| Page 1 of 7: | [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] |
| Index | 65 reviews in total |
33 out of 36 people found the following review useful:
Everybody wants to be a cat!, 1 September 2004
![]()
Author:
Kristine (kristinedrama14@msn.com) from Chicago, Illinois
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
AristoCats is such a terrific Disney classic that I just loved so much
as a kid. Still to this day I can't resist watching it, it's just such
a wonderful and charming film with great animation and lovely songs. I
really miss the animation films like AristoCats, they had perfect
voices not to mention the hand drawn animation that makes it perfect
for the family. AristoCats is also very witty and clever, the story was
just so wonderful. This film is just beyond irresistible, I think the
most memorable moment for me was the cats playing the piano learning
the appecio's, lol, it was just so cute with the piano playing and
painting.
Douchess and her kittens are very pampered in their huge mansion,
mainly because their lady is very rich and treats them like they were
her children. But when the lady feels it's time to make her will, she
leaves everything to the cats and not to her butler. The butler gets
angry and takes the kittens on the road and abondons them in the middle
of no where. Douchess and the kittens wake up and with the help of a
smooth street cat by the name of Thomas O'Malley, they head back home
to their lady, but learn the coolness of being a skat cat.
The AristoCats is just a perfect Disney movie that I feel is a bit over
looked. I would always highly recommend this movie for kids or
families, it could be enjoyed by anyone. The songs and story is just
memorable. I will always join in for the movies best song "Everybody
wants to be a cat", such a great tune. I also love those dogs that
guarded the farm where the cats were abandoned, they were just so cute.
This is a terrific film, please watch it, you won't be disappointed.
9/10
31 out of 33 people found the following review useful:
Superb Visual Style and Humor in one of Disney's best!, 26 March 2001
Author:
Neil Doyle from U.S.A.
Complaints from previous commentators that "the pencil marks show" in the animated art shows that they miss the point entirely. The visual style is deliberately similar to what was used in '101 Dalmatians' with the characters having a deliberately sketchy look--an art style used to great effect in this and several other Disney movies. Far from being "weak animation", this is one of the very best works produced by the Disney artists. The color is superb, the humor is constant and the mere fact that the storyline bears a resemblance to the 'Dalmatians' plot does nothing to weaken the film. Upon release, it was an enormous success and has made even more money in subsequent theatrical revivals. Viewers who make comments about the art work, don't seem to realize that the "sketchy" look was what the artists sought--it has nothing whatsoever to do with careless art work. All the voices are extremely well done--Eva Gabor as the Duchess and Phil Harris as Thomas O'Malley are perfect. The slapstick comedy involving the bumbling butler and the dogs is priceless! This is another great Disney film that children and adults can enjoy equally.
29 out of 31 people found the following review useful:
Snoop Dogg loves The Aristocats, 22 September 2000
![]()
Author:
Mario Rodgers from San Antonio, TX
No. I'm not kidding with this one. He was a guest reviewer for Entertainment Weekly and gave this movie positive marks. And who can blame him? This is a charming, upbeat, and rather funny Disney movie. Who doesn't love kittens? The music in Ev'rybody Wants To Be A Cat is jamming. It makes me want to snap my fingers or something. Only years later when Cats Don't Dance came out have I seen a movie that was that musically fun. What Aristocats lacks in animation and story, it makes up for in charm. Plus, everything moves at a relaxed pace, and even the villain isn't all that scary. It's perfect for the younger set while not being so sappy that adults can't like it. If Snoop was here, I'm sure he would say the same thing. Yeah. Dig those CRAZY cats, man.
23 out of 26 people found the following review useful:
A great underrated Disney classic., 8 May 2006
![]()
Author:
John Lindsey from Albuquerque New Mexico
Set in Paris in the year 1910, a retired old rich opera singer decides
to give her fortune away to her beautiful cat Duchess ( voiced by Eva
Gabor) and her kittens, but the jealous butler Edgar comes up with a
plan as he kidnaps the cats and leaves them in the countryside. Luckily
for them with the help of a streetwise and independent tomcat named
Thomas O'Malley ( voiced by Phil Harris) helps them get home especially
meeting some of his good friends like the swinging' Scat Cat ( voiced
by Scatman Crothers) and try to foil Edgar's plans.
