As most people recall from childhood, A.A.
Milne’s classic character Winnie the Pooh is a loveably simple bear who lives
in a fantasy realm called the Hundred Acre Wood. Along with animal friends
including Eeyore the Donkey, Kanga and her baby Roo, Owl, Piglet, and the
irrepressible Tigger—as well as human companion Christopher Robin—Pooh is the
device by which Milne told sweet stories about devotion, friendship, and love.
Given this combination of cute-animal whimsy and inspirational themes, Pooh was
a natural subject for cartoon adaptation by the Walt Disney Company. Disney
initially released three theatrical shorts, Winnie
the Pooh and the Honey Tree (1966), Winnie
the Pooh and the Blustery Day (1968), and Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too (1974), which were compiled—along
with a small amount of new material—for this feature.
Since Milne’s books were
anthologies, the compilation of the shorts works exceptionally well for The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh,
with one “chapter” flowing seamlessly into the next. Additionally, because the
vignettes integrate clever references to their literary sources—shifts between
scenes are often depicted by cutting to book pages featuring an illustration
that becomes the first shot of the next scene, and so on—The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh gracefully balances animated
entertainment with a visual celebration of reading. The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh is lovingly designed, with
gentle hand strokes visible in character delineation and wonderful washes of
color permeating backgrounds. (While Disney didn’t retain the exact character
designs from E.H. Shepard, who illustrated the original Pooh books, Disney’s
style honors the spirit of Shepard’s work.)
Predictably, the one area in which
Disney succumbs to sticky-sweet excess is sound, since the studio created the
aural aspect of the Hundred Acre Wood from scratch. Voice actor Sterling
Holloway incarnates Pooh as the spirit of childlike innocence, just as John
Fiedler (as Piglet) and Clint Howard (as Roo) personify adorableness with the
squeaky little voices they provide for their characters. (It helps that
narrator Sebastian Cabot provides a solidly adult sound for balance, and that
voice actor Paul Winchell, as Tigger, channels eccentricity and exuberance
instead of mere cuteness.) The music, by Mary
Poppins tunesmiths Richard Sherman and Robert Sherman, also registers quite
high on the glucose scale, especially with such silly wordplay as “Hip Hip
Pooh-Ray” (the title of one of the Shermans’ songs).
As for the “many
adventures” depicted in the film, they’re mostly slight contrivances designed
to showcase endearing characters. In order, Pooh gets into trouble while trying
to score his favorite snack, honey; the animals of the Hundred Acre Wood face a
torrential rainstorm; and Tigger makes mischief with his incessant bouncing.
Adults may find 74 minutes of this stuff a bit hard to take in one sitting, but
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
is about as edifying as children’s entertainment gets, in terms of exposing
young viewers to wholesome themes of belonging, community, and companionship.
The
Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh: GROOVY
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