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The Rescuers

The Rescuers is a 1977 American animated adventure comedy-drama film produced by Walt Disney Productions and released by Buena Vista Distribution. It is the 23rd Disney animated feature film. Bob Newhart and Eva Gabor respectively star as Bernard and Bianca, two mice who are members of the Rescue Aid Society, an international mouse organization dedicated to helping abduction victims around the world. Both must free young orphan Penny (voiced by Michelle Stacy) from two treasure hunters (played by Geraldine Page and Joe Flynn), who intend to use her to help them obtain a giant diamond. The film is based on a series of books by Margery Sharp, including The Rescuers (1959) and Miss Bianca (1962).

The Rescuers
Original theatrical release poster
Directed by
Story by
Based onThe Rescuers
Miss Bianca
by Margery Sharp
Produced by
  • Wolfgang Reitherman
Starring
Edited by
  • Jim Koford
  • James Melton
Music byArtie Butler
Production
company
Distributed byBuena Vista Distribution
Release date
  • June 22, 1977 (1977-06-22)
Running time
77 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$7.5 million
Box office$169 million[1]

The Rescuers entered development in 1962, but was shelved due to Walt Disney's dislike of the project's political overtones. During the 1970s, the film was revived as a project for the younger animators, but it was taken over by the senior animation staff following the release of Robin Hood (1973). Four years were spent working on the movie. The Rescuers was released on June 22, 1977, to positive critical reception and became a box office success, earning $48 million against a budget of $7.5 million during its initial theatrical run. It has since grossed a total of $169 million after two re-releases in 1983 and 1989. Due to the film's success, a sequel titled The Rescuers Down Under was released in 1990, which made this film the first Disney animated film to have a sequel.

Plot

In an abandoned riverboat in Devil's Bayou, Louisiana, a young orphan named Penny drops a message in a bottle, containing a plea for help, into the river. The Rescue Aid Society, an international mouse organization inside the United Nations, finds the bottle when it washes up in New York City. The Hungarian representative, Miss Bianca, volunteers to accept the case. She chooses Bernard, a stammering janitor, as her co-agent. The two visit Morningside Orphanage, where Penny lived, and meet an old cat named Rufus. He tells them about a woman named Madame Medusa who once tried to lure Penny into her car, prompting the mice to investigate her pawn shop for clues.

At the pawn shop, Bianca and Bernard discover that Medusa and her partner, Mr. Snoops, are searching for the world's largest diamond, the Devil's Eye. The mice learn that Medusa and Snoops are currently at the Devil's Bayou with Penny, whom they have kidnapped and placed under the guard of two trained crocodiles, Brutus and Nero. With the help of an albatross named Orville and a dragonfly named Evinrude, the mice follow Medusa to the bayou. There, they learn that Medusa plans to force Penny to enter a small blowhole that leads down into a blocked-off pirates' cave where the Devil's Eye is located.

Bernard and Bianca find Penny and devise a plan of escape. They send Evinrude to alert the local animals, who loathe Medusa, but Evinrude is delayed when he is forced to take shelter from a cloud of bats. The following morning, Medusa and Snoops send Penny down into the cave to find the gem. Unbeknownst to Medusa, Bianca and Bernard are hiding in Penny's dress pocket. The three soon find the Devil's Eye within a pirate skull. As Penny pries the mouth open with a sword, the mice push the gem through it, but soon the oceanic tide rises and floods the cave. The three barely manage to escape with the diamond.

Medusa betrays Snoops and hides the diamond in Penny's teddy bear, while holding Penny and Snoops at gunpoint. When she trips over a cable set as a trap by Bernard and Bianca, Medusa loses the bear and the diamond to Penny, who runs away with them. The local animals arrive at the riverboat and aid Bernard and Bianca in trapping Brutus and Nero, then set off Mr. Snoops's fireworks to create more chaos. Meanwhile, Penny and the mice commandeer Medusa's swamp-mobile, a makeshift airboat. Medusa unsuccessfully pursues them, using Brutus and Nero as water-skis. As the riverboat sinks from the fireworks' damage, Medusa crashes and is left clinging to the boat's smoke stacks. Mr. Snoops escapes on a raft and laughs at her, while the irritated Brutus and Nero turn on her and circle below.

Back in New York City, the Rescue Aid Society watch a news report of how Penny found the Devil's Eye, which has been given to the Smithsonian Institution. It also mentions she has been adopted. The meeting is interrupted when Evinrude arrives with a call for help, sending Bernard and Bianca on a new adventure.

Cast

  • Bob Newhart as Bernard, Rescue Aid Society's timid janitor, who reluctantly tags along with Miss Bianca on her journey to the Devil's Bayou to rescue Penny. He is highly superstitious about the number 13 and dislikes flying (the latter being a personality trait of Newhart).
  • Eva Gabor as Miss Bianca, the Hungarian representative of the Rescue Aid Society. She is sophisticated and adventurous, and fond of Bernard, choosing him as her co-agent as she sets out to rescue Penny. Her Hungarian nationality was derived from that of her voice actress.
  • Geraldine Page as Madame Medusa, a greedy, redheaded, wicked pawn-shop owner. Upon discovering the Devil's Eye diamond hidden in a blowhole, she kidnaps the small orphan, Penny, to retrieve it for her, as Penny is the only one small enough to fit in it. She has two pet crocodiles, who turn on her after she is thwarted by Bernard, Bianca, and Penny.
  • Joe Flynn as Mr. Snoops, Medusa's clumsy and incompetent business partner, who obeys his boss's orders to steal the Devil's Eye in exchange for half of it. Upon being betrayed by Medusa, however, he turns on her and flees by raft, laughing at her. This was Flynn's final role, with the film being released after his death in 1974.
  • Jeanette Nolan as Ellie Mae and Pat Buttram as Luke, two muskrats who reside in a Southern-style home on a patch of land in Devil's Bayou. Luke drinks very strong, homemade liquor, which is used to help Bernard and Evinrude regain energy when they need it. Its most important usage is for fuel for powering Medusa's swamp-mobile in the film's climax.
  • Jim Jordan as Orville (named after Orville Wright of the Wright brothers, the inventors of the airplane; most likely influenced from Bob Newhart's stand-up sketch "Merchandising the Wright Brothers"), an albatross who gives Bernard and Bianca a ride to Devil's Bayou. Jordan, 80 years old by the time the film was completed, had been lured out of retirement and had not performed since the death of his wife and comic partner Marian in 1961; it would serve as Jordan's last public performance.
  • John McIntire as Rufus, an elderly cat who resides at Morningside Orphanage and comforts Penny when she is sad. Although his time onscreen is rather brief, he provides the film's most important theme, faith. He was designed by animator Ollie Johnston, who retired after the film following a 40-year career with Disney.
  • Michelle Stacy as Penny, a lonely six-year-old orphan girl, residing at Morningside Orphanage in New York City. She is kidnapped by Medusa in an attempt to retrieve the world's largest diamond, the Devil's Eye.
  • Bernard Fox as Mr. Chairman, the chairman to the Rescue Aid Society.
  • Larry Clemmons as Gramps, a grumpy, yet kind old turtle who carries a brown cane.
  • James MacDonald as Evinrude (named after a brand of outboard motors), a dragonfly who mans a leaf boat across Devil's Bayou, giving Bernard and Miss Bianca a ride across the swamp waters.
  • George Lindsey as Deadeye, a fisher rabbit who is one of Luke and Ellie Mae's friends.
  • Bill McMillian as TV Announcer
  • Dub Taylor as Digger, a mole.
  • John Fiedler as Deacon Owl

Production

In 1959, the book The Rescuers by Margery Sharp had been published to considerable success. In 1962, Sharp followed up with a sequel titled Miss Bianca. That same year, the books were optioned by Walt Disney, who began developing an animated film adaptation. In January 1963, story artist Otto Englander wrote a treatment based on the first book, centering on a Norwegian poet unfairly imprisoned in a Siberia-like stronghold known as the Black Castle. The story was revised with the location changed to Cuba, in which the mice would help the poet escape into the United States. However, as the story became overtly involved in international intrigue, Disney shelved the project as he was unhappy with the political overtones.[2] In August 1968, Englander wrote another treatment featuring Bernard and Bianca rescuing Richard the Lionheart during the Middle Ages.[3]

