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n the autumn of 1940, an eccentric, ladylike
spinster, Eglantine Price, becomes an apprentice witch in hopes of
finding a rare magic formula that will help England win the war
against Nazi Germany. With the help of three London children, whom
she takes in to save them from the blitz, she first seeks out her
amusing but bogus professor of witchcraft, Emelius Brown, then
ventures into Portobello Road. Miss Price finally discovers that
the words of the magic spell can be found on the legendary "Lost
Isle of Naboombu," so she, Brown, and the children travel there
with the aid of a magical bedknob, having adventures beneath the
sea along the way. They discover that the lion king of Naboombu
wears around his neck a medallion bearing the words of the spell,
which they obtain. Returning home, Miss Price uses the formula to
raise a ghostly army of armor from the local museum that routs a
band of invading German commandos. |
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The film was made entirely on the Disney Studio lot in Burbank,
California, where outdoor sets included the town of Pepperinge Eye
and Miss Price's seaview cottage, and indoor sets included a
three-block section of London's legendary Portobello Road. Two
hundred players jammed this set alone, which was filled with
bric-a-brac and such oddments as a Sicilian sedan chair, Limoges
china, and gas masks from World War II. Among the performers and
extras in the crowd were veterans of music halls, vaudeville, rep
shows, radio, silent films, and early talkies. The ghostly medieval
army's weapons and armor had originally been assembled in Spain for
the film "El Cid," and then were shipped to America to be used in
the Warner Bros. musical "Camelot." Ward Kimball was the director
of the wonderful animation sequences on the Isle of Naboombu.
Despite the effort, lavish budget, ingenuity, and special effects,
the film was not a great box-office success, causing the studio
subsequently to edit it. The editing was accomplished primarily to
the detriment of musical numbers -- large chunks of "Eglantine" and
"With a Flair" were deleted. Academy Award® winner for Best
Special Visual Effects. The movie was nominated also for Best Art
Direction/Set Direction, Best Song ("The Age of Not Believing"),
Best Scoring, and Best Costume Design. The film remains a Disney
favorite today, with a theatrical reissue in 1979 and releases on
video in 1980, 1985, and 1989. |
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Premiered in England on October 7, 1971; directed by Robert
Stevenson. 117 min. for the original release version; whittled down
to 98 min. for a 1979 reissue. The creative talent behind "Mary
Poppins" joined forces again for this film, including
producer-writer Bill Walsh, director Robert Stevenson, songwriters
Richard M. and Robert B. Sherman, music supervisor Irwin Kostal,
art director Peter Ellenshaw, and special-effects technician
Eustace Lycett. The songs included "The Old Home Guard,"
"Eglantine," "The Age of Not Believing," "Portobello Road," "The
Beautiful Briny," and "Substitutiary Locomotion." One song sung by
Angela Lansbury that is on the soundtrack record album, "A Step in
the Right Direction," was edited out of the film just before its
release. The screenplay was based on Mary Norton's book, with
additions by Bill Walsh, who came up with the German invasion. |
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