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#the adventures of icabod and mr toad
bones4thecats · 8 months
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Candy Candido (1913 - 1999)
DON'T LET THIS MAN GO FORGOTTEN!!!
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irantforpleasure · 2 years
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You ever watch something and wonder "What was the point of all that?"
That's how I feel about the Icabod story in The Adventures of Icabod and Mr. Toad.
As a horror and animation fan I like the scenes with the Headless Horseman of course but the rest of the story is meh.
Sexist and fatphobic undertones aside everyone is an asshole, Katrina likes 2 guys and pits them against each other and they both objectify her. Maybe their characters just don't bod with modern audiences.
Then after the whole short, Icabod is either dead or missing and everyone just moves on. I mean harsh.
The Headless Horseman is why everyone keeps coming back!
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voicetalentbrendan · 3 years
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DisneyPlus’s Halloween Collection
The collection includes many movies and episodes all about Halloween and all things spooky. Not all Halloween episodes are included.
Movies and Series:
Frankenweenie
The Nightmare Before Christmas
Hocus Pocus
The Haunted Mansion
The Adventures of Icabod and Mr. Toad
Maleficent
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil
Z-O-M-B-I-E-S
Z-O-M-B-I-E-S 2
Coco
Halloweentown
Halloweentown II: Kalabar’s Revenge
Can of Worms
Girl Vs Monster
Halloweentown High
Twitches
Twitches Too
Mom’s Got a Date with a Vampire
The Invisible Sister
Don’t Look Under the Bed
Phantom of the Megaplex
The Scream Team
Return to Halloweentown
Mr. Boogedy
Bride of Boogedy
The Ghosts of Buxley Hall
So Weird
James and the Giant Peach
Shorts and Specials:
Frankenweenie
Trick or Treat
Lonesome Ghosts
Mater and the Ghostlight
Vampirini: Ghoul Girls Rock
Captain Sparky vs the Flying Saucers
The Legend of Mor’du
The Simpsons Treehouse of Terror:
S2:E3
S3:E6
S4:E5
S5:E5
S6:E6
S7:E6
S8:E1
S9:E5
S10:E4
S11:E4
S12:E1
S13:E1
S14:E1
S15:E1
S16:E1
S17:E4
S18:E4
S19:E5
S20:E4
S21:E4
S22:E4
S23:E3
S24:E2
S25:E2
S26:E4
S27:E5
S28:E4
S29:E4
S30:E4
Disney Channel Halloween Episodes:
Phineas and Ferb S4:E18
Jessie S2:E1
Wizards of Waverly Place S3:E2
Big City Greens S1:E15
A.N.T. Farm S1:E14
Kim Possible S1:E14
K.C. Undercover S1:E24
Good Luck Charlie S2:E25
Girl Meets World S1:E11
Sonny With a Chance S2:E18
Raven’s Home S2:E16
Shake It Up S3:E25
Tangles: The Series S1:E13
Mickey Mouse Shorts S1:E10
Gravity Falls S1:E12
Star vs. The Forces of Evil S2:E11
Lab Rats S1:E17
Ducktales S1:E10
Ultimate Spider-Man S3:E10
Disney Junior Halloween Episodes:
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse S1:E17
Vampirina S1:E24
Puppy Dog Pals S1:E17
Doc McStuffins S1:E23
Jake and the Never Land Pirates S1:E22
The Lion Guard S1:E21
Imagination Movers S2:E6
Sheriff Callie’s Wild West S2:E17
Fancy Nancy S1:E11
Mickey Mouse Roadster Racers S1:E20
Muppet Babies S1:E15
Henry Hugglemonster S2:E15
Jake and the Never Land Pirates S2:E15
Imagination Movers S3:E9
Miles from Tomorrowland S1:E23
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse S5:E7
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse S5:E8
Jake and the Never Land Pirates S3:E19
Doc McStuffins S2:E25
Henry Hugglemonster S1:E20
Jake and the Never Land Pirates S4:E2
Jake and the Never Land Pirates S4:E6
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse S2:E11
Doc McStuffins S3:E11
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acmeoop · 4 years
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Finale “The Adventures of Icabod & Mr. Toad” (1949)
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applesandbannas747 · 4 years
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hi! what are your favorite halloween kids movies?
Halloween Town is my favorite!
