holiday." Now we know from the scene before that Honest John and Gideon are just in it for the money, but since they are corrupt and greedy, they help out the Coachman anyway, providing him with slaves in the forms of small boys. The arguments that show the unsubtle darkness of the film come most prominently in two points of the film: after Pinocchio's first performance in Stromboli's puppet show where he makes plenty of money for the puppet master, he says that he is going home and will be back in the morning. At this, Stromboli becomes furious, and locks the puppet in a cage. He says that when Pinocchio grows too old, he will be chopped into firewood. But until then, Stromboli plans to make the puppet his "little wooden goldmine." The other point at which the animation shows obvious gloom is in the Pleasure Island sequence. And in fact, there is also some subtlety to it as well: when Pinocchio and his new friend Lampwick are having a good time and destroying everything in sight, the latter turns and asks if the puppet likes the place. Pinocchio then turns and says "Yeah! Being bad is a lot of fun, ain't it?" In some instances, that line recalls the original Collodi tale in which the puppet is a bad boy. But then of course comes the infamous transformation sequence, when Lampwick becomes an actual jackass. There is a marvelous shot where the transformation itself is propped up like a silhouette and all the while Lampwick is screaming for his mother. It is an amount of fear and terror that is often unequaled by most of today's horror films. As an example of the art form of animation, Pinocchio is unsurpassed. It is visually the most impressive and the most gorgeous animated film of all time. It was made at a time before the computer, when animated cels, frames, and backgrounds were all drawn by hand but with such enthusiasm and creativity. The change from the watercolors used in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs to the gouache and oil paintings used in Pinocchio make for a much richer experience, especially when exploited to the nth degree. The only animated films that could quite honestly compete visually with it are the same year's Fantasia (which had some very similar artistry, particularly during "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" sequence) and 1959's Sleeping Beauty (the perfect example of a moving tapestry). To make animated films of similar feeling and quality today, most animators prominently use computers, which do give a rich quality yes, but the effect is not the same. As technically marvelous as something 1992's Aladdin is, one could easily tell that a good amount of the animation was done with a computer (I say you need look no further than a look at the Cave of Wonders). To be short, the only animated films after 1959 that could compete with Pinocchio and Sleeping Beauty are 1994's The Lion King (which does have a lot of computer work on it, but the level of artistry brought to the African savannah is absolutely breathtaking) and perhaps Miyazaki's 1997 Princess Mononoke (in fact, perhaps even much of the Ghibli work, almost all of which is hand-drawn with very little computer work). Some of the most marvelous animation set pieces in Pinocchio come quite early in the film, specifically on the shots where Geppetto is putting the final features on his little wooden puppet. Taking a look at the scene, the result feels very oily but also quite warm. I could point out many of the other scenes in the picture, but to sum it up: many people have said that the film represents "technically perfect animation." I would most certainly agree. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs had been nominated for an Oscar for its score, and earned Walt Disney an Honorary Academy Award. But Pinocchio went a step further, and became the first animated feature to not just win a competitive award, but multiple awards: it won Best Original Score and Best Original Song for the ballad "When You Wish Upon a Star." In many cases, Academy distinctions and other such honors are superfluous and do not mean anything; but in the case of Pinocchio, the music was simply that good. These days however, the soundtrack does not receive nearly the attention it should. The songs in Pinocchio represent just about the strongest musical in Disney's film canon (only Mary Poppins and Beauty and the Beast have songs as good as the ones by Leigh Harline and Ned Washington). "When You Wish Upon a Star" of course is the main anthem of The Walt Disney Company; but the other compositions, such as "Give A Little Whistle", "I've Got No Strings", "Little Wooden Head", and "Hi-Diddle-Dee-Dee" are arguably just as good, if not better. And the score by Paul J. Smith (some parts written by Harline) is an extraordinarily well-written and very underappreciated score. In the score for Pinocchio, the two men cover a range of styles from honky-tonk to romantic and from blues to Broadway. At the heart of the film however, is the cast of characters. Some of them have very little screen time, but they make such an impression on the audience and such a stake on the plot that it's quite difficult to imagine Pinocchio without them. Take Stromboli, for example: despite appearing in only two scenes, he carves himself a special place among Disney's most evil and threatening villains. He locks Pinocchio in a cage, tells him that he's going to be helpful in making a lot of money, and then as he gets too old, Stromboli plans to turn the puppet into firewood. His last audible line in the