A total of four years were spent working on The Rescuers, which was made on a budget of $7.5 million.[4] After being revived during the early 1970s as a project for the young animators, led by Don Bluth, the studio would alternate between full-scale "A pictures" and smaller, scaled-back "B pictures" with simpler animation. The animators had selected the most recent book, Miss Bianca in the Antarctic, to adapt from. The new story involved a King penguin deceiving a captured polar bear into performing in shows aboard a schooner, causing the unsatisfied bear to place a bottle that would reach the mice.[5] This version of the story was later dropped because Fred Lucky, a storyboard artist, explained that the Arctic setting "was too stark a background for the animators."[5] Mattinson later explained, "Our problem was that the penguin wasn't formidable or evil enough for the audience to believe he would dominate the big bear. We struggled with that for a year or so. We changed the locale to somewhere in America and it was now a regular zoo and we tried to come up with something with the bear in the zoo and needing to be rescued but that didn't work either."[citation needed]

In that version, the bear character was still retained, but was renamed Louie the Bear. Jazz singer Louis Prima was cast in the role and had recorded most of the dialogue and multiple songs that were composed by Floyd Huddleston.[6] The writers also expanded the role of his best friend, Gus the Lion.[7] Huddleston had stated, "It's about two animals. One is Louis Prima — he's the polar bear — and Redd Foxx is the lion ...Louis gets cornered into leaving and going to the South Pole where he can make himself a bigger star. But he gets homesick; he feels fooled. They send out little mice as 'rescuers'."[8] According to storyboard artist Vance Gerry, director Wolfgang Reitherman had stated, "'It's too complicated. I want a simple story: A little girl gets kidnapped and the mice try to get her back, period.'"[9] By November 1973, the role of Louie the Bear had been heavily scaled back and then eliminated.[7] In one version, the bear was meant to be Bernard and Bianca's connection to Penny. Gerry explained, "We developed the sequence where, while the two mice are searching for clues as to where Penny has been taken, they come across this bear who she had been friends with because the orphanage where Penny was living was near the zoo."[citation needed] In the final film, the idea was reduced to a simple scene where Bernard enters a zoo and hears a lion's roar that scares him away.[citation needed]

 
Penny struggles to free the Devil's Eye diamond from a pirate's skull; the filmmakers carefully designed every shot of the scene to raise the tension.[10]

In Europe, while promoting the release of Robin Hood (1973), Reitherman stated: "I took Margery Sharp's books along and there was in there a mean woman in a crystal palace. When I got back I called some of the guys together and I said, 'We've got to get a villain in this thing.'"[3] The villainess and her motive to steal a diamond was adapted from the Diamond Duchess in Miss Bianca. The setting was then changed to the bayous found in the Southern United States.[11] By August 1973, the villainess was named the Grand Duchess with Phyllis Diller cast in the role.[7] A month later, conceptual artist Ken Anderson began depicting Cruella de Vil, the villainess from One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961), as the main antagonist of the film.[7][12] Anderson had drawn several sketches of Cruella de Vil sporting alligator-leathered chic attire and sunglasses; one sketch depicted her wearing bell-bottom pants and platform shoes.[13] However, several staff members such as animator Ollie Johnston stated it felt wrong to attempt a sequel for the character.[14] Furthermore, Mattinson explained that Milt Kahl did not want to animate Cruella de Vil. "Milt, of course, was very strong against that, 'Oh, no no. We're gonna have a new character. I'm not gonna do Cruella'," Mattinson recalled, "Because he felt that Marc [Davis had animated] Cruella beautifully. He was not gonna go and take his character."[12]

The new version of the character was renamed Madame Medusa, and her appearance was based on Kahl's then-wife, Phyllis Bounds (who was the niece of Lillian Disney), whom he divorced in 1978.[15] This was Kahl's last film for the studio, and he wanted his final character to be his best. He was so insistent on perfecting Madame Medusa that he ended up doing almost all the animation for the character himself.[16] The kidnapped child Penny was inspired by Patience, the orphan in the novel. The alligator characters Brutus and Nero was based on the two bloodhounds, Tyrant and Torment, in the novels. For the henchman, the filmmakers adapted the character, Mandrake, into Mr. Snoops. His appearance was caricatured from John Culhane, a journalist, who had been interviewing animators at the Disney studios.[14][17] Culhane claimed he was practically tricked into posing for various reactions, and his movements were imitated on Mr. Snoops's model sheet. However, he stated, "Becoming a Disney character was beyond my wildest dreams of glory."[18]

Also, the writers had considered developing Bernard and Bianca into married professional detectives, though they decided that leaving the characters as unmarried novices was more romantic.[11] For the supporting characters, a pint-sized swamp mobile for the mice—a leaf powered by a dragonfly—was created. As they developed the comedic potential of displaying his exhaustion through buzzing, the dragonfly grew from an incidental into a major character.[5] Veteran sound effects artist and voice actor Jimmy MacDonald came out of retirement to provide the effects.[19] Additionally, the local swamp creatures were originally written as a dedicated home guard that drilled and marched incessantly. However, the writers rewrote them into a volunteer group of helpful little bayou creatures. Their leader, a singing bullfrog, voiced by Phil Harris, was deleted from the film.[20] A pigeon was originally proposed to serve as transportation for Bernard and Bianca until Johnston remembered a True-Life Adventures episode that featured albatrosses and their clumsy take-offs and landings. He then suggested the ungainly bird instead.[21]

On February 13, 1976, co-director John Lounsbery died of a heart attack during production. Art Stevens, an animator, was then selected as the new co-director.[22]

Animation

After the commercial success of The Aristocats (1970), then-vice president Ron Miller pledged that new animators should be hired to ensure "a continuity of quality Disney animated films for another generation." Eric Larson, one of the "Nine Old Men" animators, scouted for potential artists who were studying at art schools and colleges throughout the United States. More than 60 artists were brought into the training program.[23] Then, the selected trainees were to create a black-and-white animation test, which were reviewed at the end of the month. The process would continue for several months, in which the few finalists were first employed as in-betweeners working only on nights and weekends.[24] By 1977, more than 25 artists were hired during the training program.[25] Among those selected were Glen Keane, Ron Clements, and Andy Gaskill, all of whom would play crucial roles in the Disney Renaissance.[26] Because of this, The Rescuers was the first collaboration between the newly recruited trainees and the senior animators.[25] It would also mark the last joint effort by Milt Kahl, Ollie Johnston, and Frank Thomas, and the first Disney film Don Bluth had worked on as a directing animator, instead of as an assistant animator.[21]

Ever since One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961), animation for theatrical Disney animated films had been done by xerography, which had only been able to produce black outlines. By the time The Rescuers was in production, the technology had been improved for the cel artists to use a medium-grey toner in order to create a softer-looking line.[27]

Music

The Rescuers
Soundtrack album Vinyl LP by
Released1977
Recorded1974–1977
LabelDisneyland
ProducerArtie Butler
Walt Disney Animation Studios chronology

The songwriting team of Carol Connors and Ayn Robbins first met in 1973 on a double date. Before then, Connors had co-composed and sang successful songs such as "To Know Him Is to Love Him" and "Hey Little Cobra" with the Teddy Bears. Meanwhile, Robbins worked as a personal secretary to actors George Kennedy and Eva Gabor and wrote unpublished poetry. On their first collaboration, they composed eleven songs for a Christmas show for an unproduced animated film. In spite of this, they were offered an interview from Walt Disney Productions to compose songs for The Rescuers. Describing their collaborative process, Robbins noted "...Carol plays the piano and I play the pencil."[28] During production, both women were nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song for "Gonna Fly Now" from Rocky (1976) with Bill Conti.[29]

Additionally, Connors and Robbins collaborated with composer Sammy Fain on the song, "Someone's Waiting for You". Most of the songs they had written for the film were performed by Shelby Flint.[29] Also, for the first time since Bambi (1942), all the most prominent songs were sung as part of a narrative, as opposed to by the film's characters as in most Disney animated films.

