What’s the Story?
Based on the 1928 children's book by Felix Salten, BAMBI came out in 1942 and was heavily influenced by the making of Snow White, Fantasia, and Pinocchio, borrowing elements from preceding Disney features while pushing animation to a new level of realism and drama. Told more with music and animation than dialogue, the story is a simple one of forest creatures who play and live joyfully even as they fight to survive. At the center of the story is wide-eyed deer Bambi, who must find a way to endure after hunters kill his mother. Supported by his friends, Thumper (a rabbit) and Flower (a skunk), Bambi faces the dangers of the forest, woos a delicate doe named Faline, and eventually grows into a strong buck and a leader of the forest.
Is It Any Good?
Supervised by Walt Disney, the animators closely studied the movement and anatomy of real animals, working for six years to perfect the personalities of the characters and find just the right children's voices for them. No people actually appear in the movie, but are instead the unseen menace. Symphonic and choral pieces accompany the animation, which might seem odd to kids today who are used to Disney characters breaking into song-and-dance numbers. These and other artistic choices add grace and elegance to a film that hasn't lost its impact in over 60 years.
The Platinum Edition 2-disc DVD set includes games and activities for kids, including "Bambi's Forest Friends," which shows cute live footage of deer, rabbits, skunks, and owls, and tells kids a little about each kind of animal. There are also deleted scenes, the original trailer, a recreation of Walt Disney's story meetings for Bambi, dramatized from actual transcripts, and a "Making of Bambi" feature.

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