Very entertaining and edgy post-Walt Disney's death animated movie with
a couple of nice jazzy tunes like the memorable "Everybody wants to be
a cat", good voice acting and some terrific animation for it's time
even in these times of computer animation. Not one of the greatest
Disney animated movies but a cult Disney animated fave and one of the
few gems of it's day that works well, highly recommended.
12 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
Overlooked?, 4 July 2007
![]()
Author:
Atreyu_II from The world of artists
The 20th animated Disney classic is often criticized by many people as
"mediocre" or poor in quality, but it is a good movie.
Despite being extremely underrated, it is one of the funniest Disney
classics. It is full of hilarious (some of them, hysterical) moments.
Edgar, the greedy butler, is the villain but a perfect comic relief.
He's one of my favorite Disney villains because he is so funny.
Every scene with Edgar and the two stupid hound dogs Napoleon and
Lafayette chasing him are among the most hilarious you'll ever see,
especially the one when Edgar drives his motorcycle into the river and
around the bridge, with the dogs chasing him. That is hysterical!
But the classic humor doesn't just come from Edgar or the hound dogs.
Other characters have their moments as well.
About the quality subject, it isn't perfect, but remains on a high
level. Even after Walt Disney's death those artists knew how to keep
faithful to Walt's spirit and "The Aristocats" is one of those
examples. They no longer make them like this!
As usual, legendary Disney actors voice the characters. In this case,
we have Phil Harris, Sterling Holloway, Paul Winchell, Eva Gabor and
Pat Buttram.
The characters are generally cool: Thomas O'Malley, Duchess and her 3
kittens, the mouse Roquefort, the alley cats, the English geese, the
hound dogs and the horse. The human characters are included as well:
the eccentric and kind retired Opera singer Madame Adelaide Bonfamille,
the comic Madame's old lawyer Georges Hautecourt and Edgar himself!
About the soundtrack, it has some nice and catchy songs such as Thomas
O'Malley's theme (but I can't remember its name), "Everybody Wants to
be a Cat" and "The Aristocats" (sung by Maurice Chevalier), for
example.
This movie takes place in Paris (France), in the year of 1910. A
classic, often underestimated and forgotten, but worthy.
13 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
One of Disney's better features, 22 July 2004
Author:
Akbar Shahzad (rapt0r_claw-1) from Karachi, Pakistan
The Aristocats is one of my favorite animated movies, but the
comparisons between this movie and past Disney classics are reasonable.
The dog napping plot of One Hundred and One Dalmatians is adapted to
fit the catnapping plot of The Aristocats. O'Malley and Duchess are
reconstructions of Lady and the Tramp at heart. But, as long as the end
result is just as enjoyable as the past movies, why complain? No matter
how the success was achieved, as long as it was achieved.
The plot is simple. Madame Adelaide Bonfamille is an old millionaires
spinster in Paris, 1910. The only other people in her lonely life are
her cat, Duchess, and her kittens, Toulouse, Marie and Berlioz, as well
as the faithful butler, Edgar. When Madame's lawyer, Georges, comes
over to make Madame's will, Edgar overhears her plans. She wants to
leave all her belongings to her cats, and at the end of their lifespan,
the vast sums of money will go to Edgar. Quite unreasonably, Edgar is
infuriated, and drugs and catnaps the kittens and dumps them in the
French countryside, miles from home. There they find Thomas O'Malley,
an alley cat who helps them back home, mainly because of Duchess.