It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown has a special place in my heart because watching it with my family on Halloween was a tradition
Paranorman is fantastic, love that one
Hotel Transylvania if that one counts as ‘Halloween’
Nightmare Before Christmas is good too
Other ones I know I liked as a kid include The Adventures of Icabod and Mr. Toad, Monster House, and Scary Godmother: Halloween Spooktacular
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morticiasgomez · 2 years
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I’ve been watching a lot of Disney movies lately and thought it would be a great idea to go through and watch them all from the beginning to watch how the animation changes over time. I’ll be making graphics for each movie over here.
THE GOLDEN AGE (1937-1942)
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
Pinocchio
Fantasia
Dumbo
Bambi
THE WARTIME ERA (1943-1949)
Saludos Amigos
The Three Caballeros
Make Music Mine
Fun and Fancy Free
Melody Time
The Adventures of Icabod and Mr. Toad
THE SILVER AGE (1950-1959)
Cinderella
Alice in Wonderland
Peter Pan
Lady and the Tramp
Sleeping Beauty
One Hundred and One Dalmatians
The Sword in the Stone
The Jungle Book
THE BRONZE AGE (1970-1988)
The Aristocats
Robin Hood
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
The Rescuers
The Fox and The Hound
The Black Cauldron
The Great Mouse Detective
Oliver and Company
THE RENAISSANCE (1989-1999)
The Little Mermaid
The Rescuers Down Under
Beauty and the Beast
Aladdin
The Lion King
Pocahontas
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Hercules
Mulan
Tarzan
POST RENAISSANCE (2000-2009)
Fantasia 2000
Dinosaur
The Emperor’s New Groove
Atlantis: The Lost Empire
Lilo and Stitch
Treasure Planet
Brother Bear
Home on the Range
Chicken Little
Meet the Robinsons
Bolt
THE REVIVAL (2010 - PRESENT)
Princess and the Frog
Tangled
Winnie the Pooh
Wreck it Ralph
Frozen
Big Hero 6
Zootopia
Moana
Ralph Breaks the Internet
Frozen II
Raya and the Last Dragon
Encanto
19/60
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disney-is-mylife · 7 years
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The Disney Animated Canon Films - Summed Up In Four Words
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs: Apple kills young woman - OR - Haters wrong, instant classic
Pinocchio: Scariest fucking whale EVER - OR - Puppet does dumb shit
Fantasia: Majestic music and animation - OR - Uncultured swine hate it
Dumbo: First movie about racism - OR - Disney's only silent protagonist
Bambi: Mom dies, nothing matters
Saludos Amigos: South America is musical - OR - Walt’s first attempt educating
The Three Caballeros: Donald wants dat ass
Make Mine Music: Fantasia 2 with singing
Fun and Fancy Free: Bears slapping = bear sex - OR - Puppeteer tells giant story
Melody Time: Fantasia 3 with singing
The Adventures of Icabod and Mr. Toad: Nobody remembers Mr. Toad
Cinderella: Iconic princess forever mischaracterized
Alice in Wonderland: Madder than a hatter
Peter Pan: Smee is Hook’s bitch
Lady and the Tramp: Canine romance inspires humans
Sleeping Beauty: Spiteful bitch kills princess
101 Dalmatians: Spiteful bitch kills puppies
The Sword in the Stone: Transformations teach excellent lessons
The Jungle Book: Two worlds, one family
The Aristocats: Villain is actually sympathetic
Robin Hood: Anthropomorphic classic British literature
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh: Toy Story pre-1990s
The Rescuers: Mice make better cops
The Fox and the Hound: Society’s a fucking bitch
The Black Cauldron: What the fuck, Disney? - OR - You know, for kids! - OR - Damn Disney, legitimately scared
The Great Mouse Detective: Again, mice solve crimes
Oliver & Company: Dogs, Cats, and Dickens
The Little Mermaid: Don’t underestimate body language
The Rescuers Down Under: The sequel NOBODY remembers
Beauty and the Beast: Disney’s masterpiece. That’s all.
Aladdin: Al wants dat ass
The Lion King: Hamlet with lions. Ta-da!
Pocahontas: Disney, don’t do history - OR - Disney’s last education attempt
The Hunchback of Notre Dame: Erection sets Paris aflame
Hercules: Disney, PLEASE do mythology! - OR - Hades, Disney's best villain
Mulan: Badass woman saves China
Tarzan: Badass man saves gorillas
Fantasia 2000: Fantasia 4 with celebrities
Dinosaur: The Land Before Time
The Emperor’s New Groove: Wrong lever; irreverently hilarious
Atlantis The Lost Empire: Disney’s lost action film
Lilo and Stitch: Popular alien, forgotten sisters
Treasure Planet: Classic story in space
Brother Bear: So much lost potential!
