The genius of the opening sequence for this movie is terribly underappreciated. If you pay attention, the musical themes that play throughout the overture sync up perfectly with the credits as well as the imagery...and it all comes together so naturally and doesn't feel like it is at all on purpose. For example, near the beginning the theme for "Eglantine" plays right when Angela Lansbury is credited, and we see her character depicted in the "tapestry". Later, the "Beautiful Briny" theme enters when the animation credits begin, with Ward Kimball (the animation director) cleverly suggested as the "king" of the animals/animators, his "subjects" appearing in the next frame. Two serenading troubadours, representing the Sherman brothers (composer and lyricist, respectively) appear on screen for their credits as the score turns toward the medieval, and in the next frame we see their "supporting players", that is, the credit for the arranger and conductor of the film's score. As the music swells, becoming increasingly more regal -- now, the image of dancing fauns and maidens accompany the choreographer's credit -- it reaches an exciting and shocking climax: The medieval revelry ends, and the 20th century comes crashing in. The joyfully rousing "Substitutiary Locomotion" theme enters triumphantly, playing against the most jarring image in the "tapestry" so far -- the imposing German u-boat, metallic and unnatural, flag waving, speeding toward the English coast. The effect is thrilling, and I get chills every time. This is a rare film where the opening sequence itself is a piece of art, even if the proceeding film itself is fairly standard. Whoever put this together deserved an award (and I hope they got one!).
Great analysis! I actually didn't recognize "Eglantine" at Angela Lansbury's credit until you pointed it out. The musical piece that plays during David Tomlinson's credit is from "With a Flair," a song that was cut from the final film, but the melody was still used as a leitmotif for Mr. Browne throughout the film. If you're familiar with the original Bayeux Tapestry there are a few clever jokes to appreciate. For example, at 1:49 the object in the sky looks just like how the Bayeux Tapestry's depiction of a comet, but here it is used to represent the football game! I think this may be the best opening credits in any movie, and it is one of the best film overtures.
I think older Disney movies and old movies in general have beautiful opening credits with an overture to accompany them, it really is a lost art for reasons you explained. And also, something I noticed (whether intentional or not) was that Professor Brown’s character, though would need to look up at some degree to keep track of his juggling rhythm, is doing so at an angle in which he’s looking up directly at Eglantine and smiling.
The man who put this together was the artist David Jonas, who would go on to work as either title designer, animator and production illustrator on such films as Ralph Bakshi’s Lord of the Rings, The Black Cauldron, Back to the Future Part II and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.
There are a few short places where it sounds like music would have been used in portobello road but was taken out (like the ethnicities dancing)...that Scottish tune with the sheep (or was that part of the Scottish dance at portobello?...then the one where it shows the guy serenading the woman who’s in the tower, then the guy playing the violin and then those horns....none of those were used in the songs in the film.
Songs I was able to identify in this overture: 0:56 - The Age of Not Believing (?) 1:21 - ??? 1:42 - The Beautiful Briny Sea 2:01 - Portabello Road 2:27 - Substitutiary Locomotion
Oh my goodness, I didn´t remember this most beautiful opening, thank you so much for uploading it here, it was one of the lifemarkers in my childhhood, even being here in Brazil, and I'm sure to many other kids of my generation all over the world who were lucky to watch it back then! I must download this :-)
@@HeckyEOA89 Yup! If I remember correctly, this was there last film they worked on at Disney.......or one of their last. At least until they came back and worked on The Tigger Movie.
Different between of Christmas and Normal Favourites which is "Bedknobs and Broomsticks" (Disney Animation and Live Action sets Film) and "Santa's Pocket Watch" (Pete Parsons Studios Cartoon Animations of Southern Arts) in 1971 and 1980 which is absolutely my favourites on my own and these are mine and of course I got them on DVDs.
