IMDb RATING
6.1/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
The witch from Pixar's Rebelle (2012) uses magical illustrations to tell the legend of a power-obsessed prince who sought a magic spell that would allow him to wrest control of a kingdom fro... Read allThe witch from Pixar's Rebelle (2012) uses magical illustrations to tell the legend of a power-obsessed prince who sought a magic spell that would allow him to wrest control of a kingdom from his brothers, only to destroy that kingdom and his own fate as well.The witch from Pixar's Rebelle (2012) uses magical illustrations to tell the legend of a power-obsessed prince who sought a magic spell that would allow him to wrest control of a kingdom from his brothers, only to destroy that kingdom and his own fate as well.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
"The Legend of Mor'du" is a Pixar short that is a spin-off from "Brave", though it apparently was made first....so I guess 'spin-off' isn't exactly the right word...especially since the characters are from the "Brave" universe but not ones from the movie "Brave".
The story was visually a big disappointment. While the witch who tells the story is rendered using traditional CGI, the story itself is like a slideshow...which is bound to disappoint most viewers. It tells a story about four brothers...and the selfishness of the eldest following their father's death.
The story is mildly interesting and the only part that really interested me was the guy's reaction to the witch at the end of the story. Otherwise, a big disappointment.
The story was visually a big disappointment. While the witch who tells the story is rendered using traditional CGI, the story itself is like a slideshow...which is bound to disappoint most viewers. It tells a story about four brothers...and the selfishness of the eldest following their father's death.
The story is mildly interesting and the only part that really interested me was the guy's reaction to the witch at the end of the story. Otherwise, a big disappointment.
I don''t understand why Pixar decided to make this one but it surely complements its predecessor BRAVE. Brave had a different story and this one just takes up a point and continues it. The plot is simple and not much of a strainer. Loved it!
And it scores some brownie points in the animation which I hear Pixar did by completely changing the animation systems for the first time in 25 years! Well, The Legend Of Mor'du is one of those marvellously created Pixar short films and I enjoyed it.
If you haven't watched Brave, then apparently you will not fathom a thing in this 7 minute splendor. Recommended!
Can be watched with a typical Indian family? YES
And it scores some brownie points in the animation which I hear Pixar did by completely changing the animation systems for the first time in 25 years! Well, The Legend Of Mor'du is one of those marvellously created Pixar short films and I enjoyed it.
If you haven't watched Brave, then apparently you will not fathom a thing in this 7 minute splendor. Recommended!
Can be watched with a typical Indian family? YES
Saw 'The Legend of Mor'du' for many reasons. Love animation, and always have done as a child, will be forever grateful towards it for helping me relax when very much needed. Love Pixar and a vast majority of their films. Really like to love their theatrical short films and the feature-related shorts are fun enough though don't put them on the same level personally. Will admit that 'Brave' is not one of my favourite feature films of theirs, consider it one of their lesser films while not disliking it anywhere near as much as some (still liked it actually).
'The Legend of Mor'du' is one of their feature related films and is an interesting and well made one in its own right, did like the visuals and how it focused on the witch. If comparing 'The Legend of 'Mor'du' to 'Brave', it is to me inferior, inevitable as it is not a feature film and didn't have as much time and budget to make, and one can be forgiven if they questioned the point of it. From reading my review summary, one would understandably think that it seems like my thoughts on 'The Legend of Mor'du' were negative. Not so, have already said it was interesting and well made, but it could have done with more magic.
In terms of the story, 'The Legend of Mor'du' is slight and generic and the pace could have been tighter.
Do agree that the character design and movements for Dingwell were blocky and suggestive of time and budget starting to run out.
Otherwise, the animation is very good. Very stylish and atmospheric, simple but effective and the purposefully rough look at times didn't look cheap. Loved the sweeping camera movements and the first segment was imaginatively animated. Also loved the dark use of colour that added to the creepiness and the meticulously detailed backgrounds.
The opening credits are cleverly done. The music at times brought chills down my spine and not just adds to the atmosphere and action but enhances it. The witch is an interesting character and it was great to have some focus on her as she had enough to her to warrant more focus. Julie Walters does a great job voicing her. The other characters aren't as strong but far from bland. Headed by Walters, the voice acting is well done.
Altogether, not bad at all. 7/10
'The Legend of Mor'du' is one of their feature related films and is an interesting and well made one in its own right, did like the visuals and how it focused on the witch. If comparing 'The Legend of 'Mor'du' to 'Brave', it is to me inferior, inevitable as it is not a feature film and didn't have as much time and budget to make, and one can be forgiven if they questioned the point of it. From reading my review summary, one would understandably think that it seems like my thoughts on 'The Legend of Mor'du' were negative. Not so, have already said it was interesting and well made, but it could have done with more magic.
In terms of the story, 'The Legend of Mor'du' is slight and generic and the pace could have been tighter.
Do agree that the character design and movements for Dingwell were blocky and suggestive of time and budget starting to run out.
Otherwise, the animation is very good. Very stylish and atmospheric, simple but effective and the purposefully rough look at times didn't look cheap. Loved the sweeping camera movements and the first segment was imaginatively animated. Also loved the dark use of colour that added to the creepiness and the meticulously detailed backgrounds.
The opening credits are cleverly done. The music at times brought chills down my spine and not just adds to the atmosphere and action but enhances it. The witch is an interesting character and it was great to have some focus on her as she had enough to her to warrant more focus. Julie Walters does a great job voicing her. The other characters aren't as strong but far from bland. Headed by Walters, the voice acting is well done.
Altogether, not bad at all. 7/10
Having enjoyed the film Brave I was looking forward to seeing this supporting short, not sure what it would provide. This short focuses on the story of Mor'du, which is a story we already know from the main film since it is the tale that sits behind the path of Merida as a warning to her in the main film. Here we don't have more detail of this story but instead just longer spent telling it. The device of having this delivered by the Witch is reasonably nice as it allows for some humor, but mainly it is a straight telling.
The animation is not the full Pixar computer generated effects of Brave but a more stylish approach with rougher edges. I liked this as a look and felt this helped the short as a story being told – but I did have an issue with the story itself. I was hoping for it to do something I hadn't heard already but it never did, which made me wonder why it had been selected to be the supporting short that Pixar so often produce to accompany the DVD release of their film. There were many good characters in the main film which could have been used to make an interesting or funny short, so I'm not sure why they just repeated in this way.
It still has entertainment value and is well made, but it is covering ground the film did and feels disappointing and unnecessary as a result.
The animation is not the full Pixar computer generated effects of Brave but a more stylish approach with rougher edges. I liked this as a look and felt this helped the short as a story being told – but I did have an issue with the story itself. I was hoping for it to do something I hadn't heard already but it never did, which made me wonder why it had been selected to be the supporting short that Pixar so often produce to accompany the DVD release of their film. There were many good characters in the main film which could have been used to make an interesting or funny short, so I'm not sure why they just repeated in this way.
It still has entertainment value and is well made, but it is covering ground the film did and feels disappointing and unnecessary as a result.
Did you know
- TriviaWILHELM SCREAM: (at around 5 mins) When one of the soldiers is thrown off a cliff.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Animation Lookback: Pixar Animation Studios Part 5 (2013)
- SoundtracksFRIGHT NIGHT
Written by Joe Lamont
Produced by Seth Justman
Performed by The J. Geils Band
c/o EMI America Records. A division of Capitol Records, Inc.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Legend of Mor'du
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 7m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content