Songs

Original songs performed in the film include:

No.TitlePerformer(s)Length
1."The Journey"Shelby Flint 
2."Rescue Aid Society"Robie Lester, Bob Newhart, Bernard Fox & the Disney Studio Chorus 
3."Tomorrow is Another Day"Shelby Flint 
4."Someone's Waiting for You"Shelby Flint 
5."Tomorrow is Another Day (Reprise)"Shelby Flint 

Songs heard in the film but not released on the soundtrack include:

  • "Faith is a Bluebird" – Although not an actual song, it is a poem recited by Rufus and partially by Penny in a flashback the old cat has to when he last saw the small orphan girl, and comforted her through the poem, about having faith. The titular bluebird that appears in this sequence originally appeared in Alice in Wonderland (1951).
  • "The U.S. Air Force" – Serves as the leitmotif for Orville.
  • "For Penny's a Jolly Good Fellow" – Sung by the orphan children at the end of the film, as a variation of the song "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow".

Release

On June 19, 1977, The Rescuers premiered at the AFI Silver Theatre in Washington, D.C.[30] During the film's initial theatrical run, the film was released as a double feature with the live-action nature documentary film, A Tale of Two Critters.[31] On December 16, 1983, The Rescuers was re-released to theaters accompanied with the new Mickey Mouse featurette, Mickey's Christmas Carol, which marked the character's first theatrical appearance after a 30-year absence. In anticipation of its upcoming theatrically released sequel in 1990, The Rescuers Down Under, The Rescuers saw another successful theatrical run on March 17, 1989.

Marketing

To tie in with the film's 25th anniversary, The Rescuers debuted in the Walt Disney Classics Collection line in 2002, with three different figures featuring three of the film's characters, as well as the opening title scroll. The three figures were sculpted by Dusty Horner and they were: Brave Bianca, featuring Miss Bianca the heroine and priced at $75,[32] Bold Bernard, featuring hero Bernard, priced also at $75[33] and Evinrude Base, featuring Evinrude the dragonfly and priced at $85.[32] The title scroll featuring the film's name, The Rescuers, and from the opening song sequence, "The Journey," was priced at $30. All figures were retired in March 2005, except for the opening title scroll which was suspended in December 2012.[32]

The Rescuers was the inspiration for another Walt Disney Classics Collection figure in 2003. Ken Melton was the sculptor of Teddy Goes With Me, My Dear, a limited-edition, 8-inch sculpture featuring the evil Madame Medusa, the orphan girl Penny, her teddy bear "Teddy" and the Devil's Eye diamond. Exactly 1,977 of these sculptures were made, in reference to the film's release year, 1977. The sculpture was priced at $299 and instantly declared retired in 2003.[33]

In November 2008, a sixth sculpture inspired by the film was released. Made with pewter and resin, Cleared For Take Off introduced the character of Orville into the collection and featured Bernard and Bianca a second time. The piece, inspired by Orville's take-off scene in the film, was sculpted by Ruben Procopio.[34]

Home media

The Rescuers premiered on VHS and LaserDisc on September 18, 1992 as part of the Walt Disney Classics series. The release went into moratorium on April 30, 1993.[35] It was re-released on VHS as part of the Walt Disney Masterpiece Collection on January 5, 1999, but was recalled three days later and reissued on March 23, 1999 (see "Nudity scandal").

The Rescuers was released on DVD on May 20, 2003, as a standard edition, which was discontinued in November 2011.[citation needed]

On August 21, 2012, a 35th-anniversary edition of The Rescuers was released on Blu-ray alongside its sequel in a "2-Movie Collection".[36][37]

Nudity scandal

 
One of the frozen frames containing a picture of a topless woman in the window

On January 8, 1999, three days after the film's second release on home video, The Walt Disney Company announced a recall of about 3.4 million copies of the videotapes because there was an objectionable image in one of the film's backgrounds.[38][39][40][41]

The image in question is a blurry image of a topless woman with breasts and nipples showing. The image appears twice in non-consecutive frames during the scene in which Miss Bianca and Bernard are flying on Orville's back through New York City. The two images could not be seen in ordinary viewing because the film runs too fast—at 24 frames per second.[42]

On January 10, 1999, two days after the recall was announced, the London newspaper The Independent reported:

A Disney spokeswoman said that the images in The Rescuers were placed in the film during post-production, but she declined to say what they were or who placed them... The company said the aim of the recall was to keep its promise to families that they can trust and rely on the Disney brand to provide the best in family entertainment.[43]

The Rescuers home video was reissued on March 23, 1999, with the inappropriate nudity edited and blocked out.

Reception

Box office

The Rescuers was successful upon its original theatrical release earning worldwide gross rentals of $48 million at the box office.[44][45] During its initial release in France, it out-grossed Star Wars (1977) receiving admissions of $7.2 million.[46] The film also became the highest-grossing film in West Germany at the time with admissions of 9.7 million.[47][48] By the end of its theatrical run, the distributor rentals amounted to $19 million in the United States and Canada while its international rentals totaled $41 million.[49]

The Rescuers was re-released in 1983 in which it grossed $21 million domestically. The film was again re-released in 1989 and grossed $21.2 million domestically. In its total lifetime domestic gross, the film has grossed $71.2 million,[50] and its total lifetime worldwide gross is $169 million.[1]

Critical reaction

The Rescuers was said to be Disney's greatest film since Mary Poppins (1964), and seemed to signal a new golden age for Disney animation.[51] Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times praised the film as "the best feature-length animated film from Disney in a decade or more—the funniest, the most inventive, the least self-conscious, the most coherent, and moving from start to finish, and probably most important of all, it is also the most touching in that unique way fantasy has of carrying vibrations of real life and real feelings."[52] Gary Arnold of The Washington Post wrote the film "is one of the most rousing and appealing animated features ever made by the Disney studio. The last production for several members of the original feature animation unit assembled by Walt Disney in the late '30s, the film is both a triumphant swan song and gladdening act of regeneration."[53] Dave Kehr of The Chicago Reader praised the film as "a beautifully crafted and wonderfully expressive cartoon feature," calling it "genuinely funny and touching."[54] Variety magazine wrote the film was "the best work by Disney animators in many years, restoring the craft to its former glories. In addition, it has a more adventurous approach to color and background stylization than previous Disney efforts have displayed, with a delicate pastel palette used to wide-ranging effect."[4]

Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote that the film "doesn't belong in the same category as the great Disney cartoon features (Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs, Bambi, Fantasia) but it's a reminder of a kind of slickly cheerful, animated entertainment that has become all but extinct."[55] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film two-and-a-half stars out of four writing, "To see any Disney animated film these days is to compare it with Disney classics released 30 or 40 years ago. Judged against Pinocchio, for example. The Rescuers is lightweight, indeed. Its themes are forgettable. It's mostly an adventure story."[31] TV Guide gave the film three stars out of five, opining that The Rescuers "is a beautifully animated film that showed Disney still knew a lot about making quality children's fare even as their track record was weakening." They also praised the voice acting of the characters, and stated that the film is "a delight for children as well as adults who appreciate good animation and brisk storytelling."[56] Ellen MacKay of Common Sense Media gave the film four out of five stars, writing, "Great adventure, but too dark for preschoolers".[57]

In his book, The Disney Films, film historian Leonard Maltin refers to The Rescuers as "a breath of fresh air for everyone who had been concerned about the future of animation at Walt Disney's," praises its "humor and imagination and [that it is] expertly woven into a solid story structure [...] with a delightful cast of characters." Finally, he declares the film "the most satisfying animated feature to come from the studio since 101 Dalmatians." He also briefly mentions the ease with which the film surpassed other animated films of its time.[58] The film's own animators Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston stated on their website that The Rescuers had been their return to a film with heart and also considered it their best film without Walt Disney.[59] The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported that the film received a 79% approval rating, with an average rating of 6.5/10 based on 33 reviews. The website's consensus states: "Featuring superlative animation, off-kilter characters, and affectionate voice work by Bob Newhart and Eva Gabor, The Rescuers represents a bright spot in Disney's post-golden age."[60] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 74 out of 100 based on 8 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[61]

