DUMBO
Animated Feature
Voices by: Sterling Holloway, Herman Bing,
Verna Felton
Walt Disney Pictures; Directed by Ben
Sharpsteen
Rated G; 64 minutes; 1941
The stork delivers a baby elephant to Mrs Jumbo,
veteran of the circus, but the newborn is ridiculed because of his truly
enormous ears and dubbed "Dumbo". Dumbo is relegated to the circus'
clown acts; it is up to his only friend, a mouse, to assist Dumbo to achieve
his full potential.
COPY B
Deceptively simple,
beautiful, moving, and hilarious, DUMBO is often overlooked when considering
Disney's greatest films because perhaps of its lack of extravagance, its brief
running time, and its simple story. Baby elephant Jumbo Jr. is delivered by the
stork to his elephant mom with much fanfare but soon receives a cold shoulder
from the snobby female pachyderms and the rest of the circus due to his
oversize ears. When his mother goes on a rampage in order to protect him from
some snickering rubes, she winds up locked away. Dumbo is left without a friend
in the world until the street-smart Timothy Mouse decides to become his manager
and a telephone line full of delightful jive-talking crows convince him he can
fly. Highlights include Dumbo accidentally getting drunk and experiencing the
surreal musical sequence "Pink Elephants on Parade" and a soundtrack
packed with such priceless songs as the Oscar-winning "Baby Mine" and
the crow's soulful number, "When I see an Elephant Fly." There's nary
an imperfect moment to be found in this raucous, tender, sublime film, which
has been delighting audiences for generations.