I liked the artwork in this opening sequence as a kid, but I wasn't aware of the fact that it was cleverly imitating the art style of the Bayeux Tapestry, even having such Easter eggs as the Tapestry's depiction of Halley's Comet, which is reinterpreted as the football that the animals are forming a tower to intercept! Pure genius!
As much as I love films like Frozen and Tangled, I really think they lack the sort of Disney atmosphere, if that makes sense? Some recent Disney films have had it, but I honestly think they can't compare to the classics like this...
+Rainbow Turtle I agree with you completely. This is very overlooked nowadays but it had the atmosphere you mentioned. A lot of it though is because the team behind also did "Mary Poppins" & "The Love Bug". The three of them had the same director.
I got to see that Tapestry when my mom and I visited England back in 1999. GAHHH!!! Has it really been 20 years since then? Suddenly I feel so OLD! And I only just turned 35.
Same here it has brought me back this memory while I have watched this since I was a teenager … It has always brings me back this best memory …. I have always loved watching Miss Eglantine Price ( Angela Lansbury -96/97 ) she is the best character of mine … She is the best Witch-In-Training … She is the best character of mine …. It has always brings me back the best memory …Because she is the best character of mine and I have supported her every step of my way. She will always be Miss Eglantine Price, Mrs .Potts and Ms Jessica Fletcher ( Bedknobs and Broomsticks 1971) #RestInPeaceMsLansbury 1933-2022 😢😢
I'm autistic as well. When it came to this movie, I loved watching the first bed flying scene in the dark and letting the colors fly all over the room. ^_^
I remember m3 an my mum would watch this while wrapped in a duvet on the sofa eating biscuits. And i remember saying to my mum i want a nob like rhat for xmas lol
When I was small, watching this on VHS, I absolutely loved it - but I was terrified of all the suits of armour coming alive at the end. I would shout "the suits! The suits!" and run out of the room...
No greater British film. Whoever thought to include the Bayeux Tapestry was a genius and more so a true Brit. Do not forget, we are Norman, and Anglo Saxon. That's enough.
1:36 to 1:41 is that bagpipes making that screechy sound? I fuckin love it! Plus that little elated musical break at 2:10 to 2:30 is so joyful I love it! Along with the rest of this fantastical movie!!!
Yes, Both of these parts were not from songs in the film. My guess they were just transitions for the next instrumental song in the intro or they were cut segments from the dances in Portobello Road.
I've thought of a plot for a spiritual successor. "Magic Doorknobs and Flying Vacuums ". Taking place in the 90s in balkan eastern europe (could even do this as modern day ukraine since it's a very similar situation as BK&BST), a woman fosters a group of 3 siblings. she is a home grown witch, wanting to rebel against the occupation, as she learns her practice from an old tome she recently found. The children snoop the house and bust their hostess casting a spell to see what's happening in the rebellion (or war front). Additionally, she can't travel to the occupation zone, as she can't get her vacuum to fly properly because the hose keeps getting clogged. to keep her secret, she enchants a door knob that easily comes off the attic door with a warp spell similar to the bed of BK&BST. having to take care of the children, she is in search of the gentleman that the book dealer said that the tome came from. The gentleman is actually a recent university graduate who's father was a murdered sorcerer. With aligned goals, the graduate, the witch and the three children search for the other lost books, which were in a very heavily guarded state library taken over by either hostile occupation. after finding the books, the group is hassled by soldiers, and the youngest child thinks quickly as she realizes the knob screws onto a bolt of a drawer of a very large library table. she sets the path to a mystical land that she read in a book of fairytales she found in the library. they flee, without the graduate, who luckily escapes the building. The spell works on the table, only for the table to break as they land in a forest. they meet a sorceress who tries to trick them promising the main character to trade spells. The sorceress captures them, and her apprentice betrays the sorceress as the group again flees, this time on a carriage, and yes the knob somehow fits onto a screw in thee carriage. the apprentice somehow makes it into their world, only for everyone to find that chaos has broken out and the city is under siege or strict curfew. The apprentice helps the main character witch with her plan by teaching her a new spell. She also found a new vacuum from her neighbor's abandoned house. Surprise, the graduate was at the witch's home, looking for her and the children. United, the graduate, main character and apprentice go off to enchant mannequins, kitchen equipment and uniforms from stores & a local war museum to attack & scare off the occupiers. After the success, the main character tries to send the apprentice home, to no avail. The next morning, the news states that the occupiers have left. With nowhere to go, the apprentice becomes the main character's apprentice, and the main character adopts the children. The film starts to hint that they will live happily ever after, but then a cliffhanger, perhaps an airstrike siren goes off, and the apprentice and the witch look at each other, and say "let's go".