The characterization of O'Malley certainly doesn't seem to have been a
problem. Voiced by Phil Harris (Baloo from The Jungle Book), he also
acts like the lovable bear and even looks just like you would imagine
Baloo to look like, were he transmogrified into a cat. His bunch of
jazz cats, led by Scat Cat, are some of the more effective Disney
cameo-players. My favorite was the long-haired, blonde English Cat
(besides Scat Cat, the rest have no names but clearly distinct
nationalities). Roquefort the house-mouse and Frou-Frou the horse have
brief roles, but shine in these glimpses. Edgar isn't really the real
Disney villain in that he is not evil...he is simply impatient. He is
not cruel from the start--his only sin is impatience. If he hadn't
known about the will, he would've taken care of the cats as if nothing
had happened. One sees his point in a way--what would those cats DO
with the money? Madame could have given her estate to Edgar, and the
butler would never have abandoned the cats had they not been privileged
more than himself. So I like Edgar, in some ways.
The story is a mix of other Disney classics. Besides Fantasia--which
had NO plot--this was Disney's first shot at writing an original story
for an animated feature, and even so they had to take shortcuts. Here
are the main plot elements repeated: 1) Villain-pet
naps-animals-for-personal-gain from One Hundred and One Dalmatians. 2)
Pampered-pet-learns-of-life-on-streets-through-streetwise-friend from
Lady and the Tramp. It also borrows a little bit from Chuck Jones and
Abe Levitow's Gay Purr-ee (1962). The plot is berated for being too
shallow, but I don't see how it can be with so many elements of
faultless classics. Again, as in the first paragraph: If the audience
enjoys a story, it doesn't matter how the story developed.
The animation, so often blasted for being lazy and flawed, can never be
seen the same way by everyone. It's solely a matter of opinion. The
animation isn't bad, like television cartoons: it's a different style,
radically different from, say, Sleeping Beauty. If that great fairy
tale were portrayed by such animation, it would be the greatest failure
in history; the same way, the sketchy, loose, carefree style of The
Aristocats is perfect to tell that kind of story with those characters.
Sleeping Beauty needed to be immaculate, as near to photography as
could be; The Aristocats is the most cartoony of Disney animated
features.
The Aristocats will always have an advantage over many films in my
book. It was one of the few movies my dad saw in theater, so I was
exposed to it more than several other movies. Besides that, it has
always been one of Disney's more enjoyable features, more fun than
most. It doesn't aim for the realism and drama of Bambi. It's just
wholesome entertainment.
9/10
8 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
For kids to enjoy. And it's cool!, 27 May 2000
Author:
revival05 from Sweden
> Kids will love this movie, just as they should. But, actually I thought
it was
cool! The characters and the music (ScatCat
rocks) are fantastic to listen to, and
the soundtrack is to be recommended.
An old lady makes her beloved cats the owner
of her money, in her will. Her
clumsy butler, Edgar, finds this idea very
stupid and annoying. And a problem,
since he was certain that the money would go
to him. So, wise as he is, he
decides to get the cats out of the picture, so
he can get all the cash. Of course.
He grabs them in a rainy night and throw them
away in a swamp way outside the
city in France.
Can't be missing in your
Disney-collection.
9 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Sweet, Romantic and Completely Underrated!, 23 March 2007
![]()
Author:
Fiendish_Dramaturgy from .: Fiendish Writings in the Dark :.
This is NOT the masterpiece that is Snow White, Cinderella, or Bambi,
but it IS a very sweet, enjoyable, romantic, well-done Disney animated
feature.
There are, of course, lessons included herein for the kiddies, and some
very appropriate kiddie-cheek, but there is plenty herein for the
adults, as well.
While this is somewhat of a regurgitation of the Classic Disney RomCom
Adventure, it still holds some elements, which solely belong to the
AristoCats. O'Malley is the "tramp" and Dutchess is the "lady," but
Dutchess has several kittens and they are all trying to get home.
Phil Harris is our tomcat O'Malley. You may recognize his voice, as he
also furnished the voice of Baloo the Bear in the Jungle Book, and
Little John in Disney's Robin Hood. Eva Gabor lends her silky sweet
voice to Dutchess.
Directed by Wolfgang Reitherman, who directed, or worked on, every
Disney animated film worth mentioning until his death in 1985.
This is among my very favorite of the Disney animated feature films,
and belongs in any Disney collection. The 2-Disk Special Edition Is Due
Out This Summer (2007).
This rates an 8.4/10 from...
the Fiend :.
