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he members of a Swiss family are the sole survivors
of a shipwreck on an uncharted tropical island. With great courage
and ingenuity, they use the salvage from the wreck to build a home
in a huge tree, raise food, and protect themselves from a raiding
band of pirates. The rescue of the granddaughter of a sea captain
from the pirates precipitates the ultimate attack by the
buccaneers. The furious battle is almost won by the brigands, when
grandfather's ship arrives and routs the attackers. The romance
between the eldest Robinson boy and the granddaughter culminates in
their marriage. The new couple and much of the family decide to
stay on the island paradise, but scholarly brother Ernst decides to
go back on the ship to civilization./td>
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Filmed on the Caribbean island of Tobago, the motion picture's
lavish preproduction planning and on-location shooting (twenty-two
weeks) resulted in a budget that exceeded $4 million, but the
extraordinary box office returns, subsequent popular reissues in
1969, 1972, 1975, and 1981, and a release on home video in 1982
have made it one of Disney's top-grossing films. The creation of an
intriguing treehouse, matching the one in the movie, through which
guests can climb in the Disney Theme Parks has increased and
perpetuated the popularity of the film. |
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Directed by Ken Annakin. 126 min. Based on the book by Johann Wyss,
written to preserve the tales he and his sons made up while
imagining themselves in Robinson Crusoe's predicament. Not
originally intended for publication, the narrative was later edited
and illustrated by Wyss' descendants. |
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