THis was the first time I ever went to a cinema. Love it, just regrettably that the modern versions of it are all cut., mostly because no one seemed to have taken good care of the originals It is said they are all damaged
I thought they would cut the Nazi drawings out. But it all looks just like my copy, which was recorded off TCM a long time ago. My colors are much brighter - the rose is rose red, not brick red. The water is blue. I'm sorry for kids to today who have to watch ugly, muddy colors and edited films. (I am also watching it on an old analogue TV that always had bright colors.)
I have this entire song burned into my memory. I like how the opening is able to touch on different parts of the story but artsy enough to not give anything away. Maybe the Nazi part though...
It’s a traditional Scottish highlanders’ bagpipe melody, which I think is known as the ‘Call to Arms’ or a title to that effect. The reason it appears in this film is because it’s an homage to the Scottish soldiery in the LDVs (later known as the Home Guard), which comprised the majority of the force since most Englishmen in the service were already deployed on various fronts throughout the world
The genius of the opening sequence for this movie is terribly underappreciated. If you pay attention, the musical themes that play throughout the overture sync up perfectly with the credits as well as the imagery...and it all comes together so naturally and doesn't feel like it is at all on purpose.
For example, near the beginning the theme for "Eglantine" plays right when Angela Lansbury is credited, and we see her character depicted in the "tapestry". Later, the "Beautiful Briny" theme enters when the animation credits begin, with Ward Kimball (the animation director) cleverly suggested as the "king" of the animals/animators, his "subjects" appearing in the next frame. Two serenading troubadours, representing the Sherman brothers (composer and lyricist, respectively) appear on screen for their credits as the score turns toward the medieval, and in the next frame we see their "supporting players", that is, the credit for the arranger and conductor of the film's score. As the music swells, becoming increasingly more regal -- now, the image of dancing fauns and maidens accompany the choreographer's credit -- it reaches an exciting and shocking climax: The medieval revelry ends, and the 20th century comes crashing in. The joyfully rousing "Substitutiary Locomotion" theme enters triumphantly, playing against the most jarring image in the "tapestry" so far -- the imposing German u-boat, metallic and unnatural, flag waving, speeding toward the English coast. The effect is thrilling, and I get chills every time.
This is a rare film where the opening sequence itself is a piece of art, even if the proceeding film itself is fairly standard. Whoever put this together deserved an award (and I hope they got one!).
Great analysis! I actually didn't recognize "Eglantine" at Angela Lansbury's credit until you pointed it out. The musical piece that plays during David Tomlinson's credit is from "With a Flair," a song that was cut from the final film, but the melody was still used as a leitmotif for Mr. Browne throughout the film. If you're familiar with the original Bayeux Tapestry there are a few clever jokes to appreciate. For example, at 1:49 the object in the sky looks just like how the Bayeux Tapestry's depiction of a comet, but here it is used to represent the football game!
I think this may be the best opening credits in any movie, and it is one of the best film overtures.
I think older Disney movies and old movies in general have beautiful opening credits with an overture to accompany them, it really is a lost art for reasons you explained. And also, something I noticed (whether intentional or not) was that Professor Brown’s character, though would need to look up at some degree to keep track of his juggling rhythm, is doing so at an angle in which he’s looking up directly at Eglantine and smiling.
My favorite bit - a fortuneteller representing the Technical Consultants!