film is "Good night, my little wooden goldmine." The filmmakers bring us a reverse Geppetto-type figure, one that exists only to threaten or bring further harm and humiliation to Pinocchio. Stromboli however, isn't the only great character in the film. Almost every main character in the film is a brilliant little masterpiece, showcasing some of the very best work done by some of Disney's greatest animators. For many of them, it was their first big assignment: Pinocchio himself was done mostly by Milt Kahl, with some contributions done by Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston; Jiminy Cricket was handled by Ward Kimball, and this assignment was the only thing that kept him at the Disney Studios after two of his scenes originally planned for Snow White were discarded; Art Babbitt, in one of his last Disney projects, animated Geppetto, whom the animator thought to be his greatest accomplishment; Figaro the Cat and Cleo the Goldfish were both done by Eric Larson, one animator you don't hear a lot about; Honest John and Gideon were both done by Norm Ferguson, another precursor to the Nine Old Men; Stromboli himself was animated by Bill Tytla, who is widely considered to be the greatest animator in the history of Disney animation (Chernabog from Fantasia is more than enough to ensure that); the Coachman was the only character for a feature-length Disney film to be animated by Charles August Nichols, another unsung animator; Lampwick the delinquent is considered to be Fred Moore's finest achievement; the Blue Fairy, one of the film's greatest achievements, was animated by Jack Campbell; and Monstro the Whale (my personal pick for the greatest achievement of character animation in the whole film) was done by Wolfgang Reitherman, who would become a major director later in his career. These mentions and credits would be pointless though, if the animators did not put forth their greatest efforts. In Pinocchio, the works of these animators remains at least one of their three best (in Reitherman's case, I'd call Monstro his all-time best work). Only a tiny number of characters made after their time (or even after this film) have come anywhere close to equaling the marvelous achievements of the cast of characters, animated and ACTED (which is what character animation is, essentially) with such fussy detail. The effects animation in Pinocchio is an entirely different matter, but it might well just be the greatest achievement of the whole film: from the fire that Pinocchio cooks up to make Monstro sneeze to the glow whenever the Blue Fairy appears, and from the shadows of Lampwick and Pinocchio to the water splashes made by Monstro himself (the water ripples are perhaps the most beautiful thing drawn by anyone in the Golden Age of Animation), the effects animation by itself represent a level of artistry that cannot be matched by today's computers. I have yet to speak of the everlasting quality of the story: the durability of the tale of a little puppet's ambition to become a real boy is perhaps the key to everything that makes the film work. In Pinocchio's innocence and naivety, the stage is set for nearly everything else to come to prominence, from Jiminy's efforts to keep the puppet under control to Honest John's scheme to use that same puppet as a cash reward. Pinocchio's promises are always broken by the slightest temptation to slack off or have a good time, and this of course gets him into real trouble. Since this is a fantasy of the highest order, I am able to forgive the film of some its questions (such as how the Blue Fairy delivers the letter explaining where Geppetto, Figaro, and Cleo are). As much as Pinocchio is about avoiding temptations and doing the right thing, it is also about second chances: time and time again, Pinocchio does wrong and is chastised for it. The Blue Fairy shows up to forgive him of his lies, and Jiminy risks his neck several times to save the puppet from the greatest perils (being made into a slave of either Stromboli's or the Coachman's). But these second chances would be pointless if Pinocchio didn't learn a lesson. He has a line late in the film that is simply marvelous: "I'd rather be smart than be an actor!" He has learned his lesson on the consequences of becoming a star, but when Pleasure Island rolls around, he has yet another lesson to learn: while all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy, all play and no work is more than enough for a boy to make a jackass of himself. The combination of second chances, ambition, and learning from mistakes makes Pinocchio one of the most important parables in not just the history of Disney, but also in the history of film literature. The success of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs poured money into the studio's vaults like nobody's business (Sergei Eisenstein himself called it the greatest film ever made). But it is still strange to this day that Pinocchio, such a thing of beauty and a major step up from its predecessor, was an initial failure. These days however, it has literally enshrined itself a place in cinematic history as one of the major achievements in animation as well as the 1940s in general. If Snow White was a sign that animation could make a significant mark on the history of film, Pinocchio broke through and made that claim. It is considered to be Disney's greatest film for many different reasons, and rightly so. It is a thing of visual and poetic beauty that is also an uncontested masterpiece, and certainly one of the greatest films ever made.
