Jeanskynebu
the audience applauded
Dotsthavesp
I wanted to but couldn't!
BeSummers
Funny, strange, confrontational and subversive, this is one of the most interesting experiences you'll have at the cinema this year.
Humaira Grant
It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.
Horst in Translation ([email protected])
If you read the title "Goliath II", then you may think that this is a sequel, but nope. The title is the name of the protagonist in here and his father is Goliath or Goliath I. The central characters are elephants and our hero is too tiny and too insignificant to follow into his majestic Dad's footsteps. The consequence is lots of conflict and Goliath keeps running away from his "people". But in the end there is an interesting solution with a mouse that somewhat symbolizes David in the old tale. And a happy end as usual for Disney. Yep, these slightly under 15 minutes are a Disney cartoon from 1960, so already over 55 years old. And at almost a quarter of an hour, they are about twice as long as the standards 7 minutes. This one here was nominated for an Oscar, but no win for Walt during the later stages of his career this time. This nomination also turned it into one of the biggest successes for German director Wolfgang Reitherman whose career spanned over many decades. So yeah I think you should watch it. The story reminded me a bit of How to Train Your Dragon in the Jungle Book universe. There are several antagonists here, but it's still a really harmless little movie, also suitable for the very young ones. Nobody gets killed, nobody gets hurt and the most "extreme" scene is perhaps Mother Elephant spanking her son. Go check it out. Final note: In here you will also find Mel Blanc in a Disney film, a combination that did not happen too often I believe. Sadly he does not have too much material really. But with what he has he shines like everybody else from the experienced voice cast.
OllieSuave-007
Great cartoon short featuring a herd of proud elephants marching through the jungle, along with a pint-sized outcast named Goliath II. He is frowned upon by the herd leader, his father Goliath I, for his small size. However, he is loved and nurtured by his mother. But, when he gets lost a couple of times, and nearly becoming a meal to a tiger and a crocodile, he gets disciplined by his mother and rebuffed by the herd. But, he might just redeem himself when he chooses to stand up to a pesky mouse while all the other adult elephants escape.This cartoon short is a nice throwback to the Disney films, featuring recognizable voice actors such as Sterling Holloway, Verna Felton, Barbara Jo Allen, J. Pat O'Malley and Paul Frees. The plot is solid and exciting and the story is full of humor and funny one-liners - loved how Goliath's mom talks back to Goliath I and calls him names.There are also some slapstick stuff too that will generate some laugh-out-loud moments, particularly courteous to the tiger, and there is a very upbeat and toe-tapping march music serving as the cartoon's score.The characters and animation serve as a precursor as some sort to the Disney full-length animated film, The Jungle Book, which was released the following year. Fun stuff here - definitely one of the best Disney cartoons out there and one I remember fondly from my childhood.Grade A
MisterWhiplash
The notable thing about this short cartoon directed by Wolfgang "Woolie" Reitherman (who would go to direct many of the notable Disney movies of the 60's and 70's and was part of the "9 Old Men"), is that it features a few pieces of key animation from The Jungle Book several years before the film while *also* featuring some shots which are clearly taken from older Disney movies (I counted Dumbo and Peter Pan, though I'm sure there are bits from others I missed).It may be that I notice such things after a lifetime of seeing these things, but I think even if you're only somewhat familiar with the animation it will come up as 'hey, wait a minute, that's Dumbo and his mom, isn't it?' All the same it's a cute short - not much more, but the story, about a tiny elephant who is looked on as a pain in the butt for the other larger elephants and gets into mishaps with a tiger (only to later save them all by, again the Dumbo connection, fighting a mouse that they adults are all scared of), is a charming and substantive story of standing up for yourself against odds even if you're smaller or weaker or whatnot.It is slight, it is silly, and it feels like an early trial run for The Jungle Book long before Balloo and Bagheera and when Khan looked like a rag-doll version of a tiger. It's fine, it's just not anything highly memorable, aside from its cribbing of shots from other Disney movies (perhaps, no, surely, as a way of cutting corners costwise).
Robert Reynolds
This cartoon, nominated for an Oscar, continues Disney's tendency in the latter 1950s-early 1960s to do short animation that was longer than the typical 6-8 minute length that had been the norn in the 1930s and 1940s. Although not entirely fresh ground (Warner Brothers explored the same basic concept before), Disney gives this a warm and fuzzy feel and then leavens it with enough humor to make it work splendidly. Sterling Holloway's narration is splendid, as always. As with all too much of the Mouse's older material, this is out of print, but it runs on The Ink and Paint Club on occasion. Recommended.