The man who put this together was the artist David Jonas, who would go on to work as either title designer, animator and production illustrator on such films as Ralph Bakshi’s Lord of the Rings, The Black Cauldron, Back to the Future Part II and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.
There are a few short places where it sounds like music would have been used in portobello road but was taken out (like the ethnicities dancing)...that Scottish tune with the sheep (or was that part of the Scottish dance at portobello?...then the one where it shows the guy serenading the woman who’s in the tower, then the guy playing the violin and then those horns....none of those were used in the songs in the film.
This has to be one of the greatest opening credit sequences in the world.
It's a perfect marriage of music and images.
I certainly loved it when watching it on VHS
Indeed, so artistic and historical!
Especially when you compare it to today’s sorry excuse for opening credits today.
I used to watch it again and again.
This was my favourite film throughout my childhood. I still have it on DVD and I still love it just as much:)
Same this was my childhood
We have it on VHS
Ce fut le premier film de Walt Disney que j avais été voir avec mon frère et mon père ma mère n aimait pas les comédies musicales j avais 7 ans
One of my favorite films from Disney ❤️💕
Mulan was another war film around 1998 during a war in China during the 14th century!. From Joe. X
Songs I was able to identify in this overture:
0:56 - The Age of Not Believing (?)
1:21 - ???
1:42 - The Beautiful Briny Sea
2:01 - Portabello Road
2:27 - Substitutiary Locomotion
1:21 is a deleted song called a Step in the Right Direction
Il y a aussi églantine
When I was just a child. I used replay this opening all over. At 2:28 -- 2:51
What do you think I’m doing right now on TH-cam?? 🤪😜😝🙃
2:51 - 3:22 Gives me the chills!
I get chills from 2:28-3:22.
I get chills from 0:00 - 3:40
Oh my goodness, I didn´t remember this most beautiful opening, thank you so much for uploading it here, it was one of the lifemarkers in my childhhood, even being here in Brazil, and I'm sure to many other kids of my generation all over the world who were lucky to watch it back then! I must download this :-)
South America Brazil is.
@@joeandrews7329 Of course but why are putting forward such a platitude?
Absolutely love this movie. Fantastic. Will never ever tire of it
2nd World War film from August 1940.
1:41 to 2:00 is my favorite part. That Beautiful Briny Sea melody mixed with that eerie instrument used in The Jungle Book. Glorious!
Courtesy of the Sherman brothers
@@HeckyEOA89 Yup! If I remember correctly, this was there last film they worked on at Disney.......or one of their last. At least until they came back and worked on The Tigger Movie.
Different between of Christmas and Normal Favourites which is "Bedknobs and Broomsticks" (Disney Animation and Live Action sets Film) and "Santa's Pocket Watch" (Pete Parsons Studios Cartoon Animations of Southern Arts) in 1971 and 1980 which is absolutely my favourites on my own and these are mine and of course I got them on DVDs.
I liked the artwork in this opening sequence as a kid, but I wasn't aware of the fact that it was cleverly imitating the art style of the Bayeux Tapestry, even having such Easter eggs as the Tapestry's depiction of Halley's Comet, which is reinterpreted as the football that the animals are forming a tower to intercept! Pure genius!
As much as I love films like Frozen and Tangled, I really think they lack the sort of Disney atmosphere, if that makes sense? Some recent Disney films have had it, but I honestly think they can't compare to the classics like this...
+Rainbow Turtle I agree with you completely. This is very overlooked nowadays but it had the atmosphere you mentioned. A lot of it though is because the team behind also did "Mary Poppins" & "The Love Bug". The three of them had the same director.
Three of the best Disney films!
You said it.
So true
Modern Disney is just so dark
I always thought that the medieval imagery seen in the opening was a prophecy of the events that would come to happen in the film's storyline.
It is that litteraly ;)
It is.
Alex K Gee, do you think?
