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Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin

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Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin
The Special Edition DVD
Directed byGeorge Lucas
Written byCarter Crocker
Karl Geurs
Produced byKarl Geurs
Gina Shay
StarringJim Cummings
Brady Bluhm
Paul Winchell
Music byAlan Menken
Tim Rice
Stephen Schwartz
Distributed byWalt Disney Home Video
Release date
August 5 1997
Running time
107 min
Country United States
LanguageEnglish

Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin (also known as Winnie the Pooh's Most Grand Adventure in some countries) is Disney's second Winnie the Pooh animated feature. It is also Disney's third direct-to-video animated sequel.

The original 1997 print of the film was Not Rated. When it made its 2006 2 Disc Special Edition re-release, it was given a PG rating from the MPAA.

Plot

The first day of Autumn has arrived; to Winnie-the-Pooh it's another fun-filled season to be with his very best friend, Christopher Robin. However, he is no where to be found, which causes Pooh to worry what happened to him.

After finding a (sticky) note revealing that Christopher Robin has gone to school, Owl scares Pooh and his friends when he misinterprets the note and makes them think that Christopher Robin has been captured by a horrible monster named Skullasaurus (a spoof thing for Dinosaur), and taken into The Land Of The Great Unknown, where extraordinary things happen.

So Pooh, accompanied by Rabbit, Tigger, Eeyore, and Piglet, set off on an adventurous journey to rescue their friend from this terrible Land Of Terror. Some of the adventures include exploring a thorn forest with venus flytraps, rescuing Piglet from a flock of peaceful butterflies that carry him into the sky, and falling into a canyon hundreds of feet deep.

Pooh's friends also confront their own inhibitions and insecurities throughout the search, facing and conquering them in a series of events where they're forced to act beyond their own known limits, thus discovering their true potential. Eventually, Pooh and his friends find a huge mountain shaped like a skull and, thinking that it must be where Christopher Robin is being held captive (In The Eye part, which owl describes as the most terrible of the whole place, and it is simply stiff with Heffalumps, Woozles, Jagulars, Bats, Ghosts, Skeletons, Zombies, Revenants, Demons, Evil Sorcerers, Perilous Rulers, Wicked Witches, Dragons, Ravens, Wolves, Crocodiles, Old Trees, Flying Monkeys, Black Knights, Pirates, Elves, Trolls, Giant Spiders, Goblins,Sharptooths, Lion, Skullasauruses, and other horrors of the worst descriptions).

In it they also in the end face Christopher Robin whose shadow looked to them like some sort of terrible Beast, (until they got a better view of him), venture in through the mouth. The network of caverns and tunnels inside leads to much mayhem until they eventually find Christopher Robin (or more accurately, he finds them) and happily return home.

At the film's conclusion, Pooh and Christopher Robin return to their favorite spot, where Christopher Robin explains what he learned at school, and comments that he learned he could be brave, strong, and smart when he gave his heart to it. He then sadly says that tomorrow he'll be going again, but reassures Pooh that he'll always be back, as long as Pooh's here:

"Pooh, promise you won't ever forget about me. Not even when I'm 100?" "How old shall I be then?" "99." "I promise." "Forever and ever?" "Yes, Christopher Robin...forever and ever."

The two sit at their spot under the tree as we pan out from them, while the narrator explains how we shall meet them again in this enchanted place... called the Hundred Acre Wood.

Cast

Trivia

  • This movie marks the last time Paul Winchell voiced the character of Tigger. Winchell, who had voiced Tigger in the original theatrical shorts, reprised his role on The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh until 1989, to be replaced by Jim Cummings in 1990. After this movie, Cummings would become Tigger's main voice actor.

The final lines in the film with Christopher Robin and Pooh on the tree are recycled from The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh and the book the quotes originally came from, The House at Pooh Corner.

Criticism

When it came out, analysts and parents criticized the film, claiming that the mild horror content (such as the long fall into the muddy marsh, the biting plants in the forest of thorns, the monsters in the map/quest scene, and the spills and chills in the skull cave) was not suitable for young children.

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