Review: A great achievement. Considered the best of the Walt Disney Studio's animated films. - This is considered the best of the Walt Disney Studio’s animated films. Released in 1940, it grossed world-wide $121,892,045. Cast: Geppetto – Christian Rub; Pinocchio – Dickie Jones; Blue Fairy – Evelyn Venable; Jiminy Cricket – Cliff Edwards. Plot: A wooden puppet created by Geppetto is brought to life by the Blue Fairy. He wants to become a real boy. In order to achieve this, he must prove himself brave, truthful, and unselfish with the help of Jiminy Cricket as his conscience. What Disney has done here is ingenious. He has turned Pinocchio into a parable for children. Some are sung to you by Jiminy Cricket, “Let your conscience be your guide”, others the Blue Fairy tells you, “A lie grows until it’s as plain as the nose on your face”, while you watch the results of bad choices through his beautifully drawn animated story. Pinocchio wants to be a real boy, not just wooden. All children want this. They know they should be good, but they know when tempted they can be weak. In our film, Pinocchio does not go to school as he should when he meets Foulfellow and Gideon who convince him being an actor is fun. “Hi, Diddle Dee-Dee, An Actor’s Life For Me.” This leads to them giving him to Stromboli, the evil puppet master, who locks him in a cage. When the Blue Fairy comes to help, Pinocchio lies to her. With each lie his nose grows until it has leaves on it and a bird’s nest with baby birds in it. What could be a better way to teach a child not to lie than to show them what happens to Pinocchio? The Blue Fairy helps Pinocchio escape the cage. But on his way home he immediately runs into Foulfellow again and is shanghaied to Pleasure Island, where boys can smoke and play pool all day or, at least, until (through tobacco and bad habits) they change into mules. They grow long ears, hooves and snouts. Once they are mules they are taken to work in the salt mines. What child would want to smoke after seeing this? Pinocchio escapes again and goes home to find that Geppetto has been trapped inside Monstro’s stomach while searching for him, and he and Jiminy rush out to save him. The scenes with Monstro the Whale are some of the most beautiful in the film. Disney’s ability to mimic the ocean waves and water crashing against rocks are amazing. After Snow White the Disney crew began work on Pinocchio and applied what they had learned and then invented numerous innovations. 1) They broke out of frame: An extension of a split frame where a character can depart from the sides of the frame falling out of the animation entirely. (When the whale is chasing Pinocchio and is not seen but the audience knows he is nearby. 2) Multiplane camera: Allows drawings in 3D. Camera passes through foreground drawings. (In the beginning of the film there is an aerial shot of Pinocchio’s village.) Pinocchio was a great achievement. It was done when the Walt Disney Studio was at its pinnacle of abilities and the principles they invented still live today through, “Despicable Me”, or “Jurassic Park”, because there isn’t a working graphic artist who hasn’t studied the masterful Walt Disney! I give this Great film 5 stars. This is the two-Disc 70th Anniversary Edition with the entire second disc a Special Feature.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Contributor | Ben Sharpsteen;Hamilton S. Luske, Charles Judels, Christian Rub, Cliff Edwards, Dick Jones, Don Brodie, Evelyn Venable, Frankie Darro, Mel Blanc, Walter Catlett Contributor Ben Sharpsteen;Hamilton S. Luske, Charles Judels, Christian Rub, Cliff Edwards, Dick Jones, Don Brodie, Evelyn Venable, Frankie Darro, Mel Blanc, Walter Catlett See more |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 8,398 Reviews |
| Format | AC-3, Animated, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, Full Screen, Multiple Formats, NTSC, Restored, Special Edition |
| Genre | Kids & Family |
| Language | English, French, Spanish |
| Runtime | 1 hour and 28 minutes |

## Images

![Pinocchio (Two-Disc 70th Anniversary Platinum Edition) - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81NbP2Arm1L.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ My longest review yet
*by T***S on July 5, 2012*