I got to see that Tapestry when my mom and I visited England back in 1999. GAHHH!!! Has it really been 20 years since then? Suddenly I feel so OLD! And I only just turned 35.
The Bayeux Tapestry also appears in the opening credits of "Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves".
I love that intro with medieval drawings
The special effects were by Alan Maley, Danny Lee, and Eustace Lycett.
0:37 from that moment to the TITLE.... MAGNIFICENT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I SIMPLY LOVE IT!!!!!!!
One of best openings ever!!! Up there with Mary Poppins and Wizard of Oz
@Hapa4life87 it was actually way better than Mary Poppins, yet, for some reason, has been forgotten as one of the classic family movies.
Honey these are my main movies!!!
Irwin Kostal was a composer, and so was Jerry Goldsmith.
Le générique du début laisse entrevoir tous les chapitres du film et surtout la fin génial sans tuer personne
For me, the greatest Disney life action ever!
Agree - way more entertaining than Mary Poppins.
Same here it has brought me back this memory while I have watched this since I was a teenager … It has always brings me back this best memory …. I have always loved watching Miss Eglantine Price ( Angela Lansbury -96/97 ) she is the best character of mine … She is the best Witch-In-Training … She is the best character of mine …. It has always brings me back the best memory …Because she is the best character of mine and I have supported her every step of my way. She will always be Miss Eglantine Price, Mrs .Potts and Ms Jessica Fletcher ( Bedknobs and Broomsticks 1971) #RestInPeaceMsLansbury 1933-2022 😢😢
j'adore une très bonne musique qui me rappelle que de bon souvenir :)
I love the u boat so much!!! It looks so good
This beautiful movie made my imagination even more colorful and the autism more bearable :)
1:08 💛
I'm autistic as well. When it came to this movie, I loved watching the first bed flying scene in the dark and letting the colors fly all over the room. ^_^
The intro as a kid creeped me out. Come to think of it, the movie creeped me out. Still very enjoyable!
Similar story to Mulan.
0:56 is always going to be my favourite and a total child hood memory
If you notice it's supposed to be like the bayeaux tapestry
Similar opening sequence near to Pete's Dragon.
Гениальный опенинг, однако! Спасибо что опубликовали отрывок из фильма, особенно с качественным звуком.
From 1:42 to 2:25 is my absolute favorite part, from this whole opening intro. The music and everything! Anyone else?
Oh yes Sr !!!
It’s like giving me Jungle Book opening vibes.
I remember m3 an my mum would watch this while wrapped in a duvet on the sofa eating biscuits. And i remember saying to my mum i want a nob like rhat for xmas lol
Absolutely
This was filmed during the 2nd World War in August 1940.
Grazie papà, mamma, Floriana e Serena di tutto
2:00 - 2:28 is absolutely my favourite part. Sublime composing and delivery by the conductor and orchestra.
Is that a bass flute playing the main melody at 01:44?
When I was small, watching this on VHS, I absolutely loved it - but I was terrified of all the suits of armour coming alive at the end. I would shout "the suits! The suits!" and run out of the room...
Disney's all time great epic film.
Love it.
RIP Angela Lansbury
1925-2022
She’s now reunited with most of the cast with the exception of the children.
@@declancolwell1241 Yeah
There should really be a nod to Irwin Kostal (the conductor) as well.
Arranger Irwin Kostal also arranged the musical scores for Mary Poppins, asd well as a number of stage musicals, including Fiorello!
@@rayfridley6649 Don't forget that he also conducted the Sound of Music!
@@synthonaplinth5980 And "West Side Story", "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" and the original "Pete's Dragon".
@@darthstarkiller1912 Wasn't 'West Side Story' conducted by Leonard Bernstein?
They don't make movies this good or with this special Disney feel anymore. I'm sad that kids today don't know something like this.
I love the opening! :)
Le auguro la buonanotte professoressa Florio grazie professoressa delle lezioni al liceo
My childhood:")
This always will be the best film I saw in the whole world!