Jack Shaheen, in his study of Hollywood portrayals and stereotypes of Arabs, noted the inclusion of delegates from Arab countries in the Rescue Aid Society.[62]

Accolades

Award Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
Academy Awards Best Original Song "Someone's Waiting for You"
Music by Sammy Fain;
Lyrics by Carol Connors and Ayn Robbins
Nominated [63]
National Board of Review Awards Special Citation Won [64]

In 2008, the American Film Institute nominated The Rescuers for its Top 10 Animated Films list.[65]

Legacy

Bernard and Bianca made appearances as meet-and-greet characters at Walt Disney World and Disneyland in the years following the original film's release. While they currently do not make regular appearances at the American parks, both continue to appear regularly at Tokyo Disney Resort. In 2024 both characters are set to appear as figures in the upcoming Tiana's Bayou Adventure ride (based on the 2009 film The Princess and the Frog) in Critter Country at Disneyland and Frontierland at Walt Disney World. [66]

In the Disney Infinity video games, Medusa's Swamp Mobile was introduced as a vehicle in Disney Infinity 2.0.[67]

In the world builder video game Disney Magic Kingdoms, Bernard, Miss Bianca, Penny, Madame Medusa, and Orville appear as playable characters in the main storyline of the game, along with The Rescue Aid Society and Madame Medusa's Riverboat as attractions.[68][69][70]

Sequel

The Rescuers was the first Disney animated film to have a sequel. After three successful theatrical releases of the original film, The Rescuers Down Under was released theatrically on November 16, 1990.

The Rescuers Down Under takes place in the Australian Outback, and involves Bernard and Bianca trying to rescue a boy named Cody and a giant golden eagle called Marahute from a greedy poacher named Percival C. McLeach. Both Bob Newhart and Eva Gabor reprised their lead roles. Since Jim Jordan, who had voiced Orville, had since died, a new character, Wilbur (Orville's brother, another albatross), was created and voiced by John Candy.

See also

References

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  2. ^ Koenig 1997, pp. 153–154.
  3. ^ a b Ghez 2019, p. 49.
  4. ^ a b "Film Reviews: The Rescuers". Variety. June 15, 1977. Retrieved February 12, 2016.
  5. ^ a b c Koenig 1997, p. 154.
  6. ^ Beck, Jerry (August 15, 2011). "Lost Louis Prima Disney Song". Cartoon Brew. Retrieved December 10, 2012.
  7. ^ a b c d Solomon 2008, p. 9.
  8. ^ Rogers, Tom (February 24, 1974). "Floyd Huddleston Turns 'Love' Into Oscar Bid". The Tennessean. p. 8. Retrieved January 28, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.  
  9. ^ Renault 1998, p. 336.
  10. ^ Knowles, Rebecca; Bunyan, Dan (2002). "Animal Heroes". Disney: The Ultimate Visual Guide. Dorling Kindersley. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-789488-62-6.
  11. ^ a b Koenig 1997, p. 155.
  12. ^ a b Ghez 2019, p. 51.
  13. ^ Doty, Meriah (February 10, 2015). "Cruella de Vil's Comeback That Wasn't: See Long-Lost Sketches of Iconic Villain in 'The Rescuers' (Exclusive)". Yahoo! Movies. Retrieved February 28, 2015.
  14. ^ a b Beck, Jerry (2005). The Animated Movie Guide. Chicago Review Press. p. 225. ISBN 978-1-556525-91-9. Retrieved February 28, 2015 – via Google Books.
  15. ^ Canemaker 2001, p. 156.
  16. ^ . Disney Archives: Villains. Archived from the original on March 2, 2011. Retrieved April 23, 2009.
  17. ^ . Disney.go.com. Archived from the original on April 8, 2009. Retrieved April 12, 2009.
  18. ^ Johnston, Ollie; Thomas, Frank (1993). "The Rescuers". The Disney Villain. Disney Editions. pp. 156–163. ISBN 978-1-562-82792-2.
  19. ^ "Obituaries: James MacDonald". Variety. February 17, 1991. Retrieved February 28, 2015.
  20. ^ Koenig 1997, p. 156.
  21. ^ a b Thomas, Bob (1991). "Carrying on the Tradition". Disney's Art of Animation: From Mickey Mouse to Beauty and the Beast. New York: Hyperion. pp. 111–112. ISBN 1-56282-899-1.
  22. ^ Canemaker 2001, pp. 260–261.
  23. ^ Culhane, John (August 1, 1976). "The Old Disney Magic". The New York Times. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  24. ^ Canemaker 2001, pp. 76–77.
  25. ^ a b Canemaker 2001, p. 79.
  26. ^ Finch, Christopher (1988). "Chapter 9: The End of an Era". The Art of Walt Disney: From Mickey Mouse to the Magic Kingdoms. Portland House. p. 260. ISBN 978-0-517664-74-2.
  27. ^ Deja, Andreas (May 20, 2014). "Deja View: Xerox". Deja View. Retrieved February 28, 2015 – via Blogger.
  28. ^ "Song Team Debuts". Playground Daily News. July 28, 1977. p. 20. Retrieved October 17, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
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Bibliography

  • Canemaker, John (2001). Walt Disney's Nine Old Men and the Art of Animation. New York: Disney Editions. ISBN 978-0-7868-6496-6.
  • Ghez, Didier (2019). They Drew as They Pleased Vol. 5: The Hidden Art of Disney's Early Renaissance. Chronicle Books. ISBN 978-1-7972-0410-9.
  • Koenig, David (1997). "The Rescuers". Mouse Under Glass: Secrets of Disney Animation & Theme Parks. Irvine, California: Bonaventure Press. pp. 153–161. ISBN 978-0-9640-6051-7.
  • Renault, Christian (1998). "Vance Gerry (1929–2005)". In Ghez, Didier (ed.). Walt's People: Volume 5 — Talking Disney with the Artists Who Knew Him. Theme Park Press. ISBN 978-1-6839-0011-5.
  • Solomon, Charles (2008). Disney Lost and Found: Exploring the Hidden Artwork from Never-Produced Animation. New York: Disney Editions. ISBN 978-1-4231-1601-1.

Further reading

  • Korkis, Jim (January 19, 2022). "Remembering the Rescuers". Mouse Planet.

