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n the churchyard of a cathedral in London a sword
appears imbedded in a stone, inscribed: "Whoso pulleth out this
sword of this stone and anvil is rightwise king born of England."
Although many try, no one can budge the sword from the stone. Deep
in the dark woods, kindly but absentminded Merlin the Magician
begins to teach 11-year-old Arthur, who is called "Wart" and who
lives in the castle of Sir Ector where he is an apprentice squire
to burly, oafish Sir Kay when he is not washing mounds of pots and
pans in the scullery. By being changed by Merlin into various
animals, Wart learns the basic truths of life, but he also runs
into the evil Madam Mim, who tries to destroy him. Merlin and Mim
have a wizard's duel during which each changes into various
creatures, with Merlin using his wits to win. On New Year's Day a
great tournament is held in London to pick a new king. Wart,
attending as Kay's squire, forgets Kay's sword and runs back to the
inn to get it, but the inn is locked. Wart, seeing the sword in the
stone, innocently -- and easily -- pulls it out. When the knights
marvel at the wondrous sword and question where he got it, Wart has
to prove himself all over again, and again he pulls the sword from
the stone. Wart is proclaimed king by the marveling warriors. Wart
as King Arthur is apprehensive of his ability to govern, but Merlin
returns to reassure him. |
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The movie is somewhat dated because it is filled with 1960s
references, but it has some wonderful moments, especially the
highly imaginative wizard's duel. The songs, including "A Most
Befuddling Thing," "That's What Makes the World Go Round," "Higitus
Figitus," and "The Legend of the Sword in the Stone," were written
by Richard M. and Robert B. Sherman. |
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The film marked Wolfgang Reitherman's first solo directorial effort
for a feature film. Based on the book by T. H. White. Starring: the
voices of Ricky Sorenson (Wart), Sebastian Cabot (Narrator/Sir
Ector), Karl Swenson (Merlin), Junius Matthews (Archimedes), Norman
Alden (Sir Kay), and Martha Wentworth (Madam Mim). 79 min. The
motion picture was rereleased theatrically in 1972 and 1983, and
inspired the Sword in the Stone ceremony at the Disney Theme Parks.
Released on video in 1986. |
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