Ciao a tutti gli stregoni
Buongiorno professoressa Florio e buon inizio settimana
No greater British film. Whoever thought to include the Bayeux Tapestry was a genius and more so a true Brit. Do not forget, we are Norman, and Anglo Saxon. That's enough.
1:36 to 1:41 is that bagpipes making that screechy sound? I fuckin love it! Plus that little elated musical break at 2:10 to 2:30 is so joyful I love it! Along with the rest of this fantastical movie!!!
Yes, Both of these parts were not from songs in the film. My guess they were just transitions for the next instrumental song in the intro or they were cut segments from the dances in Portobello Road.
Quando al liceo studiavo nel triennio la letteratura inglese
Back when all the credits were at the beginning of the movie.
Love the opening titles
Who here in 2024
Quando mamma ai tempi dell'asilo mi vestivi da Jolly
Still Beter then frozen
Okay
Way better
Take that back😡😡
Me trae bonito recuerdo
First
and thanks for the nostalgia
I've thought of a plot for a spiritual successor. "Magic Doorknobs and Flying Vacuums ". Taking place in the 90s in balkan eastern europe (could even do this as modern day ukraine since it's a very similar situation as BK&BST), a woman fosters a group of 3 siblings. she is a home grown witch, wanting to rebel against the occupation, as she learns her practice from an old tome she recently found. The children snoop the house and bust their hostess casting a spell to see what's happening in the rebellion (or war front). Additionally, she can't travel to the occupation zone, as she can't get her vacuum to fly properly because the hose keeps getting clogged. to keep her secret, she enchants a door knob that easily comes off the attic door with a warp spell similar to the bed of BK&BST. having to take care of the children, she is in search of the gentleman that the book dealer said that the tome came from. The gentleman is actually a recent university graduate who's father was a murdered sorcerer. With aligned goals, the graduate, the witch and the three children search for the other lost books, which were in a very heavily guarded state library taken over by either hostile occupation. after finding the books, the group is hassled by soldiers, and the youngest child thinks quickly as she realizes the knob screws onto a bolt of a drawer of a very large library table. she sets the path to a mystical land that she read in a book of fairytales she found in the library. they flee, without the graduate, who luckily escapes the building. The spell works on the table, only for the table to break as they land in a forest. they meet a sorceress who tries to trick them promising the main character to trade spells. The sorceress captures them, and her apprentice betrays the sorceress as the group again flees, this time on a carriage, and yes the knob somehow fits onto a screw in thee carriage. the apprentice somehow makes it into their world, only for everyone to find that chaos has broken out and the city is under siege or strict curfew. The apprentice helps the main character witch with her plan by teaching her a new spell. She also found a new vacuum from her neighbor's abandoned house. Surprise, the graduate was at the witch's home, looking for her and the children. United, the graduate, main character and apprentice go off to enchant mannequins, kitchen equipment and uniforms from stores & a local war museum to attack & scare off the occupiers. After the success, the main character tries to send the apprentice home, to no avail. The next morning, the news states that the occupiers have left. With nowhere to go, the apprentice becomes the main character's apprentice, and the main character adopts the children. The film starts to hint that they will live happily ever after, but then a cliffhanger, perhaps an airstrike siren goes off, and the apprentice and the witch look at each other, and say "let's go".
That's the same storyline as Bedknobs and Broomsticks.
Buonanotte alle famiglie Franciosa eh ragazzi Marco è bellissimo
i love this movie
THis was the first time I ever went to a cinema. Love it, just regrettably that the modern versions of it are all cut., mostly because no one seemed to have taken good care of the originals It is said they are all damaged
I thought they would cut the Nazi drawings out. But it all looks just like my copy, which was recorded off TCM a long time ago. My colors are much brighter - the rose is rose red, not brick red. The water is blue. I'm sorry for kids to today who have to watch ugly, muddy colors and edited films. (I am also watching it on an old analogue TV that always had bright colors.)
