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Too Smart for Strangers

  • Video
  • 1985
  • 41m
IMDb RATING
5.1/10
88
YOUR RATING
Too Smart for Strangers (1985)
DramaFamilyMusical

Winnie the Pooh, Piglet, Tigger, Owl and the rest of the gang discuss all the dangers of strangers and how you should handle yourself should you ever come face to face with a stranger.Winnie the Pooh, Piglet, Tigger, Owl and the rest of the gang discuss all the dangers of strangers and how you should handle yourself should you ever come face to face with a stranger.Winnie the Pooh, Piglet, Tigger, Owl and the rest of the gang discuss all the dangers of strangers and how you should handle yourself should you ever come face to face with a stranger.

  • Directors
    • Philip Frank Messina
    • Ron Underwood
  • Writers
    • Betty G. Birney
    • A.A. Milne
  • Stars
    • Hal Smith
    • Will Ryan
    • Phil Baron
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.1/10
    88
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Philip Frank Messina
      • Ron Underwood
    • Writers
      • Betty G. Birney
      • A.A. Milne
    • Stars
      • Hal Smith
      • Will Ryan
      • Phil Baron
    • 2User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos9

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    Top cast14

    Edit
    Hal Smith
    Hal Smith
    • Winnie the Pooh
    • (voice)
    • …
    Will Ryan
    Will Ryan
    • Rabbit
    • (voice)
    • …
    Phil Baron
    • Piglet
    • (voice)
    Ron Gans
    • Eeyore
    • (voice)
    Kim Christianson
    • Roo
    • (voice)
    Joe A. Giamalva
      Ron Mangham
      Mark Sawyer
      Patty Maloney
      Patty Maloney
      Frank Groby
      Sharon Baird
      Sharon Baird
      Norman Merrill
        Peter Risch
        Sonny Melendrez
        Sonny Melendrez
        • Self
        • Directors
          • Philip Frank Messina
          • Ron Underwood
        • Writers
          • Betty G. Birney
          • A.A. Milne
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews2

        5.188
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        Featured reviews

        1isantistao

        Aweful

        Get different characters for your stupid little PSA announcement. I remember my mom putting me in front of this when I was like 5 years old. Even then I knew what was wrong with this. The original cartoons were masterpieces. This was straight up BS.
        4Jace_the_Peanuts_Fan

        Scary, Too Dark, and Confusing, Though Not Terrible

        I'm neutral to Welcome to Pooh Corner, and it is not as good as any other Winnie the Pooh incarnations. I didn't grow up with Welcome to Pooh Corner because 1) it's from long before I was born, 2) it didn't have any reruns on TV at all during my lifetime, and 3) I never owned any of the video releases. However, I've seen this episode and many other ones online. This is the worst or least good WTPC episode/special. This is also one out of the only three episodes on YouTube, and I've seen all of them. I was originally planning on going in-depth about Too Smart for Strangers in my review on WTPC in general, but after learning there was a page for this episode, I decided to do separate reviews on this and the series as a whole. I don't like Too Smart for Strangers, I don't hate/dislike it, it's a mixed bag like the rest of the series. Allow me to explain why.

        The episode/special has had a controversy in recent years because of the part where Pooh talks about molestation and genitals. I agree that it is too dark for a kid's show, especially anything Pooh-related, although the title character is right about touching others' private parts and molesting being unacceptable. This brings me to my next point.

        How does he know that touching others inappropriately is unacceptable? The animals from the Hundred Acre Wood are all naked/nearly naked stuffed animals with no private parts and no pants. I never thought I'd hear my favorite bear talk about these items.

        Pooh Bear and Piglet are right about stranger danger and any mention of it being scary as well as doing what we can to avoid strangers being a smart thing to do. However, the former comes off as TOO smart, making him go off-character. So much for being a bear of very little brain. Too Smart for Strangers? More like Too Dumb for Strangers.

        Tigger and Roo sing a duet about making your parents believe what you report to them about encountering a stranger. It briefly says if your parents don't believe what you say, you should keep repeating it until they believe you. It doesn't work that way (or does it?).