When it was first released in 1940, Walt Disney's Pinocchio failed at the box office. And it is quite a strange circumstance, as it was the studio's follow-up to the groundbreaking smash hit Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, released only two years previously. Some critical reviews of the film called it even better than its predecessor, and that is mostly the consensus opinion of today: that Pinocchio is indeed a better film than Snow White in almost every way. Its contributions to the art and cinematic form of animation are undeniably enormous, and only a very small number of animated cartoons have come anywhere close to equaling its breathtaking artistry. It is quite strange that Disney did not follow the success of Snow White with another fairy tale. Many were considered, including Sleeping Beauty, The Little Mermaid, and Beauty and the Beast. But these stories proved to be a challenge to not only the team of artists, but also to Walt himself. It was one of the studio's great animators, Norm Ferguson, who brought the attention of Carlo Collodi's The Adventures of Pinocchio to Disney's attention. For story problems and other issues, the studio halted work on Bambi (released in 1942) and production began on Pinocchio. Carlo Collodi's original story is one of the darkest children's stories ever written, and so Disney was obviously dealing with some very difficult subject matter. In the original story, Pinocchio is a bad kid from the very beginning. He does many bad deeds throughout the course of the first few chapters, and of course it's highly unappealing for a children's cartoon; so major changes were made to the title character that simply worked for the best: he is bright-eyed, curious, easily manipulated, and unbelievably forgetful; most young children should be able to relate to him, and so should adults who remember what it was like to be Pinocchio's age. It has often been said that Pinocchio is one of the darkest of all Disney animated features. And it is true in ways that are both obvious and subtle; a mixture of both works quite well. Take the scene for example, when Pinocchio is running home and stumbles into Honest John and Gideon for a second time: the Fox and the Cat, pretending to be his friends, see an "illness" in the puppet that ultimately leads to the conclusion that he needs a vacation on Pleasure Island, "where every day is a holiday." Now we know from the scene before that Honest John and Gideon are just in it for the money, but since they are corrupt and greedy, they help out the Coachman anyway, providing him with slaves in the forms of small boys. The arguments that show the unsubtle darkness of the film come most prominently in two points of the film: after Pinocchio's first performance in Stromboli's puppet show where he makes plenty of money for the puppet master, he says that he is going home and will be back in the morning. At this, Stromboli becomes furious, and locks the puppet in a cage. He says that when Pinocchio grows too old, he will be chopped into firewood. But until then, Stromboli plans to make the puppet his "little wooden goldmine." The other point at which the animation shows obvious gloom is in the Pleasure Island sequence. And in fact, there is also some subtlety to it as well: when Pinocchio and his new friend Lampwick are having a good time and destroying everything in sight, the latter turns and asks if the puppet likes the place. Pinocchio then turns and says "Yeah! Being bad is a lot of fun, ain't it?" In some instances, that line recalls the original Collodi tale in which the puppet is a bad boy. But then of course comes the infamous transformation sequence, when Lampwick becomes an actual jackass. There is a marvelous shot where the transformation itself is propped up like a silhouette and all the while Lampwick is screaming for his mother. It is an amount of fear and terror that is often unequaled by most of today's horror films. As an example of the art form of animation, Pinocchio is unsurpassed. It is visually the most impressive and the most gorgeous animated film of all time. It was made at a time before the computer, when animated cels, frames, and backgrounds were all drawn by hand but with such enthusiasm and creativity. The change from the watercolors used in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs to the gouache and oil paintings used in Pinocchio make for a much richer experience, especially when exploited to the nth degree. The only animated films that could quite honestly compete visually with it are the same year's Fantasia (which had some very similar artistry, particularly during "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" sequence) and 1959's Sleeping Beauty (the perfect example of a moving tapestry). To make animated films of similar feeling and quality today, most animators prominently use computers, which do give a rich quality yes, but the effect is not the same. As technically marvelous as something 1992's Aladdin is, one could easily tell that a good amount of the animation was done with a computer (I say you need look no further than a look at the Cave of Wonders). To be short, the only animated films after 1959 that could compete with Pinocchio and Sleeping Beauty are 1994's The Lion King (which