Tarzan 1999 HD
Tarzan is a 1999 American animated adventure film produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation and released by Walt Disney Pictures. The 37th film produced by the studio, and the tenth and last released during the Disney Renaissance era, it is based on the 1912 story Tarzan of the Apes by Edgar Rice Burroughs, being the first animated major motion picture version of the story. The film was directed by Kevin Lima and Chris Buck (in his feature directorial debut) and produced by Bonnie Arnold from a screenplay by Tab Murphy, Bob Tzudiker, and Noni White. The film stars the voices of Tony Goldwyn, Minnie Driver, Glenn Close, Rosie O'Donnell, Brian Blessed, Lance Henriksen, Wayne Knight, and Nigel Hawthorne.
Tarzan 1999 HD
Tarzan premiered at the El Capitan Theatre in Los Angeles on June 12, 1999, and was released in the United States on June 16. It received positive reviews from critics, who praised its voice performances, music, animation, and action sequences. Against a production budget of $130 million (then the most expensive traditionally animated film ever made until Treasure Planet in 2002), the film grossed $448.2 million worldwide, becoming the fifth highest-grossing film of 1999, the second highest-grossing animated film of 1999 behind Toy Story 2, and the first Disney animated feature to open at first place at the North American box office since Pocahontas (1995). It won the Academy Award for Best Original Song ("You'll Be in My Heart" by Phil Collins). The film has led to many derived works, such as a Broadway adaptation, a television series, and two direct-to-video followups, Tarzan & Jane (2002) and Tarzan II (2005).
A spin-off animated series, The Legend of Tarzan, ran from 2001 to 2003. The series picks up where the film left off, with Tarzan adjusting to his new role as leader of the apes following Kerchak's death, and Jane (whom he has since married) adjusting to life in the jungle. In July 1999, Disney announced that they were planning a sequel for Tarzan.[73] In 2002, Tarzan & Jane was released as a direct-to-video sequel, with Michael T. Weiss replacing Goldwyn as the voice of Tarzan. Tarzan II, a direct-to-video follow-up, was released in 2005.
Five Tarzan video games have been released on various platforms. Tarzan's home is also featured as a playable world, "Deep Jungle", in the 2002 game Kingdom Hearts, and in the 2013 HD remaster Kingdom Hearts HD 1.5 Remix, in which Goldwyn and Blessed were the only actors from the film to reprise their roles, while Jane was voiced by Naia Kelly and Audrey Wasilewski reprised her role as Terk from the 1999 video game based on the film; Kerchak and Kala appeared, but were silent, while Tantor and Professor Porter were absent. The world was originally meant to return in Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories, but ultimately did not appear and has not appeared in any subsequent Kingdom Hearts games.
Walt Disney Pictures animation film Tarzan (Chris Buck, Kevin Lima, 1999) retells the life of Edgar Rice Burrough's famous king of the jungle. It was the 37th Disney animated feature film and the tenth and last released during Disney's Renaissance Period.
The screenplay for Tarzan (Chris Buck, Kevin Lima, 1999) was written by Tab Murphy, Bob Tzudiker and Noni White and they captured the spirit of the classic story by Edgar Rice Burroughs, 'Tarzan of the Apes' (1912). The plot, a good combination of drama, action, comedy and romance, is basic and easy to follow but more remarkable is the character development. All the characters are memorable and Tarzan and Jane's relationship is wonderfully developed. Tarzan is charismatic, emotional, outgoing, and at the same time, goofy and boyish. Jane is eccentric, feisty, benevolent, and intelligent. The scenes between Tarzan and his ape mother, Kala, are tender and it's beautiful to see how Jane helps Tarzan to understand the ways of human life. Glen Keane served as the supervising animator for Tarzan as an adult, while John Ripa animated Tarzan as an infant and child. John Ripa studied the movements of young chimpanzees to use for young Tarzan's animation, while Glen Keane used the movements of a gibbon and used it for the animation of adult Tarzan, he also watched his son Max Keane do his skateboarding and snowboarding and used surfers' moves in the scenes where Tarzan is sliding through the trees. Terk and Tantor provide great comic relief, and the gorillas provide plenty of quite emotional scenes. The animation is mind-blowing. The jungle feels immersive and lifelike and it's exciting to see Tarzan energetically swinging in the trees. Also impressive are the fire effects used in the jungle, and the smoke effects from the guns used by the poachers. Kudos to the makers for how they managed to combine hand-drawn animation with CGI effects. The action scenes move at such a fast and steady pace, unseen before in a hand-drawn film. The songs by Phil Collins are spectacular, even winning an Oscar for 'You'll be in My Heart'. Tarzan was Disney's last big box office hit and widely acclaimed film for a number of years. It would be the end of a great period that had started with The Little Mermaid (Ron Clements, John Musker, 1989), a period now known as the Disney Renaissance.
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Tarzan is considered by many to be the last major box office success of the Disney Renaissance before the studio's decline in the early to mid 2000s (sometimes known as Disney's "Second Dark Age"), although some consider Dinosaur (2000) to be the last film in the Disney Renaissance. When it was released on June 18, 1999, its production budget of $130 million made it the most expensive animated film ever made until it was topped by Disney's own $140 million Treasure Planet in 2002. It was also the first Disney animated feature to open at first place at the North American box office since Pocahontas (1995). 041b061a72