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6,6/10
615
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Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuWhen both parents are killed by man, the wolf Lobo learns the ways of the hunter.When both parents are killed by man, the wolf Lobo learns the ways of the hunter.When both parents are killed by man, the wolf Lobo learns the ways of the hunter.
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I'm a little biased; the writer (Dwight Hauser) is my wife's father. We were looking for a copy and came across this site. It was fun for me to watch Marcia (my wife) watch the movie. And as with many thousands of other old folks, I remember it from my own childhood.
I wonder if Lobo's mother was really injured. It certainly looked like it. I asked Marcia, but she didn't know. It seems doubtful Disney would have gone about it that way. Kinda heart wrenching, but an accurate reflection of the disdain held for wolves in those days...heck...even these days by a remaining few.
This is a great find! We are passing it out to all the grandkids...:-)
Derek
I wonder if Lobo's mother was really injured. It certainly looked like it. I asked Marcia, but she didn't know. It seems doubtful Disney would have gone about it that way. Kinda heart wrenching, but an accurate reflection of the disdain held for wolves in those days...heck...even these days by a remaining few.
This is a great find! We are passing it out to all the grandkids...:-)
Derek
10Figaro-8
Ernest Thompson Seton's story has been brought to the screen in a remarkable and unique way. There is no dialogue in the whole movie. The story is told through narration by Rex Allen (who had the perfect voice for this sort of thing) and music performed by the Sons of the Pioneers. (The title song, which reappears throughout the film, was written by the Sherman Brothers.) Oliver Wallace provides a nice music score and the outdoor photography by Jack Couffer and Lloyd Beebe is beautiful. All of these elements combine to form a very entertaining film. May the legend live on.
It's a Disney True-Life adventure shot near Sedonia, Arizona, with the cast and crew that was becoming standard for the series of pseudo-documentaries, with James Algar directing and Rex Bell narrating, with songs by the Sherman twins and incidental music by the Sons of the Pioneers.
It's the story of Lobo, a wolf in the 19th Century, about the time cattle ranching was introduced following the wiping out of the buffalo, based on a story by Ernst Thompson Seton. There's the usual amazing photography, not just of the red butte-and-mesa land, but the amazingly trained animals.
Enjoyable as the parts of the movie are, I noticed that the story-telling aspect had fallen into set patterns. When the young Lobo makes friends and goes frolicking with a young antelope, it struck me: in many ways, this movie is BAMBI, only Man has entered the desert, with guns and traps and dogs. There's clearly a character, an uncredited actor who has set himself against Lobo, but he is given no personality; he is referred to only as "the hunter."
Disney was by no means a one-man operation; there were many creative people working for him. However, his management-by-wandering-around style meant that, although he might have one project at a time uppermost in his mind -- at this point, probably MARY POPPINS -- he might turn up at any point. The folks in the animation section had a warning for when was was around: "Man is in the Forest."
It's the story of Lobo, a wolf in the 19th Century, about the time cattle ranching was introduced following the wiping out of the buffalo, based on a story by Ernst Thompson Seton. There's the usual amazing photography, not just of the red butte-and-mesa land, but the amazingly trained animals.
Enjoyable as the parts of the movie are, I noticed that the story-telling aspect had fallen into set patterns. When the young Lobo makes friends and goes frolicking with a young antelope, it struck me: in many ways, this movie is BAMBI, only Man has entered the desert, with guns and traps and dogs. There's clearly a character, an uncredited actor who has set himself against Lobo, but he is given no personality; he is referred to only as "the hunter."
Disney was by no means a one-man operation; there were many creative people working for him. However, his management-by-wandering-around style meant that, although he might have one project at a time uppermost in his mind -- at this point, probably MARY POPPINS -- he might turn up at any point. The folks in the animation section had a warning for when was was around: "Man is in the Forest."
Someone here said that his father-in-law wrote the screenplay for the movie. He must be immensely proud of him. My mother took me to the movies in 1962 when it was released and as an 8 year old I was gripped. Disney was in it's 'animals' stage and Lobo was one of the best. I hadn't seen the film again until earlier this year but it was as wonderful as I remember it. Over the years that song "Lobo, Lobo, Lobo, Lobo your name will survive..." was all I could remember but I remembered it a lot over the years so it was great to hear the full song once again.
I see there's a number of people here that didn't get it, probably expected a kind of Jaws with wolves. No. This is a scary yet heartwarming film and it's beautifully filmed, the narration is excellent. I loved the way Disney filmed the wolves and through editing created a story - they did this with their other animal movies also.
Once upon a time innocence meant something to a child, movies like Lobo helped create that innocence.
I see there's a number of people here that didn't get it, probably expected a kind of Jaws with wolves. No. This is a scary yet heartwarming film and it's beautifully filmed, the narration is excellent. I loved the way Disney filmed the wolves and through editing created a story - they did this with their other animal movies also.
Once upon a time innocence meant something to a child, movies like Lobo helped create that innocence.
Another in a long line of enjoyable Disney nature films. This one tells the story of a wolf named Lobo (not Sherriff Lobo) from when he's a young pup to when he becomes an adult with a large bounty on his head. There's all sorts of corny cuteness with Lobo playing other animals and such, but the film was surprisingly realistic in the human hunters attempts to kill or capture Lobo with some pretty scary traps and hunting dogs. However, this remains a Disney films and is hardly a grim diatribe about the evils of hunting. At it's heart it's about cute animals and an appreciation for nature, which all goes down quite easy and without much pretension.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThere is no dialogue in the film, a very adventurous move from such a "safe" studio as Disney.
- Zitate
Rex Allen - Narrator: Singing: Across the lonely campfire when the wolves begin to call. The riders tell the story of the bravest wolf of all. The king of all the hunters, born to lead the rest. His name became a legend across the great southwest. Lobo Lobo your name will survive for no man could bring you in dead or alive!
- VerbindungenFeatured in L'ami public numéro un: Les animaux (1964)
- SoundtracksThe Legend of Lobo
Written by Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman
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- 1 Std. 7 Min.(67 min)
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