does have a lot of computer work on it, but the level of artistry brought to the African savannah is absolutely breathtaking) and perhaps Miyazaki's 1997 Princess Mononoke (in fact, perhaps even much of the Ghibli work, almost all of which is hand-drawn with very little computer work). Some of the most marvelous animation set pieces in Pinocchio come quite early in the film, specifically on the shots where Geppetto is putting the final features on his little wooden puppet. Taking a look at the scene, the result feels very oily but also quite warm. I could point out many of the other scenes in the picture, but to sum it up: many people have said that the film represents "technically perfect animation." I would most certainly agree. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs had been nominated for an Oscar for its score, and earned Walt Disney an Honorary Academy Award. But Pinocchio went a step further, and became the first animated feature to not just win a competitive award, but multiple awards: it won Best Original Score and Best Original Song for the ballad "When You Wish Upon a Star." In many cases, Academy distinctions and other such honors are superfluous and do not mean anything; but in the case of Pinocchio, the music was simply that good. These days however, the soundtrack does not receive nearly the attention it should. The songs in Pinocchio represent just about the strongest musical in Disney's film canon (only Mary Poppins and Beauty and the Beast have songs as good as the ones by Leigh Harline and Ned Washington). "When You Wish Upon a Star" of course is the main anthem of The Walt Disney Company; but the other compositions, such as "Give A Little Whistle", "I've Got No Strings", "Little Wooden Head", and "Hi-Diddle-Dee-Dee" are arguably just as good, if not better. And the score by Paul J. Smith (some parts written by Harline) is an extraordinarily well-written and very underappreciated score. In the score for Pinocchio, the two men cover a range of styles from honky-tonk to romantic and from blues to Broadway. At the heart of the film however, is the cast of characters. Some of them have very little screen time, but they make such an impression on the audience and such a stake on the plot that it's quite difficult to imagine Pinocchio without them. Take Stromboli, for example: despite appearing in only two scenes, he carves himself a special place among Disney's most evil and threatening villains. He locks Pinocchio in a cage, tells him that he's going to be helpful in making a lot of money, and then as he gets too old, Stromboli plans to turn the puppet into firewood. His last audible line in the film is "Good night, my little wooden goldmine." The filmmakers bring us a reverse Geppetto-type figure, one that exists only to threaten or bring further harm and humiliation to Pinocchio. Stromboli however, isn't the only great character in the film. Almost every main character in the film is a brilliant little masterpiece, showcasing some of the very best work done by some of Disney's greatest animators. For many of them, it was their first big assignment: Pinocchio himself was done mostly by Milt Kahl, with some contributions done by Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston; Jiminy Cricket was handled by Ward Kimball, and this assignment was the only thing that kept him at the Disney Studios after two of his scenes originally planned for Snow White were discarded; Art Babbitt, in one of his last Disney projects, animated Geppetto, whom the animator thought to be his greatest accomplishment; Figaro the Cat and Cleo the Goldfish were both done by Eric Larson, one animator you don't hear a lot about; Honest John and Gideon were both done by Norm Ferguson, another precursor to the Nine Old Men; Stromboli himself was animated by Bill Tytla, who is widely considered to be the greatest animator in the history of Disney animation (Chernabog from Fantasia is more than enough to ensure that); the Coachman was the only character for a feature-length Disney film to be animated by Charles August Nichols, another unsung animator; Lampwick the delinquent is considered to be Fred Moore's finest achievement; the Blue Fairy, one of the film's greatest achievements, was animated by Jack Campbell; and Monstro the Whale (my personal pick for the greatest achievement of character animation in the whole film) was done by Wolfgang Reitherman, who would become a major director later in his career. These mentions and credits would be pointless though, if the animators did not put forth their greatest efforts. In Pinocchio, the works of these animators remains at least one of their three best (in Reitherman's case, I'd call Monstro his all-time best work). Only a tiny number of characters made after