External links

rescuers, other, uses, disambiguation, 1977, american, animated, adventure, comedy, drama, film, produced, walt, disney, productions, released, buena, vista, distribution, 23rd, disney, animated, feature, film, newhart, gabor, respectively, star, bernard, bian. For other uses see The Rescuers disambiguation The Rescuers is a 1977 American animated adventure comedy drama film produced by Walt Disney Productions and released by Buena Vista Distribution It is the 23rd Disney animated feature film Bob Newhart and Eva Gabor respectively star as Bernard and Bianca two mice who are members of the Rescue Aid Society an international mouse organization dedicated to helping abduction victims around the world Both must free young orphan Penny voiced by Michelle Stacy from two treasure hunters played by Geraldine Page and Joe Flynn who intend to use her to help them obtain a giant diamond The film is based on a series of books by Margery Sharp including The Rescuers 1959 and Miss Bianca 1962 The RescuersOriginal theatrical release posterDirected byWolfgang Reitherman John Lounsbery Art StevensStory byLarry Clemmons Vance Gerry Ken Anderson Frank Thomas Burny Mattinson Fred Lucky Dick Sebast David Michener Ted BermanBased onThe RescuersMiss Biancaby Margery SharpProduced byWolfgang ReithermanStarringBob Newhart Eva Gabor Joe Flynn Geraldine PageEdited byJim Koford James MeltonMusic byArtie ButlerProductioncompanyWalt Disney ProductionsDistributed byBuena Vista DistributionRelease dateJune 22 1977 1977 06 22 Running time77 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 7 5 millionBox office 169 million 1 The Rescuers entered development in 1962 but was shelved due to Walt Disney s dislike of the project s political overtones During the 1970s the film was revived as a project for the younger animators but it was taken over by the senior animation staff following the release of Robin Hood 1973 Four years were spent working on the movie The Rescuers was released on June 22 1977 to positive critical reception and became a box office success earning 48 million against a budget of 7 5 million during its initial theatrical run It has since grossed a total of 169 million after two re releases in 1983 and 1989 Due to the film s success a sequel titled The Rescuers Down Under was released in 1990 which made this film the first Disney animated film to have a sequel Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Animation 4 Music 4 1 Songs 5 Release 5 1 Marketing 5 2 Home media 5 2 1 Nudity scandal 6 Reception 6 1 Box office 6 2 Critical reaction 6 3 Accolades 7 Legacy 8 Sequel 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksPlotIn an abandoned riverboat in Devil s Bayou Louisiana a young orphan named Penny drops a message in a bottle containing a plea for help into the river The Rescue Aid Society an international mouse organization inside the United Nations finds the bottle when it washes up in New York City The Hungarian representative Miss Bianca volunteers to accept the case She chooses Bernard a stammering janitor as her co agent The two visit Morningside Orphanage where Penny lived and meet an old cat named Rufus He tells them about a woman named Madame Medusa who once tried to lure Penny into her car prompting the mice to investigate her pawn shop for clues At the pawn shop Bianca and Bernard discover that Medusa and her partner Mr Snoops are searching for the world s largest diamond the Devil s Eye The mice learn that Medusa and Snoops are currently at the Devil s Bayou with Penny whom they have kidnapped and placed under the guard of two trained crocodiles Brutus and Nero With the help of an albatross named Orville and a dragonfly named Evinrude the mice follow Medusa to the bayou There they learn that Medusa plans to force Penny to enter a small blowhole that leads down into a blocked off pirates cave where the Devil s Eye is located Bernard and Bianca find Penny and devise a plan of escape They send Evinrude to alert the local animals who loathe Medusa but Evinrude is delayed when he is forced to take shelter from a cloud of bats The following morning Medusa and Snoops send Penny down into the cave to find the gem Unbeknownst to Medusa Bianca and Bernard are hiding in Penny s dress pocket The three soon find the Devil s Eye within a pirate skull As Penny pries the mouth open with a sword the mice push the gem through it but soon the oceanic tide rises and floods the cave The three barely manage to escape with the diamond Medusa betrays Snoops and hides the diamond in Penny s teddy bear while holding Penny and Snoops at gunpoint When she trips over a cable set as a trap by Bernard and Bianca Medusa loses the bear and the diamond to Penny who runs away with them The local animals arrive at the riverboat and aid Bernard and Bianca in trapping Brutus and Nero then set off Mr Snoops s fireworks to create more chaos Meanwhile Penny and the mice commandeer Medusa s swamp mobile a makeshift airboat Medusa unsuccessfully pursues them using Brutus and Nero as water skis As the riverboat sinks from the fireworks damage Medusa crashes and is left clinging to the boat s smoke stacks Mr Snoops escapes on a raft and laughs at her while the irritated Brutus and Nero turn on her and circle below Back in New York City the Rescue Aid Society watch a news report of how Penny found the Devil s Eye which has been given to the Smithsonian Institution It also mentions she has been adopted The meeting is interrupted when Evinrude arrives with a call for help sending Bernard and Bianca on a new adventure CastBob Newhart as Bernard Rescue Aid Society s timid janitor who reluctantly tags along with Miss Bianca on her journey to the Devil s Bayou to rescue Penny He is highly superstitious about the number 13 and dislikes flying the latter being a personality trait of Newhart Eva Gabor as Miss Bianca the Hungarian representative of the Rescue Aid Society She is sophisticated and adventurous and fond of Bernard choosing him as her co agent as she sets out to rescue Penny Her Hungarian nationality was derived from that of her voice actress Geraldine Page as Madame Medusa a greedy redheaded wicked pawn shop owner Upon discovering the Devil s Eye diamond hidden in a blowhole she kidnaps the small orphan Penny to retrieve it for her as Penny is the only one small enough to fit in it She has two pet crocodiles who turn on her after she is thwarted by Bernard Bianca and Penny Joe Flynn as Mr Snoops Medusa s clumsy and incompetent business partner who obeys his boss s orders to steal the Devil s Eye in exchange for half of it Upon being betrayed by Medusa however he turns on her and flees by raft laughing at her This was Flynn s final role with the film being released after his death in 1974 Jeanette Nolan as Ellie Mae and Pat Buttram as Luke two muskrats who reside in a Southern style home on a patch of land in Devil s Bayou Luke drinks very strong homemade liquor which is used to help Bernard and Evinrude regain energy when they need it Its most important usage is for fuel for powering Medusa s swamp mobile in the film s climax Jim Jordan as Orville named after Orville Wright of the Wright brothers the inventors of the airplane most likely influenced from Bob Newhart s stand up sketch Merchandising the Wright Brothers an albatross who gives Bernard and Bianca a ride to Devil s Bayou Jordan 80 years old by the time the film was completed had been lured out of retirement and had not performed since the death of his wife and comic partner Marian in 1961 it would serve as Jordan s last public performance John McIntire as Rufus an elderly cat who resides at Morningside Orphanage and comforts Penny when she is sad Although his time onscreen is rather brief he provides the film s most important theme faith He was designed by animator Ollie Johnston who retired after the film following a 40 year career with Disney Michelle Stacy as Penny a lonely six year old orphan girl residing at Morningside Orphanage in New York City She is kidnapped by Medusa in an attempt to retrieve the world s largest diamond the Devil s Eye Bernard Fox as Mr Chairman the chairman to the Rescue Aid Society Larry Clemmons as Gramps a grumpy yet kind old turtle who carries a brown cane James MacDonald as Evinrude named after a brand of outboard motors a dragonfly who mans a leaf boat across Devil s Bayou giving Bernard and Miss Bianca a ride across the swamp waters George Lindsey as Deadeye a fisher rabbit who is one of Luke and Ellie Mae s friends Bill McMillian as TV Announcer Dub Taylor as Digger a mole John Fiedler as Deacon OwlProductionIn 1959 the book The Rescuers by Margery Sharp had been published to considerable success In 1962 Sharp followed up with a sequel titled Miss Bianca That same year the books were optioned by Walt Disney who began developing an animated film adaptation In January 1963 story artist Otto Englander wrote a treatment based on the first book centering on a Norwegian poet unfairly imprisoned in a Siberia like stronghold known as the Black Castle The story was revised with the location changed to Cuba in which the mice would help the poet escape into the United States However as the story became overtly involved in international intrigue Disney shelved the project as he was unhappy with the political overtones 2 In August 1968 Englander wrote another treatment featuring Bernard and Bianca rescuing Richard the Lionheart during the Middle Ages 3 A total of four years were spent working on The Rescuers which was made on a budget of 7 5 million 4 After being revived during the early 1970s as a project for the young animators