I would like to see a Broadway stage version of Bedknobs, with Angela Lansbury recreating the title role.
She's too old right now
@@jasminnemcdonald94A actually she passed away
Grazie di tutto Ivan
I loved this one it was funny may she rest in peace
Io, di questo film, mi ricordo solo l'inizio (e non il calcio, per cortesia!!!) e mi è venuto in mente...un gioco!
Buonanotte professoressa Florio
R.I.P.
Angela Lansbury
David Tomlinson
Quando mesi fa ti ho visto qui a Ferrara in centro e mi hai pure salutato portavi un giubbotto di pelle nera medico dello sport di Arezzo
That movie was made since my mother, Catherine Payn was 2 years old
Esta peli la mire cuendo era pequeño me gustaria saber en que canar la podria encontar completa
Buonanotte Floriana
Buonanotte professoressa Solimando
Grazie Ivan Morelli che al caffè Venezia in via Venezia a Pescara nel 2014 mi hai detto cose sugli ebrei che non sapevo
As Seen on Family Classics with Dean Richards
Ti auguro una buona serata Antonella Di Tonno
tapiserie de Bayeux in da house!
Buongiorno Iana
I have this entire song burned into my memory. I like how the opening is able to touch on different parts of the story but artsy enough to not give anything away. Maybe the Nazi part though...
Buonanotte alle famiglie Franciosa
A 1971 film set during the 2nd world war around August 1940. From Joe. X
There was another war story similar to this 1 during the 14th century in ancient China from 1998, Mulan. From Joe. X
Buonanotte Marco
What about sound start at 0.31? Help me please
bagpipes and fanfara ( an old form of trumpet )
New
This film made me a Eurosceptic from early childhood.
Is there any meaning to the red letters?
It’s an artistic interpretation of the Bayeux Tapestry, which also featured a distinctive red lettering
Un film che dal punto di vista storico non ho capito molto bene mi farebbe molto piacere Ivan Morelli rivedere questo film con te
Buonanotte Nicoula l'uomo che vorrebbe che portassi la barba
Une suite de l apprentie sorcière pour Disney est il prévue pourquoi pas la fille d églantine price ou sa petite fille ce serait genial
Dio Santo che tristezza la gente che per il mio aspetto mi paragona sempre ad un nazista della seconda guerra mondiale pure con questo film
After the success of Mary Poppins, this was sort of the sequel. Very entertainng Disney family movie.
The Term 'Spiritual Sucessor' applies here.
Quando Marco mi hai fatto vedere in foto il tuo gatto nero
Ciao Ivan Morelli
Buonanotte Ivan Morelli
Ah ma questo film l'ha girato Robert Stevenson il regista del film Herbie il maggiolino sempre più matto
Buonanotte Antonella Di Tonno
Everything proven vhs tapes don't stop playing at all it doesn't have picture quality problem's at all it's the people who is the problem
Sometimes they do. But they lasted more like thirty years than fifteen.
0.27 - 0.30 Song title please?
It’s a traditional Scottish highlanders’ bagpipe melody, which I think is known as the ‘Call to Arms’ or a title to that effect. The reason it appears in this film is because it’s an homage to the Scottish soldiery in the LDVs (later known as the Home Guard), which comprised the majority of the force since most Englishmen in the service were already deployed on various fronts throughout the world
@@peterweatherley7669 Thanks a lot for the answer 🔝
Unfortunately I've just searched the track and I haven' t found this melody 😥😥😥 It is very strange
Chissà perché già in quinta elementare i miei insegnanti di scuola non mi parlavano dei tedeschi
My buddy Brian Slott says to me
Go back to the farm Sheep
When I baa like a sheep
Cant believe walt was not around
Buonanotte medico dello sport di Arezzo se stai lavorando a quest'ora di notte ti auguro buon lavoro
Se sei già sveglia Antonella Di Tonno ti do il buongiorno e ti auguro un buon inizio settimana
For once une francaise/generique qui aime le titre