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Movie Title: Pocahontas
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Pocahontas is available for streaming or downloading.

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Just a posthaste effect here – if you are thinking of purchasing a copy of Pocahontas now, unprejudiced wait a miniature while.

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On May 3, 2005, Disney will be releasing a “Special Edition”, tenth anniversary, 2-disc DVD release that will be similar to thier current reissue of Sleeping Beauty and other Disney classics.

With all of the features on that, people who bewitch this DVD now will be disappointed if they don’t wait.

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Disney will be adding the usual “Making of” clips, some pre-production art, and other features that fabricate their “Special Editions” ample, to this current edition of Pocahontas.

Loosely rooted in genuine American history and based upon people who once actually lived, “Pocahontas” is a very different kind of though-provoking classic from the House of Mouse. It’s the account of a comely, free-spirited, young (but not as young as Disney’s usual) Native American princess who crosses paths with an English explorer named John Smith, only to have romance expeditiously make between them. John Smith arrives in the Americas impartial in time for Pocahontas, who is panicked by her father’s wish that she marry hometown hero Kocoum and, confused all the more by a mysterious dream, is in search of a different path to follow. John Smith is also in search of something, and when he finds Pocahontas, he thinks he has found it. The plight is, John is filled with prejudices against Pocahontas and her people, until she shows him the light. She teaches him about the beauty and wonder of nature and how we are all connected to each other. But adore makes John an easy sell. His fellow English settlers are not quite so easily convinced. They only discover the Indians as perilous savages that must be destroyed to obtain the spot worthy to live in. Matters are made worse by the greed of their leader, Governor Ratcliffe, who is convinced the savages are hoarding the gold he can’t seem to win by digging up the land. Their violent actions lead to violent reactions from the tribe, which culminate in a fiery confrontation that only Pocahontas’s fancy and opinion can bring to peace.

The first time I saw Pocahontas, and for long after that, I had mixed feelings about it. I’m a hardcore Disney fan, and there’s limited I despise more than to be disappointed in a Disney lively feature. Unfortunately, this was something I had to deal with for… possibly the first time ever in theaters upon seeing “Pocahontas.” Not doubt, “Pocahontas” was always a graceful film. The art is Disney at its best, and the music and songs are truly comely. The laughable relief, in the execute of Pocahontas’s animal friends, is lawful on the money. The whisper cast is top notch, with Mel Gibson as John Smith and Irene Bedard as Pocahontas (Judy Kuhn doing her astounding singing grunt), David Ogden Stiers as Ratcliffe and his servant, Wiggins, Russell Means as Chief Powhatan, Christian Bale, Linda Hunt, and more rounding out the cast, but there was unbiased something missing,…something crucial. I soon decided that the scrape was in the villain, Governor Ratcliffe, who honest wasn’t villain ENOUGH for my tastes. This sudden realization of what was sinful with “Pocahontas” was a gargantuan mistake, but it’s one that is composed commonly made. I failed to gape then, that the correct villain of “Pocahontas” is not Governor Ratcliffe at all, but “prejudice” itself. This is something that is even pointed out in the DVD’s audio commentary, but, of course, I only heard that recently. My unpleasant. I should have been able to gaze past the expected to the shapely determined. However, while this knowledge does benefit improve the movie somewhat, it tranquil doesn’t engage it from, “righteous, but not quite `Disney’ estimable,” to “Instant Disney Classic.” As it turned out, the secret lay in a chop musical number: “If I Never Knew You.” One day, while watching the network television premiere of “Pocahontas” on ABC, I learned about a ravishing and wrongfully prick scene from the film in which John Smith, while awaiting his execution, shares a romantic duet with Pocahontas in which the two truly prove their feelings for and to each other. It’s the moment in the movie where we truly catch the feeling that these two cherish each other, and not having it in the film was a sinister mistake! And, why did they slit it? Because minute kids were bored with it. Thank goodness for DVDs and Special Editions! In this 2-disc, 10th Anniversary DVD release of Pocahontas, that resplendent scene has been completed and restored to the film, and it makes all the dissimilarity in the world! There’s even a modern reprise of the song approach the kill as Pocahontas and John Smith exchange two lines, and that moment will bring you to tears! After finally viewing the movie with “If I Never Knew You” intact, I can happily say that “Pocahontas” has gone from one of my least popular Disney films to one of the best! There may be no drop-dead beautiful, redheaded mermaids and no luscious singing bears, but Disney has managed to win a more accurate and serious subject and turn it into a extraordinary fresh masterpiece! Now, if they could only fix “Atlantis: The Lost Empire.”

As for the DVD, this astounding 10th Anniversary Edition is a colossal improvement over the Gold Collection release. The film has been digitally remastered and is presented in anamorphic widescreen. Your are given the option of viewing “Pocahontas” as it plays, which means the “extended cleave” with “If I Never Knew You” intact, or choosing the shorter, far disagreeable theatrical crop. Why would anyone want to do that? Unruffled, options are always nice to have. Disc One also includes a blooming and informative audio commentary with producer and directors that will only heighten your appreciation of the film. An art project, game, and two sing-along-songs (“Colors of the Wind” and “Unbiased Around the River Bend”) are included on Disc One as well, along with the Vanessa Williams video for the pop version of “Colors of the Wind.” Remember how they old-fashioned to play Disney songs like that on the radio during the Disney Decade? That was so cold.

Disc Two is loaded with colossal extras for the serious animation enthusiast. There’s an savory making-of featurette hosted by Irene Bedard, an early production reel, loads of galleries and clips on one of my common subjects: character development (art gain, layouts, and backgrounds are also covered), scene production comparison reels, the pop video for “If I Never Knew You,” a featurette on the music of the film, and one about the decision to restore the movie’s (very indispensable) cleave scene. One of the highlights of the DVD extras for me was definitely the discovery of the thankfully deleted talking turkey character, Redfeather, while what some might deem a uncouth point is the lack of insight given into the exact history late Pocahontas, Smith, and the others. Further extras include an awesome selection of captivating deleted scenes, two theatrical trailers, a shipshape featurette on the movie’s ambitious premiere in Central Park (on a row of 8-story movie screens), a multi-language clip reel of the Oscar Winning song, “Colors of the Wind,” and a very cold publicity gallery which includes a fun fashion spread from Harper’s Bazaar that broken-down Pocahontas as a model! Yes, you gain to inspect Pocahontas drawn in unique clothes, in beefy color, and she looks darn expedient, even if I am more of a Tink and Ariel man myself!

The is one DVD Edition I can’t recommend enough, primarily because it presents a movie you’ve seen before as you’ve never seen it before, and, in this case, I judge most people will derive the extension to be a enormous improvement. Bottom-line, even if you weren’t a fan of “Pocahontas” before, do yourself a favor and check it out one more time in its extended crop. It’s not the same experience. It’s mighty, great better!

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