My brother and I were born in the early and mid 50's. We are both in our 60's now and I remember watching this on our old black and white tv long ago. Great memories!
So I spread to my family and friends on FB about this first accessiblity to the deaf and hard-of-hearing that is biggest first-time accessible with captions! My wish has been granted!
reportedley, when Walt Disney saw this movie, his reaction was "We can do better than that with our second-string animators" well since i'm a fan of animated movies, i don't see it that way, but since Disney and Fleischer were rivals, it makes sense
On October 15,1961 my Mom pointed out this movie to me. She had to have seen it in the theater when she was 8/9. I was 6/7 when I saw this with Mom and I always remembered Gabby trying to tell the king;"THERE'S A GIANT ON THE BEACH!"
@alex9920iasi Actually, the first animated feature was the sadly now lost political satire "El Apóstol" (The Apostle), made in 1917 by Argentine animator Quirino Cristiani. The earliest-surviving animated feature is the silhouette-animated "Adventures of Prince Achmed", made in 1926 by Lotte Reiniger and Berthold Bartosch.
It may not have been as trivial as Jonathan Swift's original war over which end of an egg to break-but it does point out that wars can be fought for silly reasons.
My brother and I were born in the early and mid 50's. We are both in our 60's now and I remember watching this on our old black and white tv long ago. Great memories!
Finally you are first one on any media ever that you made an accessible to the deaf and hard-of-hearing for this deaf and hard-of-hearing!! Congrats!
Thank you very much for the English subtitles
Fleischer should have made more than 2 full-length animated features; I love the way the excitement starts right at the beginning!
So I spread to my family and friends on FB about this first accessiblity to the deaf and hard-of-hearing that is biggest first-time accessible with captions! My wish has been granted!
last time i saw this movie i was 5 years old, now im 28 years & i still love this movie
this film should be preserved in the National Film Registry
Gulliver's Travels
(IN TECHNICOLOR)
Ahhhhh..... the classics never let me down
reportedley, when Walt Disney saw this movie, his reaction was "We can do better than that with our second-string animators" well since i'm a fan of animated movies, i don't see it that way, but since Disney and Fleischer were rivals, it makes sense
7:11 Gabby: There's a giant on the beach!
My childhood :') ....90's baby for the win!!!
On October 15,1961 my Mom pointed out this movie to me. She had to have seen it in the theater when she was 8/9. I was 6/7 when I saw this with Mom and I always remembered Gabby trying to tell the king;"THERE'S A GIANT ON THE BEACH!"
5:48 - what a glorious quality of the captioning that ASL interpreting doesn't do. Captioning always better!
@tummielvr im a big fan of old school, & im trying to relive my childhood life back in the 80's
This movie used to scare me as a kid ~_~ I still feel queasy right now.
@alex9920iasi Actually, the first animated feature was the sadly now lost political satire "El Apóstol" (The Apostle), made in 1917 by Argentine animator Quirino Cristiani. The earliest-surviving animated feature is the silhouette-animated "Adventures of Prince Achmed", made in 1926 by Lotte Reiniger and Berthold Bartosch.
WOOOOTTT! Keep up going!!!!
I have a DVD of "The Lucy Show" that uses this as the theme music. It doesn't fit the show at all!
a war is caused just because of a song...
It may not have been as trivial as Jonathan Swift's original war over which end of an egg to break-but it does point out that wars can be fought for silly reasons.
Rrrrrrroses! Rodadenderums! Snnnnapparrdrragons... und- DAIsies....
*sigh* JUST PLAY BOTH SONGS YOU SILLY HIERARCHIES
First. Lol