their time (or even after this film) have come anywhere close to equaling the marvelous achievements of the cast of characters, animated and ACTED (which is what character animation is, essentially) with such fussy detail. The effects animation in Pinocchio is an entirely different matter, but it might well just be the greatest achievement of the whole film: from the fire that Pinocchio cooks up to make Monstro sneeze to the glow whenever the Blue Fairy appears, and from the shadows of Lampwick and Pinocchio to the water splashes made by Monstro himself (the water ripples are perhaps the most beautiful thing drawn by anyone in the Golden Age of Animation), the effects animation by itself represent a level of artistry that cannot be matched by today's computers. I have yet to speak of the everlasting quality of the story: the durability of the tale of a little puppet's ambition to become a real boy is perhaps the key to everything that makes the film work. In Pinocchio's innocence and naivety, the stage is set for nearly everything else to come to prominence, from Jiminy's efforts to keep the puppet under control to Honest John's scheme to use that same puppet as a cash reward. Pinocchio's promises are always broken by the slightest temptation to slack off or have a good time, and this of course gets him into real trouble. Since this is a fantasy of the highest order, I am able to forgive the film of some its questions (such as how the Blue Fairy delivers the letter explaining where Geppetto, Figaro, and Cleo are). As much as Pinocchio is about avoiding temptations and doing the right thing, it is also about second chances: time and time again, Pinocchio does wrong and is chastised for it. The Blue Fairy shows up to forgive him of his lies, and Jiminy risks his neck several times to save the puppet from the greatest perils (being made into a slave of either Stromboli's or the Coachman's). But these second chances would be pointless if Pinocchio didn't learn a lesson. He has a line late in the film that is simply marvelous: "I'd rather be smart than be an actor!" He has learned his lesson on the consequences of becoming a star, but when Pleasure Island rolls around, he has yet another lesson to learn: while all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy, all play and no work is more than enough for a boy to make a jackass of himself. The combination of second chances, ambition, and learning from mistakes makes Pinocchio one of the most important parables in not just the history of Disney, but also in the history of film literature. The success of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs poured money into the studio's vaults like nobody's business (Sergei Eisenstein himself called it the greatest film ever made). But it is still strange to this day that Pinocchio, such a thing of beauty and a major step up from its predecessor, was an initial failure. These days however, it has literally enshrined itself a place in cinematic history as one of the major achievements in animation as well as the 1940s in general. If Snow White was a sign that animation could make a significant mark on the history of film, Pinocchio broke through and made that claim. It is considered to be Disney's greatest film for many different reasons, and rightly so. It is a thing of visual and poetic beauty that is also an uncontested masterpiece, and certainly one of the greatest films ever made.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A great achievement. Considered the best of the Walt Disney Studio's animated films.
*by L***A on November 4, 2020*

This is considered the best of the Walt Disney Studio’s animated films. Released in 1940, it grossed world-wide $121,892,045. Cast: Geppetto – Christian Rub; Pinocchio – Dickie Jones; Blue Fairy – Evelyn Venable; Jiminy Cricket – Cliff Edwards. Plot: A wooden puppet created by Geppetto is brought to life by the Blue Fairy. He wants to become a real boy. In order to achieve this, he must prove himself brave, truthful, and unselfish with the help of Jiminy Cricket as his conscience. What Disney has done here is ingenious. He has turned Pinocchio into a parable for children. Some are sung to you by Jiminy Cricket, “Let your conscience be your guide”, others the Blue Fairy tells you, “A lie grows until it’s as plain as the nose on your face”, while you watch the results of bad choices through his beautifully drawn animated story. Pinocchio wants to be a real boy, not just wooden. All children want this. They know they should be good, but they know when tempted they can be weak. In our film, Pinocchio does not go to school as he should when he meets Foulfellow and Gideon who convince him being an actor is fun. “Hi, Diddle Dee-Dee, An Actor’s Life For Me.” This leads to them