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Closed Caption; Visual commentary: The producers & directors reveal the making-of process with additional footage as you watch the film; Delted scenes: Alternate ending and original prologue; Disney's Animation Magic: Go behind the scenes with Walt Disney Feature Animation Chairman Roy Disney; DisneyPedia: The Life of a Pirate Revealed; RLS Legacy - An Exploration Adventure Game: Take a virtual 3-D tour of the ship and be challenged to the ultimate treasure hunt; Music video performed by John Rzeznik of the Goo Goo Dolls; Digital-to-digital transfer; Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound; French and Spanish-language tracks; Widescreen (1.66:1), enhanced for 16 x 9 televisions; THX-certified
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Opening Credits/A Young Boy's Dream
2. The Warning
3. Jim's Quest
4. The R.L.S. Legacy
5. John Silver
6. Setting Sail
7. A Mutiny in the Making
8. "I'm Still Here (Jim's Theme)"
9. A Star Gone Supernova
10. Getting In Too Deep
11. Jim Hears the Truth
12. Protecting the Map
13. B.E.N.
14. Bargaining for the Map
15. Sneaking Back on Ship
16. The Discovery
17. The Treasure
18. The Escape
19. Silver and Jim Say Goodbye
20. Going Home/End Credits
One of Disney's most ambitious animated undertakings (reportedly 17 years in development), this Oscar-nominated adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's classic adventure was buried at the box office but is definitely worth discovering on home video. The basic story has captivated generations, fueling live-action versions by Victor Fleming in 1934 and Walt Disney in 1950, and even a puppet-action version in 1996 (Muppet Treasure Island), among others. In an attempt to avoid the box-office poison inherent in the words "pirate movie," Disney gave Stevenson's tale a futuristic spin, setting an alienated young man, Jim Hawkins, on a space-age collision course with aliens. It begins when Jim comes into possession of a virtual treasure map to the fabled Treasure Planet, said to hold "the loot of a thousand worlds." The film's Long John Silver is a cyborg (voiced by stage veteran Brian Murray), and he's at once nemesis and mentor to Jim -- with an artificial Cuisinart arm, to boot (he's also cook aboard the spaceship Legacy). David Hyde Pierce gives voice to family friend Dr. Doppler, a fussy, doglike creature, and Emma Thompson voices Legacy's formidable feline commander, Captain Amelia. Martin Short's marooned robot, B.E.N., is no match for Robin Williams's Genie, but he still generates most of the film's laughs. The animation, which seamlessly combines traditional hand-drawn characters and computer-generated backgrounds, is out-of-this-world. An opening solar board sequence is a universe beyond the tree-surfing shots in Tarzan. The DVD edition contains considerable plunder for animation buffs, including illuminating "visual commentary" by directors Ron Clements and John Musker (The Little Mermaid and Aladdin), and several segments that chart the film's evolution. Donald Liebenson, Barnes & Noble
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