9 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Not among's Disney's very best, but still enjoyable, 25 May 2002
![]()
Author:
scgary66 from Los Angeles
The first Disney animated film without the strong involvement of Disney
himself, this film suffers from the fact that the story is not particularly
original or interesting (this is, I believe, the only animated Disney film
since the 1940's which is NOT based on an earlier book or other work, but is
rather an original story). As others have noted, the plot is essentially a
cross between the romance in Lady and the Tramp and the kidnapping/journey
home story in 101 Dalmatians.
But to overcome this flaw, the filmmakers have successfully used many of the
better features of most of the Disney animated films of the previous 10-15
years: Phil Harris (from The Jungle Book) voicing one of the main
characters, follows his duet with Louis Prima in the previous film with
another here with Scatman Crothers. The quality visual look of this film is
virtually carried over from "Dalmatians" (with some nice nods to French
Impressionism, it appears), and the villain here (the butler) is strongly
reminiscent of the henchmen in that film as well. (This is probably one of
Disney's least memorable villains.) The main story goes back and forth
between the cats, and the butler's ongoing difficulties with two rural hound
dogs (with great voice work by Pat Buttram and George "Goober" Lindsey").
The various animal characters are similarly familiar to those who have seen
"Tramp" and "Dalmatians." The cats' owner, while bearing a striking visual
resemblance to the wicked stepmother in Sleeping Beauty, bears none of that
character's nasty traits and comes across as very warm and
generous.
The real strength of the film is the voice work; after first going toward
the use of mostly familiar actors in The Jungle Book, the tactic is
continued strongly here with Disney veterans Harris and Sterling Holloway
from The Jungle Book, and Eva Gabor (who would do a very similar character
in the later film The Rescuers), as well as Crothers and Nancy Kulp. All are
excellent here, particularly Harris and Gabor in the leads. The character
animation is as excellent as one would expect, showing a variety of emotions
well.
Smaller children may be upset by a few brief episodes (an escape from the
path of a speeding train, a near-drowning by one of the children), but these
are not presented in a particularly frightening or dark manner and are over
very quickly. Overall, there's very little of the type of more frightening
scenes found in many other Disney classics.
One minor oddity is the way some visual aspects of 60's culture are depicted
among the jazz-performing cats in supposedly 1910 Paris; one can't help but
wonder why the story wasn't set solidly in the present, other than the great
deal Paris had changed much of its appearance in the intervening time. It
really would have made more sense that way.
The songs, while being pleasant and sometimes very enjoyably performed, are
not particularly memorable. Nonetheless, the general energy applied here,
the excellent voice work and fine animation all contribute to overcome the
relatively few and minor weaknesses. Far from the greatness of classic "10"s
such as Pinocchio or Aladdin, and not quite up to the "9"s one might give to
Sleeping Beauty or 101 Dalmatians, this is probably a rather marginal 8 of
10; perhaps a 7.
9 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
Soooo romantic!!!, 21 October 2003
![]()
Author:
ivona021 from Chicago, USA
Since cats have nine lives, I'll give you nine reasons to see this
movie:
* The kittens Berlioz and Toulouse playing the piano together (so
unbelievably cute!)
* The car-chasing dogs Napoleon and Lafayette
* Toulouse jumping like electrified every time he wants to be like a tough
alley cat
* Marie sighing romantically while alley cat O'Malley seduces her
mom
* Scat Cat and his jazz band, singing "ev'rybody wants to be a
cat"
* Stupid but proper and nice English geese Amelia and Abigail who make the
cats walk like geese
* O'Malley obtaining the "magic carpet" which puts the Cheshire cat to
shame
* Roquefort the brave mouse's journey to ask help from alley
cats
* Edgar the butler chase scenes and transition from a nice guy to an
insane
cat hater due to cat riddance plan gone bad
| Page 1 of 7: | [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] |
| Plot summary | Plot synopsis | Amazon.com summary |
| Ratings | Awards | Newsgroup reviews |
| External reviews | Parents Guide | Official site |
| Plot keywords | Main details | Your user reviews |
| Your vote history |