For more videos related to this film, check out this curated playlist: • Dumbo (1941)
Dumbo (64 min)
Sypnosis: Born with exceptionally oversized ears, baby Dumbo is ridiculed by the other circus elephants. Only his mother, Mrs. Jumbo, seems to love this “Baby Mine.” When a young boy taunts Dumbo and pulls his ears, Mrs. Jumbo spanks the bully and is shackled and caged. Now alone and scared, Dumbo finally finds a friend when plucky Timothy Q. Mouse sticks up for him. One night, after accidentally drinking some champagne-infused water, Dumbo and Timothy dream of “Pink Elephants on Parade” and wake to find themselves perched in a tree. Soon they come to the realization that Dumbo’s gigantic ears enable him to fly! Now it’s up to Dumbo to find the courage to use his newfound talent and show his tormentors who’s the real star of the circus show.
Cast: Edward Brophy (Timothy Mouse); Verna Felton (Elephant Matriarch); Cliff Edwards (Jim Crow); Herman Bing (The Ringmaster); Sterling Holloway (Mr. Stork);
Songs: “Look Out for Mr. Stork,” “Casey Junior,” “Baby Mine,” “Pink Elephants on Parade,” “When I See An Elephant Fly,”
Released on October 23, 1941.
US Theatrical Reissues: June 22, 1949; December 24, 1959; October 11, 1972; and March 26, 1976.
US Home Media Releases: June 26, 1981 (VHS); June 1982 (LD); November 5, 1985 (VHS); July 12, 1991 (VHS/LD); October 28, 1994 (VHS/LD); October 23, 2001 (DVD/VHS); June 6, 2006 (DVD); September 20, 2011 (BR/DVD);
Directed by Ben Sharpsteen.
Trivia:
• Frames: 92,160
• From a story by Helen Aberson and Harold Pearl.
• The film won an Oscar for Best Scoring of a Motion Picture (Frank Churchill and Oliver Wallace), and was nominated for Best Song (“Baby Mine”).
• Walt Disney initially planned the film as a 30-minute featurette despite the film’s final running time of 64 minutes. RKO, which distributed the film in 1941, asked that an additional ten minutes be added to the film. Disney refused to do so, noting the film was excellent as it was.
• Coming after two expensive movies (Fantasia and Pinocchio) the previous year, Dumbo was made for only $812,000, partly because it was able to move very quickly through the animation department due to its succinct story and clearcut characters, and it made a welcome profit for the Studio.
• Dumbo had been scheduled for the cover of Time magazine at the time of its general release in December 1941, but a much more momentous event occurred—Pearl Harbor—and poor Dumbo was supplanted by Japanese General Yamamoto.
• It was shown on the Disney television series in 1955
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