Home on the Range: Judi Dench deserved better
Chicken Little: WHAT HAPPENED, DISNEY? WHY?
Meet the Robinsons: Actually Walt’s life story
Bolt: TV star meets reality
The Princess and the Frog: The REAL Disney comeback
Tangled: Excellent story, mediocre acting - OR - I SEE THE LIGHT
Winnie the Pooh: Cute but BAD timing
Wreck-It Ralph: Winning over non gamers - OR - Mad Hatter goes Turbo
Frozen: Terrified woman freeze world - OR - Disney’s most credited comeback
Big Hero 6: Squishy robot wins audience - OR - BAYMAX IS THE CUTEST
Zootopia: Cop film nobody expected
Moana: YOU’RE WELCOME, YOU’RE WELCOME - OR - CONSIDER THE COCONUT, WHAT? - I’D RATHER BE SHINY
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brokenmusicboxwolfe · 7 years
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I saw:
The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad- This was an animated film made during a period Disney was making features by combining shorter individual stories. In this case the first story takes the book The Wind in the Willows as it’s source. The second uses The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, which you can probably guess is why I’m watching it this time of year.  
Mr. Toad is...well, he’s a toad but he’s also an impulsive aristocrat that indulges his ever changing obsessions without regard for good sense or even persinal safety. He becomes taken with motor cars at a time you couldn’t pop into a local car dealership, which considering his money had been cut off by his well meaning friends wouldn’t have matter anyway. He quickly gets accused of stealing a car, which he refutes by claiming he traded his estate for it. It sounds disasterous either way you look at it, and it is because he ends up in jail while a gang of weasels take over his home. Though since if they use the deed to Toad Hall they prove Toad innocent and their ringleader of purgery this should be easy to take care of. A jail break won’t be enough to sort this out, but I’ll just have to tale their word for it stealing the deed back because it seems to me....
Shut up Stephanie! Just go with it....
The last time I saw this I had not read The Wind in the Willows. We had a set of children’s classics filling a bookcase when I was little, but these were in editions in plain single colored covers, only the title written on them, and not a single illustration within or hint of what the books were about. The slate grey book never drew me to it. But then about 8 years ago we spent months taking care of a sick relative, a luddite with no tv, internet, radio we could use...but a nice selection of classic children’s novels (trust me, after reading her copy if Gone with the Wind and wanting to punch someone I stuck to the kiddie pool). What do you know, Wind in the Willows was a great book! Of course, this being a half hour Disney cartoon this isn’t proper adaptation. Never mind though, it’s fun as it is!
As for the second story, a school teacher moves to a small town where he takes a fancy to the local pretty rich girl, rich being key to his attraction. She sees this as a chance to make her actual boyfriend, the community tough guy/practical joker, jealous. Think the cheerleader stirring  her football star boyfriend by pretending to take an interest in the geekiest boy in the class. It works. At a part the boyfriend sets out to scare the teacher with a spooky story of a ghostly headless horseman in the woods that has to be crossed to get home after the shindig. Jumping as every shadow already the teacher soon find himself face to, um....well, not face that’s for sure!...with a horseman armed with a sword bit no head! Yikes!
I find it funny I actually enjoy it despite the fact there are a good few things that bug me. I’m not big on Bing Crosby, so the fact he narrates and sings the frequent songs in this section isn’t a selling point for me. Having the jock mock Ichabod’s looks is one thing, but when the song does it too it seeks like the makers endorse the insults. Considering the “funny” treatment of a fat girl wallflower’s interaction with the jock they have no trouble with finding unconventional looks amusing. But still I like it. 
The characters aren’t good guys or quite bad guys. Well, some are worse than others. Ichabod’s greedy side wasn’t as nasty as Katrina using him or Brom scaring him silly. His greed was powerless, though he was oblivious to it. Actually, as a child I was always worried that, never mind what they said people thought about Ichabod’s fate, that Brom had actually murdered him and gotten away with it! I guess I always down deep thought someone was a bad guy! LOL
Anyway, while it takes liberties with the original story, it’s actually one of the more faithful adaptation of it. The section with the Headless Horseman attack has always delighted my inner monster kid. Cloud hands closing around the moon, crickets seeming to call out Icabod’s name, a false scare of galloping cattails, and then the horseman swoops in all billowing cape and flame eyes jack o’lantern thrown right at the audience.... Do I like it because if it’s intrinsic quality or because of a childhood affection embedded deep in me?  What does it matter why as long as I enjoy it! 