        The plot is very confusing. I mentioned a couple of the plot holes earlier, but there's more. Firstly, the characters watch multiple clips of real-life kids encountering strangers and demonstrating how they handle it, and they mention being friends with those kids. How do they know them? Have they met them off-screen previously? Christopher Robin and his parents, Sora from Kingdom Hearts, and Darby from My Friends Tigger and Pooh appear to be the only humans who can find the Hundred Acre Wood.

        Secondly, in a duet Pooh and Piglet sing towards the end, they say if they were to end up in stranger danger, they'd tell their moms or dads. They don't have any parents.

        Thirdly, Pooh and his friends live in their own little forest and don't encounter many strangers. They don't go into the real world very much. How do they know how to handle stranger danger? Could Christopher Robin have learned about stranger danger and touching others inappropriately in school and talked to his stuffed animals about them? I can't imagine a kid having such a conversation with his toys.

        In contrast to the negatives, the plot of Pooh's Great School Bus Adventure (another one of the show's educational specials and one of the other episodes on YouTube) makes sense to me because Pooh Bear mentions Christopher Robin taught him about school bus safety and etiquette, and the characters learn more tips from their adventure on the bus. They could've done the same with this episode but with the characters coming face to face with a stranger instead of riding a bus.

        Instead of using the plot they picked, a stranger, maybe a heffalump or a woozle, could've come to the Hundred Acre Wood, and Pooh or one of his friends could've talked to the stranger, leading to them being kidnapped or ending up in some other kind of stranger danger. The characters who haven't been kidnapped or in stranger danger could've worked together to rescue their friend, and the victim could've learned what to do while in stranger danger and eventually got saved by himself/herself or their friends.

        The plot they picked could've worked if the special came out sometime after The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh started because some new characters in the Pooh franchise have been introduced since then, and more creatures have been able to find the Hundred Acre Wood. However, there are no new characters in Welcome to Pooh Corner.

        There are 2 clips of kids being left at home by themselves, and they don't look or sound old enough to be left home alone. In one clip, a stranger shows up at a girl's front door, and she reports this to her parents on the telephone and doesn't let the stranger in. In the other one, a boy receives a phone call from a stranger, hangs up right away, calls his parents, and reports the stranger to them. Who leaves under-aged kids home alone anymore?

        I already knew most of what Too Smart for Strangers was teaching before I watched it for the first time, but I learned a few tips from it, such as the idea of strangers being easy to come across at not-so-crowded places-such as construction sites and alleys-and to never ride home with somebody I've never met who says they're friends with one of my relatives.

        The special came out at the right time (1985). Back then, kidnapping was very common, and Disney had no choice but to make a PSA about what to do if one were to end up in stranger danger. Using familiar characters in a PSA is a more effective way to handle it than using real-life, unfamiliar faces because that could give more people motivation to watch it, and your favorite characters are shown to be in a similar situation you might be in. However, they could've made a PSA with different characters, like maybe the Mickey Mouse gang. Using Pooh characters was out of place, but the information is useful for the most part. If you don't like this and are looking for a better PSA about stranger danger with familiar characters, watch the Sonic Says "Stranger Danger" skit from The Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog.

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        Storyline

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        Did you know

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        • Trivia
          This is a special educational episode that was released on VHS in 1985.
        • Goofs
          After the girl refuses to ride with a woman who claims to know her mother, the boom mic can be seen above the car.
        • Quotes

          Piglet: I hate to mention it, Pooh. I really do but I think we should tell our friends that danger doesn't always come from strangers. It can be from someone you know.

          Winnie the Pooh: Oh, Piglet, you're right. People you see every day might want to... touch you and sometimes, that's dangerous.

        • Connections
          Edited into The Golden Girls Return from Space Mountain (2012)
        • Soundtracks
          Too Smart for Strangers

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        Details

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        • Release date
          • September 7, 1985 (United States)
        • Country of origin
          • United States
        • Language
          • English
        • Also known as
          • Too Smart for Strangers with Winnie the Pooh
        • Production companies
          • Cornerstone
          • Left Coast Television
          • Walt Disney Productions
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Tech specs

        Edit
        • Runtime
          • 41m
        • Color
          • Color
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.33 : 1

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