led by Don Bluth the studio would alternate between full scale A pictures and smaller scaled back B pictures with simpler animation The animators had selected the most recent book Miss Bianca in the Antarctic to adapt from The new story involved a King penguin deceiving a captured polar bear into performing in shows aboard a schooner causing the unsatisfied bear to place a bottle that would reach the mice 5 This version of the story was later dropped because Fred Lucky a storyboard artist explained that the Arctic setting was too stark a background for the animators 5 Mattinson later explained Our problem was that the penguin wasn t formidable or evil enough for the audience to believe he would dominate the big bear We struggled with that for a year or so We changed the locale to somewhere in America and it was now a regular zoo and we tried to come up with something with the bear in the zoo and needing to be rescued but that didn t work either citation needed In that version the bear character was still retained but was renamed Louie the Bear Jazz singer Louis Prima was cast in the role and had recorded most of the dialogue and multiple songs that were composed by Floyd Huddleston 6 The writers also expanded the role of his best friend Gus the Lion 7 Huddleston had stated It s about two animals One is Louis Prima he s the polar bear and Redd Foxx is the lion Louis gets cornered into leaving and going to the South Pole where he can make himself a bigger star But he gets homesick he feels fooled They send out little mice as rescuers 8 According to storyboard artist Vance Gerry director Wolfgang Reitherman had stated It s too complicated I want a simple story A little girl gets kidnapped and the mice try to get her back period 9 By November 1973 the role of Louie the Bear had been heavily scaled back and then eliminated 7 In one version the bear was meant to be Bernard and Bianca s connection to Penny Gerry explained We developed the sequence where while the two mice are searching for clues as to where Penny has been taken they come across this bear who she had been friends with because the orphanage where Penny was living was near the zoo citation needed In the final film the idea was reduced to a simple scene where Bernard enters a zoo and hears a lion s roar that scares him away citation needed nbsp Penny struggles to free the Devil s Eye diamond from a pirate s skull the filmmakers carefully designed every shot of the scene to raise the tension 10 In Europe while promoting the release of Robin Hood 1973 Reitherman stated I took Margery Sharp s books along and there was in there a mean woman in a crystal palace When I got back I called some of the guys together and I said We ve got to get a villain in this thing 3 The villainess and her motive to steal a diamond was adapted from the Diamond Duchess in Miss Bianca The setting was then changed to the bayous found in the Southern United States 11 By August 1973 the villainess was named the Grand Duchess with Phyllis Diller cast in the role 7 A month later conceptual artist Ken Anderson began depicting Cruella de Vil the villainess from One Hundred and One Dalmatians 1961 as the main antagonist of the film 7 12 Anderson had drawn several sketches of Cruella de Vil sporting alligator leathered chic attire and sunglasses one sketch depicted her wearing bell bottom pants and platform shoes 13 However several staff members such as animator Ollie Johnston stated it felt wrong to attempt a sequel for the character 14 Furthermore Mattinson explained that Milt Kahl did not want to animate Cruella de Vil Milt of course was very strong against that Oh no no We re gonna have a new character I m not gonna do Cruella Mattinson recalled Because he felt that Marc Davis had animated Cruella beautifully He was not gonna go and take his character 12 The new version of the character was renamed Madame Medusa and her appearance was based on Kahl s then wife Phyllis Bounds who was the niece of Lillian Disney whom he divorced in 1978 15 This was Kahl s last film for the studio and he wanted his final character to be his best He was so insistent on perfecting Madame Medusa that he ended up doing almost all the animation for the character himself 16 The kidnapped child Penny was inspired by Patience the orphan in the novel The alligator characters Brutus and Nero was based on the two bloodhounds Tyrant and Torment in the novels For the henchman the filmmakers adapted the character Mandrake into Mr Snoops His appearance was caricatured from John Culhane a journalist who had been interviewing animators at the Disney studios 14 17 Culhane claimed he was practically tricked into posing for various reactions and his movements were imitated on Mr Snoops s model sheet However he stated Becoming a Disney character was beyond my wildest dreams of glory 18 Also the writers had considered developing Bernard and Bianca into married professional detectives though they decided that leaving the characters as unmarried novices was more romantic 11 For the supporting characters a pint sized swamp mobile for the mice a leaf powered by a dragonfly was created As they developed the comedic potential of displaying his exhaustion through buzzing the dragonfly grew from an incidental into a major character 5 Veteran sound effects artist and voice actor Jimmy MacDonald came out of retirement to provide the effects 19 Additionally the local swamp creatures were originally written as a dedicated home guard that drilled and marched incessantly However the writers rewrote them into a volunteer group of helpful little bayou creatures Their leader a singing bullfrog voiced by Phil Harris was deleted from the film 20 A pigeon was originally proposed to serve as transportation for Bernard and Bianca until Johnston remembered a True Life Adventures episode that featured albatrosses and their clumsy take offs and landings He then suggested the ungainly bird instead 21 On February 13 1976 co director John Lounsbery died of a heart attack during production Art Stevens an animator was then selected as the new co director 22 Animation After the commercial success of The Aristocats 1970 then vice president Ron Miller pledged that new animators should be hired to ensure a continuity of quality Disney animated films for another generation Eric Larson one of the Nine Old Men animators scouted for potential artists who were studying at art schools and colleges throughout the United States More than 60 artists were brought into the training program 23 Then the selected trainees were to create a black and white animation test which were reviewed at the end of the month The process would continue for several months in which the few finalists were first employed as in betweeners working only on nights and weekends 24 By 1977 more than 25 artists were hired during the training program 25 Among those selected were Glen Keane Ron Clements and Andy Gaskill all of whom would play crucial roles in the Disney Renaissance 26 Because of this The Rescuers was the first collaboration between the newly recruited trainees and the senior animators 25 It would also mark the last joint effort by Milt Kahl Ollie Johnston and Frank Thomas and the first Disney film Don Bluth had worked on as a directing animator instead of as an assistant animator 21 Ever since One Hundred and One Dalmatians 1961 animation for theatrical Disney animated films had been done by xerography which had only been able to produce black outlines By the time The Rescuers was in production the technology had been improved for the cel artists to use a medium grey toner in order to create a softer looking line 27 MusicThe RescuersSoundtrack album Vinyl LP by Various artistsReleased1977Recorded1974 1977LabelDisneylandProducerArtie ButlerWalt Disney Animation Studios chronologyThe Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh 1977 The Rescuers 1977 The Fox and the Hound 1981 The songwriting team of Carol Connors and Ayn Robbins first met in 1973 on a double date Before then Connors had co composed and sang successful songs such as To Know Him Is to Love Him and Hey Little Cobra with the Teddy Bears Meanwhile Robbins worked as a personal secretary to actors George Kennedy and Eva Gabor and wrote unpublished poetry On their first collaboration they composed eleven songs for a Christmas show for an unproduced animated film In spite of this they were offered an interview from Walt Disney Productions to compose songs for The Rescuers Describing their collaborative process Robbins noted Carol plays the piano and I play the pencil 28 During production both women were nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song for Gonna Fly Now from Rocky 1976 with Bill Conti 29 Additionally Connors and Robbins collaborated with composer Sammy Fain on the song Someone s Waiting for You Most of the songs they had written for the film were performed by Shelby Flint 29 Also for the first time since Bambi 1942 all the most prominent songs were sung as part of a narrative as opposed to by the film s characters as in most Disney animated films Songs Original songs performed in the film include No TitlePerformer s Length1 The Journey Shelby Flint 2 Rescue Aid Society Robie Lester Bob Newhart Bernard Fox amp the Disney Studio Chorus 3 Tomorrow is Another Day Shelby Flint 4 Someone s Waiting for You Shelby Flint 5 Tomorrow is Another Day Reprise Shelby Flint Songs heard in the film but not released on the soundtrack include Faith is a Bluebird Although not an actual song it is a poem recited by Rufus and partially by Penny in a flashback the old cat has to when he last saw the