In The Lion King II: Simba's Pride, the Circle of Life song does not play throughout the entire movie, but the concept is still pivotal to the story. In The Lion King 1½, the song is used again. Rafiki presents Simba and Nala's newborn cub, Kiara, recalling the opening. The song reprises at the end of the film after Simba has taken the throne, after the death of Scar, and avenging Mufasa, restoring the Circle of Life to its natural order. These combined factors cause the remaining herds to leave the kingdom, therefore leaving the lions and hyenas with no food and water.
When Scar kills Mufasa and lets the hyenas run rampant on Pride Lands, the Circle of Life is broken, and the Pride Lands become decimated with droughts, famine, and overhunting from the hyenas, with animal skeletons lying all around with Scar as the king. After blessing their newborn cub, Simba, Rafiki lifts him up high for all the animals to see, and the animals bow before their future king. There, Rafiki meets up with the current King of the Pride Lands, Mufasa and his mate Sarabi. As the song progresses, various animal herds travel through the Pride Lands to gather at Pride Rock. In all seriousness this is both Disney and animation at its best.The song takes place at the very beginning of the film, the dawn of Simba's presentation. Maybe my opinion is biased? Biased because i love animals, biased because I love animation and biased because I love great movies.
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It's not just me that feels this way either, walk into any Disney store and you will see a lot of Lion King merchandise on sale (for high prices) all year round and the movie is still being re-released at cinemas (now in 3D) and on DVD (now on Blue ray or diamond edition). I feel thst it sends out great messages to children such as your past may be painful but you must face it and learn from it to move forwards and also the mini-lesson on the circle of life. I have enjoyed it at the cinema, been ill with it at home (on VHS) and will no doubt introduce my own children to it some day. It is as much a part of my childhood as the sweet smell of a new pencilcase or the rough feel of a new school jumper. My personal favourite part is Scars song, be prepared. From the opening sunrise "NNAAAAAA SSOOOPENNYAA TUMA LEEKI MA LAAD", to the Gopher who pops up and reports to Zazu "News from the under ground", to the stampede, to can you feel the love tonight, to everything that Timon and Pumbaa say. There are so many memorable moments in The Lion King. Besides, each time Disney attempt to break or bend the rules the movie tends to be pretty lame i.e.
But the formula works and audiences connect with it. Becoming seperated from one's family, rediscovering the meaning of family and finding ones own identity through regaining family. The tried and tested formula, used from Snow White right through to modern movies today was the same. The "choices for voices" were spot on and delivered very effectively.Īlthough the setting is somewhat different, the story itself is nothing new from Disney. You have James Earl Jones, Matthew Boderick, Jeremy Irons, Nathan Lane, Ernie Sabella, Rowan Atkinson, Whoopi Goldberg and the list goes on. The Animation was groundbreaking, the songs were catchy (Elton John's imput was top-notch), the humour was for adults too and the vocal cast was astounding. Movies like Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, Pocahontas, Mulan, Tarzan, Hercules, The Hunchback of Notre Dame to name but a few.įor my money The Lion King is the pick of the bunch or the pick of the pride if you will. They churned out a string of popular, traditionally animated movies that had children and adults alike flocking to the cinema like never before. The 1990's were a great decade for Disney.