- Actors: Jack Palance, John Cleese, Steven Wright, Sandy Duncan
- Directors: Richard Rich
- Disc Format: NTSC, Widescreen
- Region: Region A/1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: G
- Studio: Sony Mod
- Release Date: October 29, 2019
- Run Time: 90 minutes
The
Swan Princess may be celebrating its 25th anniversary, but
watching the Blu-ray release that coincided with this occasion was my first
opportunity to see the film. I probably should have watched it for the first
time at a younger age, because The Swan
Princess is a film that is far easier to love with nostalgia attached. For
me, I had no childhood connection and was simply able to see how dated both the
narrative and the animation style truly is.
Based on the
classic fairy tale and ballet, “Swan
Lake ,” this New Line
Cinema film was clearly attempting to compete with the Disney resurgence in the
1990s. With former Disney employee, Richard Rich, as director of the film, it
is quite clear the imitative intentions of the production. Unfortunately, The Swan Princess had to compete with an
actual Disney film and failed horribly at the box office. Somehow that did not
stop eight direct-to-video sequels.
Based on a
classic text or not, the story in The
Swan Princess feels horribly dated in terms of gender roles. A princess
named Odette (voiced by Michelle Nicastro) is turned into a swan by the evil
sorcerer Rothbart (Jack Palance) who desires her as his bride along with the
kingdom which would come with it. The handsome prince Derek (Howard McGillin)
is heartbroken at the disappearance of Odette, having had a future marriage
with her planned since childhood. Little does Derek know that Odette is still
alive, only able to transform back into her human form in the moonlight of the
lake.
With a kidnapped
princess and a sorcerer who turns into dragon-like beast at the end, this film
shares more with classic Disney than it did the 90s incarnation, which may be
why it did not do that well. It may have felt dated even when it was released,
and the last 25 years haven’t been any kinder. Nostalgia is the primary reason
I see anyone purchasing this Blu-ray, though it does come with some new special
features.
The Blu-ray
release should be primarily about the high definition presentation of the film,
but it doesn’t look that great to me. Again, it may be that it never was. There
is a new featurette included in the extras, however, along with an original
making-of featurette. The new featurette is “Looking Back at 25 Years of The Swan
Princess.” Also included are five sing-along versions of the films songs.
Entertainment Value:
/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: /10
Historical
Significance: /10
Special Features:
/10
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