small orphan girl and comforted her through the poem about having faith The titular bluebird that appears in this sequence originally appeared in Alice in Wonderland 1951 The U S Air Force Serves as the leitmotif for Orville For Penny s a Jolly Good Fellow Sung by the orphan children at the end of the film as a variation of the song For He s a Jolly Good Fellow ReleaseOn June 19 1977 The Rescuers premiered at the AFI Silver Theatre in Washington D C 30 During the film s initial theatrical run the film was released as a double feature with the live action nature documentary film A Tale of Two Critters 31 On December 16 1983 The Rescuers was re released to theaters accompanied with the new Mickey Mouse featurette Mickey s Christmas Carol which marked the character s first theatrical appearance after a 30 year absence In anticipation of its upcoming theatrically released sequel in 1990 The Rescuers Down Under The Rescuers saw another successful theatrical run on March 17 1989 Marketing To tie in with the film s 25th anniversary The Rescuers debuted in the Walt Disney Classics Collection line in 2002 with three different figures featuring three of the film s characters as well as the opening title scroll The three figures were sculpted by Dusty Horner and they were Brave Bianca featuring Miss Bianca the heroine and priced at 75 32 Bold Bernard featuring hero Bernard priced also at 75 33 and Evinrude Base featuring Evinrude the dragonfly and priced at 85 32 The title scroll featuring the film s name The Rescuers and from the opening song sequence The Journey was priced at 30 All figures were retired in March 2005 except for the opening title scroll which was suspended in December 2012 32 The Rescuers was the inspiration for another Walt Disney Classics Collection figure in 2003 Ken Melton was the sculptor of Teddy Goes With Me My Dear a limited edition 8 inch sculpture featuring the evil Madame Medusa the orphan girl Penny her teddy bear Teddy and the Devil s Eye diamond Exactly 1 977 of these sculptures were made in reference to the film s release year 1977 The sculpture was priced at 299 and instantly declared retired in 2003 33 In November 2008 a sixth sculpture inspired by the film was released Made with pewter and resin Cleared For Take Off introduced the character of Orville into the collection and featured Bernard and Bianca a second time The piece inspired by Orville s take off scene in the film was sculpted by Ruben Procopio 34 Home media The Rescuers premiered on VHS and LaserDisc on September 18 1992 as part of the Walt Disney Classics series The release went into moratorium on April 30 1993 35 It was re released on VHS as part of the Walt Disney Masterpiece Collection on January 5 1999 but was recalled three days later and reissued on March 23 1999 see Nudity scandal The Rescuers was released on DVD on May 20 2003 as a standard edition which was discontinued in November 2011 citation needed On August 21 2012 a 35th anniversary edition of The Rescuers was released on Blu ray alongside its sequel in a 2 Movie Collection 36 37 Nudity scandal nbsp One of the frozen frames containing a picture of a topless woman in the windowOn January 8 1999 three days after the film s second release on home video The Walt Disney Company announced a recall of about 3 4 million copies of the videotapes because there was an objectionable image in one of the film s backgrounds 38 39 40 41 The image in question is a blurry image of a topless woman with breasts and nipples showing The image appears twice in non consecutive frames during the scene in which Miss Bianca and Bernard are flying on Orville s back through New York City The two images could not be seen in ordinary viewing because the film runs too fast at 24 frames per second 42 On January 10 1999 two days after the recall was announced the London newspaper The Independent reported A Disney spokeswoman said that the images in The Rescuers were placed in the film during post production but she declined to say what they were or who placed them The company said the aim of the recall was to keep its promise to families that they can trust and rely on the Disney brand to provide the best in family entertainment 43 The Rescuers home video was reissued on March 23 1999 with the inappropriate nudity edited and blocked out ReceptionBox office The Rescuers was successful upon its original theatrical release earning worldwide gross rentals of 48 million at the box office 44 45 During its initial release in France it out grossed Star Wars 1977 receiving admissions of 7 2 million 46 The film also became the highest grossing film in West Germany at the time with admissions of 9 7 million 47 48 By the end of its theatrical run the distributor rentals amounted to 19 million in the United States and Canada while its international rentals totaled 41 million 49 The Rescuers was re released in 1983 in which it grossed 21 million domestically The film was again re released in 1989 and grossed 21 2 million domestically In its total lifetime domestic gross the film has grossed 71 2 million 50 and its total lifetime worldwide gross is 169 million 1 Critical reaction The Rescuers was said to be Disney s greatest film since Mary Poppins 1964 and seemed to signal a new golden age for Disney animation 51 Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times praised the film as the best feature length animated film from Disney in a decade or more the funniest the most inventive the least self conscious the most coherent and moving from start to finish and probably most important of all it is also the most touching in that unique way fantasy has of carrying vibrations of real life and real feelings 52 Gary Arnold of The Washington Post wrote the film is one of the most rousing and appealing animated features ever made by the Disney studio The last production for several members of the original feature animation unit assembled by Walt Disney in the late 30s the film is both a triumphant swan song and gladdening act of regeneration 53 Dave Kehr of The Chicago Reader praised the film as a beautifully crafted and wonderfully expressive cartoon feature calling it genuinely funny and touching 54 Variety magazine wrote the film was the best work by Disney animators in many years restoring the craft to its former glories In addition it has a more adventurous approach to color and background stylization than previous Disney efforts have displayed with a delicate pastel palette used to wide ranging effect 4 Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote that the film doesn t belong in the same category as the great Disney cartoon features Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs Bambi Fantasia but it s a reminder of a kind of slickly cheerful animated entertainment that has become all but extinct 55 Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film two and a half stars out of four writing To see any Disney animated film these days is to compare it with Disney classics released 30 or 40 years ago Judged against Pinocchio for example The Rescuers is lightweight indeed Its themes are forgettable It s mostly an adventure story 31 TV Guide gave the film three stars out of five opining that The Rescuers is a beautifully animated film that showed Disney still knew a lot about making quality children s fare even as their track record was weakening They also praised the voice acting of the characters and stated that the film is a delight for children as well as adults who appreciate good animation and brisk storytelling 56 Ellen MacKay of Common Sense Media gave the film four out of five stars writing Great adventure but too dark for preschoolers 57 In his book The Disney Films film historian Leonard Maltin refers to The Rescuers as a breath of fresh air for everyone who had been concerned about the future of animation at Walt Disney s praises its humor and imagination and that it is expertly woven into a solid story structure with a delightful cast of characters Finally he declares the film the most satisfying animated feature to come from the studio since 101 Dalmatians He also briefly mentions the ease with which the film surpassed other animated films of its time 58 The film s own animators Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston stated on their website that The Rescuers had been their return to a film with heart and also considered it their best film without Walt Disney 59 The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported that the film received a 79 approval rating with an average rating of 6 5 10 based on 33 reviews The website s consensus states Featuring superlative animation off kilter characters and affectionate voice work by Bob Newhart and Eva Gabor The Rescuers represents a bright spot in Disney s post golden age 60 On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 74 out of 100 based on 8 reviews indicating generally favorable reviews 61 Jack Shaheen in his study of Hollywood portrayals and stereotypes of Arabs noted the inclusion of delegates from Arab countries in the Rescue Aid Society 62 Accolades Award Category Nominee s Result Ref Academy Awards Best Original Song Someone s Waiting for You Music by Sammy Fain Lyrics by Carol Connors and Ayn Robbins Nominated 63 National Board of Review Awards Special Citation Won 64 In 2008 the American Film Institute nominated The Rescuers for its Top 10 Animated Films list 65 LegacyBernard and Bianca made appearances as meet and greet characters at Walt Disney World and Disneyland in the years following the original film s release While they currently do not make regular appearances