The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh.







The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh.



This is a really really good and wonderful story with some of the greatest 

animation you will ever see for it's time. Everyone says it all started with 

a mouse but Winnie the Pooh should get some of the credit cause the 

mouse couldn't do it without the bear and all the other characters of the 

hundred ace woods. I hope you go on and get Disney+ and see this 

movie cause it is an amazing piece of film legends are made of. Every 

part of this movie goes together with every piece of it, the story and 

animation are perfection at it's best. So, with that, lets get to the story 

shall we:







The film's content is derived from three previously released animated featurettes Disney produced based upon the Winnie-the-Pooh books by A. A. MilneWinnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree (1966), Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day (1968), and Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too (1974). Extra material was used to link the three featurettes
together to allow the stories to merge into each other.

A fourth, shorter scene was added to bring the film to a close, originally made during production of Blustery Day (based on the presence of Jon Walmsley as Christopher Robin). The sequence was based on the final chapter of The House at Pooh Corner, where Christopher Robin must leave the Hundred Acre Wood behind as he is starting school. In it, Christopher Robin and Pooh discuss what they liked doing together and the boy asks his bear to promise to remember him and to keep some of the memories of their time together alive. Pooh agrees to do so, and the film closes with The Narrator saying that wherever Christopher Robin goes, Pooh will always be waiting for him whenever he returns.


 

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