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Watch The Rescuers: 35th Anniversary Edition - The Rescuers 35th Anniversary Edition/Rescuers Down Under 2-Movie Collection
Two mice of the Rescue Aid Society search for a little girl kidnapped by unscrupulous treasure hunters.Two mice of the Rescue Aid Society search for a little girl kidnapped by unscrupulous treasure hunters.Two mice of the Rescue Aid Society search for a little girl kidnapped by unscrupulous treasure hunters.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 2 wins & 1 nomination total
Bob Newhart
- Bernard
- (voice)
Eva Gabor
- Miss Bianca
- (voice)
Geraldine Page
- Madame Medusa
- (voice)
Joe Flynn
- Mr. Snoops
- (voice)
Jeanette Nolan
- Ellie Mae
- (voice)
Pat Buttram
- Luke
- (voice)
Jim Jordan
- Orville
- (voice)
John McIntire
- Rufus
- (voice)
Michelle Stacy
- Penny
- (voice)
Bernard Fox
- The Chairman
- (voice)
Larry Clemmons
- Gramps
- (voice)
James MacDonald
- Evinrude
- (voice)
- (as James Macdonald)
- …
George Lindsey
- Rabbit
- (voice)
Bill McMillian
- TV Announcer
- (voice)
- (as Bill McMillan)
Dub Taylor
- Digger
- (voice)
John Fiedler
- Owl
- (voice)
Ruth Buzzi
- German Mouse
- (voice)
- (unconfirmed)
- (uncredited)
Robie Lester
- Miss Bianca
- (singing voice)
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film's popularity almost led to a spin-off TV series in 1989. When the animation department green-lit The Rescuers Down Under (1990), the spin-off was reworked into Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers (1989), with Chip and Dale replacing Bernard and Miss Bianca.
- GoofsDuring the Rescue Aid Society meeting, one of the name plates says 'Africa'. Africa is a continent, not a country, and as such would not have a UN delegate.
- Quotes
Rufus: Faith is a bluebird, we see from far. It's for real and as sure as the first evening star, you can't touch it, or buy it, or wrap it up tight, but it's there just the same, making things turn out right.
Penny: Can't touch it, or buy it, or wrap it up tight, but it's there just the same, making things turn out right. But whoever adopts me has to adopt Teddy, too.
Rufus: Oh, they'll love him! He doesn't eat much, does he?
- Crazy creditsThe opening credits describe the journey of Penny's bottle through raging ocean waters. The entire sequence is made up of still paintings.
- Alternate versionsOn 8 January 1999, Disney issued a recall of 3.4 million copies of the home video version because two frames included an "objectionable background image", probably inserted without permission during production as an in-joke. The offending frames appear in a scene featuring a pan across an apartment: in one of the apartment windows, a picture of a topless woman can be glimpsed. This scene was intact for the original theatrical release in 1977. However, it was not in the 1992 video version because that was "made from a different print" according to a Disney spokesperson.
- ConnectionsEdited from The Jungle Book (1967)
Featured review
I can't fault this movie at all, other than to say the video I have is a bit grainy. The film is undeniably charming, based on the books by Margery Sharp, which I haven't read.
The animation was just wonderful, right from minute one. It was dark and fluid, and reminded me of the masterpieces of Don Bluth like American Tail and Secret of NIMH. It matched the music perfectly, and none of the characters were drawn stereotypically. I loved the fact they made the protagonists mice, which shows a lot of originality. I was laughing so much at the swamp animals scene, as it looked so ridiculous. Another funny scene was the one with the crocs playing the pipe organ, and then Medussa starts shooting the place down.
The songs were outstanding, and beautifully sung by Shelby Flint. I've heard criticisms that the songs were lifeless and slow, but I strongly disagree. The song at the beginning "The Journey" was beautiful beyond words, as was "Someone's Waiting For You", the one with Penny crying on the boat deck. They were truly emotional and haunting, and often misunderstood by people.
The characters were really funny and engaging, especially the two crocodiles, and Orville(especially when he cries "Mayday, Mayday!")Bernard was brilliantly voiced by Bob Newhart, likewise Bianca by beautiful Hungarian actress Eva Gabor. Penny was really sweet, but the scene-stealer was Geraldine Page as Madam Medussa, who was such a convincing villainess, very sinister yet absolutely hilarious. She reminds me of Ursula from the Little Mermaid.
The script was both touching and funny, with the dialogue between Madame Medussa and Snoops sparkling like bubbles on top of a champagne glass and the story is compelling and beautifully told. All in all, I recommend this and the sequel (which isn't quite as good). 10/10.Bethany Cox
The animation was just wonderful, right from minute one. It was dark and fluid, and reminded me of the masterpieces of Don Bluth like American Tail and Secret of NIMH. It matched the music perfectly, and none of the characters were drawn stereotypically. I loved the fact they made the protagonists mice, which shows a lot of originality. I was laughing so much at the swamp animals scene, as it looked so ridiculous. Another funny scene was the one with the crocs playing the pipe organ, and then Medussa starts shooting the place down.
The songs were outstanding, and beautifully sung by Shelby Flint. I've heard criticisms that the songs were lifeless and slow, but I strongly disagree. The song at the beginning "The Journey" was beautiful beyond words, as was "Someone's Waiting For You", the one with Penny crying on the boat deck. They were truly emotional and haunting, and often misunderstood by people.
The characters were really funny and engaging, especially the two crocodiles, and Orville(especially when he cries "Mayday, Mayday!")Bernard was brilliantly voiced by Bob Newhart, likewise Bianca by beautiful Hungarian actress Eva Gabor. Penny was really sweet, but the scene-stealer was Geraldine Page as Madam Medussa, who was such a convincing villainess, very sinister yet absolutely hilarious. She reminds me of Ursula from the Little Mermaid.
The script was both touching and funny, with the dialogue between Madame Medussa and Snoops sparkling like bubbles on top of a champagne glass and the story is compelling and beautifully told. All in all, I recommend this and the sequel (which isn't quite as good). 10/10.Bethany Cox
- TheLittleSongbird
- Feb 26, 2009
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Bernardo y Bianca
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $7,500,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $71,215,869
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $2,111,582
- Dec 18, 1983
- Gross worldwide
- $71,215,869
- Runtime1 hour 17 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.75 : 1
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