at the American parks both continue to appear regularly at Tokyo Disney Resort In 2024 both characters are set to appear as figures in the upcoming Tiana s Bayou Adventure ride based on the 2009 film The Princess and the Frog in Critter Country at Disneyland and Frontierland at Walt Disney World 66 In the Disney Infinity video games Medusa s Swamp Mobile was introduced as a vehicle in Disney Infinity 2 0 67 In the world builder video game Disney Magic Kingdoms Bernard Miss Bianca Penny Madame Medusa and Orville appear as playable characters in the main storyline of the game along with The Rescue Aid Society and Madame Medusa s Riverboat as attractions 68 69 70 SequelMain article The Rescuers Down Under The Rescuers was the first Disney animated film to have a sequel After three successful theatrical releases of the original film The Rescuers Down Under was released theatrically on November 16 1990 The Rescuers Down Under takes place in the Australian Outback and involves Bernard and Bianca trying to rescue a boy named Cody and a giant golden eagle called Marahute from a greedy poacher named Percival C McLeach Both Bob Newhart and Eva Gabor reprised their lead roles Since Jim Jordan who had voiced Orville had since died a new character Wilbur Orville s brother another albatross was created and voiced by John Candy See also1977 in film List of American films of 1977 List of animated feature films of 1977 List of highest grossing animated films List of highest grossing films in France List of Walt Disney Pictures films List of Disney theatrical animated feature filmsReferences a b D Alessandro Anthony October 27 2003 Cartoon Coffers Top Grossing Disney Animated Features at the Worldwide B O Variety p 6 Archived from the original on November 4 2020 Retrieved November 5 2021 via TheFreeLibrary com Koenig 1997 pp 153 154 a b Ghez 2019 p 49 a b Film Reviews The Rescuers Variety June 15 1977 Retrieved February 12 2016 a b c Koenig 1997 p 154 Beck Jerry August 15 2011 Lost Louis Prima Disney Song Cartoon Brew Retrieved December 10 2012 a b c d Solomon 2008 p 9 Rogers Tom February 24 1974 Floyd Huddleston Turns Love Into Oscar Bid The Tennessean p 8 Retrieved January 28 2021 via Newspapers com nbsp Renault 1998 p 336 Knowles Rebecca Bunyan Dan 2002 Animal Heroes Disney The Ultimate Visual Guide Dorling Kindersley p 80 ISBN 978 0 789488 62 6 a b Koenig 1997 p 155 a b Ghez 2019 p 51 Doty Meriah February 10 2015 Cruella de Vil s Comeback That Wasn t See Long Lost Sketches of Iconic Villain in The Rescuers Exclusive Yahoo Movies Retrieved February 28 2015 a b Beck Jerry 2005 The Animated Movie Guide Chicago Review Press p 225 ISBN 978 1 556525 91 9 Retrieved February 28 2015 via Google Books Canemaker 2001 p 156 Madame Medusa Disney Archives Villains Archived from the original on March 2 2011 Retrieved April 23 2009 The Rescuers DVD Fun Facts Disney go com Archived from the original on April 8 2009 Retrieved April 12 2009 Johnston Ollie Thomas Frank 1993 The Rescuers The Disney Villain Disney Editions pp 156 163 ISBN 978 1 562 82792 2 Obituaries James MacDonald Variety February 17 1991 Retrieved February 28 2015 Koenig 1997 p 156 a b Thomas Bob 1991 Carrying on the Tradition Disney s Art of Animation From Mickey Mouse to Beauty and the Beast New York Hyperion pp 111 112 ISBN 1 56282 899 1 Canemaker 2001 pp 260 261 Culhane John August 1 1976 The Old Disney Magic The New York Times Retrieved March 3 2022 Canemaker 2001 pp 76 77 a b Canemaker 2001 p 79 Finch Christopher 1988 Chapter 9 The End of an Era The Art of Walt Disney From Mickey Mouse to the Magic Kingdoms Portland House p 260 ISBN 978 0 517664 74 2 Deja Andreas May 20 2014 Deja View Xerox Deja View Retrieved February 28 2015 via Blogger Song Team Debuts Playground Daily News July 28 1977 p 20 Retrieved October 17 2018 via Newspapers com a b Harada Wayne May 30 1977 It s a Rocky road to stardom says Oscar losing lyricist The Honolulu Advertiser p D 6 Retrieved October 17 2018 via Newspapers com Culhane John June 1977 The Last of the Nine Old Men American Film pp 10 16 a b Siskel Gene July 6 1977 Orphan teddy bear rescue Disney film Chicago Tribune Section 2 p 6 Retrieved October 17 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c The Rescuers Secondary Price Guide Archived from the original on November 10 2006 Retrieved April 12 2007 a b The Rescuers Secondary Price Guide Retrieved April 12 2007 2008 Limited Edition Orville with Bernard amp Bianca WDCC Duckman Archived from the original on December 7 2011 Retrieved November 17 2008 Stevens Mary September 18 1992 Rescuers Leads Classic Kid Stuff Chicago Tribune Retrieved May 14 2018 Burger Dennis The Rescuers Slated for 2012 Blu ray Release Along with Over 30 Other Disney Flicks Technologytell www technologytell com Archived from the original on March 18 2012 Retrieved March 23 2012 Katz John February 3 2012 Disney Teases 2012 Blu ray Slate Blu ray com Retrieved June 26 2012 Mikkelson David January 13 1999 Photographic images of a topless woman can be spotted in The Rescuers Snopes Retrieved April 12 2007 Davies Jonathan January 11 1999 Dis Calls in Rescuers After Nude Images Found The Hollywood Reporter Howell Peter January 13 1999 Disney Knows the Net Never Blinks The Toronto Star Miller D M 2001 What Would Walt Do An Insider s Story About the Design and Construction of Walt Disney World Writers Club Press p 96 ISBN 978 0 595 17203 0 White Michael January 8 1999 Disney Recalls The Rescuers Video Associated Press Disney recalls sabotaged video The Independent London October 23 2011 Archived from the original on December 25 2014 Retrieved September 24 2017 King Susan June 22 2012 Disney s animated classic The Rescuers marks 35th anniversary Los Angeles Times Retrieved July 22 2015 Ludwig Irving H January 3 1979 Disney Never Forgetting Its Roots In Animation Medium Variety p 30 Box office for 1977 Box Office Story Harmetz Aljean July 28 1978 Disney Incubating New Artists The New York Times Retrieved May 11 2016 Top 100 Deutschland 1957 2022 Inside Kino in German Retrieved March 15 2018 Search Bernard amp Bianca The Mouse Police Thomas Bob September 19 1984 Walt Disney Productions returns to animation Lewison Daily Sun Retrieved May 11 2016 via Google News Archive The Rescuers Release Summary Box Office Mojo Retrieved March 21 2018 Cawley John The Rescuers The Animated Films of Don Bluth Archived from the original on March 11 2007 Retrieved April 12 2007 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Champlin Charles July 3 1977 Animation the Real Thing at Disney Los Angeles Times pp 1 33 35 36 Retrieved October 17 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Arnold Gary June 24 1977 The Disney Legacy To the Rescue The Washington Post p B1 Retrieved November 5 2021 Kehr Dave May 24 1985 The Rescuers The Chicago Reader Retrieved July 30 2023 Canby Vincent July 7 1977 Disney s Rescuers Cheerful Animation The New York Times Retrieved May 14 2018 The Rescuers Reviews TV Guide September 3 2008 Retrieved May 27 2012 Ellen MacKay July 15 2003 The Rescuers Movie Review Common Sense Media Retrieved May 27 2012 Maltin Leonard 2000 The Disney Films New York Disney Editions p 265 ISBN 0 7868 8527 0 Feature Films Frank and Ollie Archived from the original on November 21 2005 Retrieved April 12 2007 The Rescuers 1977 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Retrieved October 10 2021 nbsp The Rescuers 1977 Reviews Metacritic Retrieved November 5 2021 Shaheen Jack G 2001 Reel Bad Arabs How Hollywood Vilifies a People Olive Branch Press p 393 ISBN 1 56656 388 7 The 50th Academy Awards 1978 Nominees and Winners oscars org Archived from the original on November 11 2014 Retrieved October 5 2011 1977 Award Winners National Board of Review Retrieved July 5 2021 AFI s 10 Top 10 Nominees PDF Archived from the original on July 16 2011 Retrieved August 19 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link https disneyparks disney go com blog 2020 06 new adventures with princess tiana coming to disneyland park and magic kingdom park Mike Futter September 24 2014 Disney Infinity 2 0 Character And Power Disc Checklist GameInformer Update 59 The Rescuers Part 1 Livestream YouTube May 27 2022 Update 60 The Rescuers Part 2 amp Up Livestream YouTube July 8 2022 Update 64 DuckTales amp The Rescuers Part 3 Tower Event Event Walkthrough YouTube November 11 2022 BibliographyCanemaker John 2001 Walt Disney s Nine Old Men and the Art of Animation New York Disney Editions ISBN 978 0 7868 6496 6 Ghez Didier 2019 They Drew as They Pleased Vol 5 The Hidden Art of Disney s Early Renaissance Chronicle Books ISBN 978 1 7972 0410 9 Koenig David 1997 The Rescuers Mouse Under Glass Secrets of Disney Animation amp Theme Parks Irvine California Bonaventure Press pp 153 161 ISBN 978 0 9640 6051 7 Renault Christian 1998 Vance Gerry 1929 2005 In Ghez Didier ed Walt s People Volume 5 Talking Disney with the Artists Who Knew Him Theme Park Press ISBN 978 1 6839 0011 5 Solomon Charles 2008 Disney Lost and Found Exploring the Hidden Artwork from Never Produced Animation New York Disney Editions ISBN 978 1 4231 1601 1 Further readingKorkis Jim January 19 2022 Remembering the Rescuers Mouse Planet External links nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to The Rescuers Official website The Rescuers at AllMovie The Rescuers at IMDb The Rescuers at the TCM Movie Database The Rescuers at Rotten Tomatoes The Rescuers at Box Office Mojo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Rescuers amp oldid 1174218556, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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