giving him to Stromboli, the evil puppet master, who locks him in a cage. When the Blue Fairy comes to help, Pinocchio lies to her. With each lie his nose grows until it has leaves on it and a bird’s nest with baby birds in it. What could be a better way to teach a child not to lie than to show them what happens to Pinocchio? The Blue Fairy helps Pinocchio escape the cage. But on his way home he immediately runs into Foulfellow again and is shanghaied to Pleasure Island, where boys can smoke and play pool all day or, at least, until (through tobacco and bad habits) they change into mules. They grow long ears, hooves and snouts. Once they are mules they are taken to work in the salt mines. What child would want to smoke after seeing this? Pinocchio escapes again and goes home to find that Geppetto has been trapped inside Monstro’s stomach while searching for him, and he and Jiminy rush out to save him. The scenes with Monstro the Whale are some of the most beautiful in the film. Disney’s ability to mimic the ocean waves and water crashing against rocks are amazing. After Snow White the Disney crew began work on Pinocchio and applied what they had learned and then invented numerous innovations. 1) They broke out of frame: An extension of a split frame where a character can depart from the sides of the frame falling out of the animation entirely. (When the whale is chasing Pinocchio and is not seen but the audience knows he is nearby. 2) Multiplane camera: Allows drawings in 3D. Camera passes through foreground drawings. (In the beginning of the film there is an aerial shot of Pinocchio’s village.) Pinocchio was a great achievement. It was done when the Walt Disney Studio was at its pinnacle of abilities and the principles they invented still live today through, “Despicable Me”, or “Jurassic Park”, because there isn’t a working graphic artist who hasn’t studied the masterful Walt Disney! I give this Great film 5 stars. This is the two-Disc 70th Anniversary Edition with the entire second disc a Special Feature.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ This DVD is a "dream come true" for me
*by T***3 on June 22, 2012*

I had been waiting patiently for this to come out on DVD and it's one of my favorite Disney movies. The movie itself teaches valuable lessons about honesty, loyalty and courage. As for one reviewer who complained about the extras, I loved the extras! The commentary was very informative and I liked the special featuring Dickie Jones, the voice of Pinocchio (all grown up now, of course, but still has a boyish face despite the thinning hair) and Real Life Geppettos. I didn't notice too much over-enhancing but I respect that one reviewer's opinion. Since this was Disney's 2nd film, there was more attention to animation and the songs ("When You Wish Upon A Star," which won Best Song in 1940 and the movie also won Best Musical Score) than getting big-ticket celebrities to loan their voices. As a matter of fact, the only names I remembered without looking up was Cliff Edwards, who plays the lovable (and sometimes feisty) Jiminy Cricket and Mel Blanc whose only contribution is a "hiccup" by Gideon, Foulfellow's sidekick. Jones plays the cute and lovable Pinocchio and German actor Christian Rub plays the doting Geppetto. I also learned Thurl Ravenscroft provided the sounds of Monstro the killer whale. Now about the movie- some of the scenes may get a little creepy for children but they serve to warn them about the consequences for being dishonest or naughty. Geppetto, a talented toymaker, makes Pinocchio and wishes upon a star that his puppet become a real boy. Thanks to the beautiful Blue Fairy (Evelyn Venable), his wish is granted- on the condition his new "son" learns to be "brave, truthful and unselfish." Jiminy Cricket, who's witnessed the miracle, is appointed as conscience (and he asks for a gold badge, which the Blue Fairy doesn't promise!). When Geppetto discovers his wish came true, he's delighted. He gets Pinocchio ready for school, yet his son is conned by Foulfellow "Honest John" and Gideon. First, they sell him to the volatile and greedy Stromboli (Charles Judels, who later in the movie plays the evil Coachman) who pushes the little puppet "into the public eye" (so he can make money, of course!). Jiminy almost gives up as conscience figuring "What does an actor need with a conscience?" Later, the 2 con men get Pinocchio ready for a trip to Pleasure Island, which collects naughty boys and here, Pinocchio meets Lampwick (Frankie Darro). I'll stop here so as not to ruin too many surprises. All in all, a great story and a great movie. One reason I was glad the extras were included on the DVD is because I got it before I got my own Blu-Ray.

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