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The Disney Movie Eras
(Not including films made in association with Pixar, Lucasfilm, or Marvel)
1937-1942: The Golden Era
The Golden Era represents the films that Walt Disney personally oversaw, and that established the Walt Disney Animation as one of the top animation studios. They consist of:
Snow White and the Seven Dwarves
Pinocchio
Fantasia!
Dumbo
Bambi
In terms of finances, the Golden Era wasn’t that golden. It suffered a great loss from Fantasia!, and tried to make up for the financial loss with Dumbo, which was originally suppose to be an animated short.
1943-1949: The Wartime Era
The Wartime Era consists of movies that were made during World War II, and because of this they were quite low budget films and were not very popular. This era is also known as the “Package Era” because the movies were not a continuous story, but rather just a bunch of short films put together. Thest movies consisted of:
Saludos Amigos
The Three Caballeros
Make Mine Music
Fun and Fancy Free
Melody Time
The Adventures of Icabod and Mr. Toad
1950-1967: The Silver Age
This period of Disney History is also known as the restoration period of Disney. It was when Disney started making full length animated feature films again, and went back to the classic Disney animation. During this time the Disney Company also made advancements in mixing animation with live action like in Song of the South and Mary Poppins, but that doesn’t really count since it is live action mixed with animation.
Cinderella
Alice in Wonderland
Peter Pan
Lady and the Tramp
Sleeping Beauty
101 Dalmatians
The Sword in the Stone
The Jungle Book
1970-1988: The Bronze Age
The Bronze Age (also called Disney’s Dark Age) saw a time where Disney Studios was struggling to make good animated movies. Without Walt Disney, who had died in 1966, to lead them they has sort of lost their footing, and were in a period of trial and error.
The Aristocats
Robin Hood
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
The Fox and the Hound
The Black Cauldron
The Great Mouse Detective
Oliver and Company
Most of these films received very little success, and The Black Cauldron was a complete flop in the box office. The only film to be commercially successful was the The Great Mouse Detective
1989-1999: The Disney Renaissance
Like the Disney Silver Era, the Disney Renaissance was Disney’s return to making musical fairytale type animated films. It is considered by many to be the best of the Disney movie eras. This period not only had great animated features, but also brought so many wonderful talents into the spotlight like Howard Ashman and Alan Menken.
The Little Mermaid
The Rescuers Down Under
Beauty and the Beast
Aladdin
The Lion King
Pochahontas
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Mulan
Tarzan
2000-2009: The Post-Renaissance Era
The Post-Renaissance era is also known as Disney’s Second Dark Age. In this time Disney was marketing more towards the kids who had grown up during the Disney Renaissance, and not everyone like they had used to. Most of the films released during this period only received moderate success, but this was mainly due to the fact that they had to compete with huge movie franchises like the Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter. Despite this not being a very commercially successful period, Disney was able to develop new technology, and released the first films that used CGI animation.
Fantasia 2000
Lilo and Stitch
Treasure Planet
Brother Bear
Home on the Range
Chicken Little
Meet the Robinsons
Bolt
2010-present: The Second Disney Renaissance
Just like the first Disney Renaissance, the Second Disney Renaissance also followed a dark age. This era marked another return to classic Disney storytelling, as well as the additions of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and Lucasfilm. Because Disney bought Marvel and Lucasfilm, they no longer needed to worry about pleasing people of all ages. They had their classic animated features films, as well as more high action thrills
Princess and the Frog
Winnie the Pooh
Tangled
Wreck It Ralph
Frozen
Big Hero 6
Zootopia
Moana
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mytripstodisney · 6 years
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Disney Movies
It has recently come to my attention that I have not seen nearly enough of the old animated movies and cartoons that the Disney Company made, so I am challenging myself to watch every Disney movie that is classified in one of the “Eras of Disney Movies”, such as the Golden Age, or the Disney Renaissance, as well as just other films that I have interest in watching like Pete’s Dragon. So far I have watched every movie in the Golden Era, The Disney Renaissance, and all of the Disney Pixar Films.
Here are the films I still need to watch: Sauldos Amigos, The Three Caballeros, Make Mine Music, Melody Time, The Adventures of Icabod and Mr. Toad (The Wartime Era); 101 Dalmatians (The Silver Age); The Aristocats, The Black Cauldron, The Great Mouse Detective, Oliver and Company (The Bronze Age); Treasure Planet, Home on the Range (The Post-Renaissance Era); Princess and the Frog (The Second Renaissance).
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