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The Lion King - Blu-ray Review

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The Lion King - Blu-ray

5 stars

The Biblical themes and Shakespearean influences running throughout Disney’s masterpiece, The Lion King, are part of why this gem is more than a perfect film.  The rich music - songs by Elton John and Tim Rice and a wondrous score by Hans Zimmerman - is another.  Yet, it is the animation, both wildly rich and sincere, that catapults this film into the heavens where it has yet to wear out its welcome.  It seems even God himself approves of The Lion King.

Because it balances the Disney formula with a couple of choice story influences, The Lion King proves to me a more timeless tale than some of its counterparts.  Here, we have the story of lion cub and future king named Simba (voiced early by Jonathan Taylor Thomas and later by Matthew Broderick) who is quickly outsmarted and outpaced by his father’s power-starved brother, Scar (Jeremy Irons).

Scar plots to murder Mufasa (James Earl Jones) with the help of three hyenas as he is still reeling over the birth of his competition.  Convinced he is to blame for his father’s death, Simba exiles himself from Pride Rock and befriends Timon and Pumbaa (Nathan Lane and Ernie Sabella); a meerkat and a warthog partnership which will eventually help a fully grown Simba return to the throne.

While the simplicity of the story is handled with a nice layering of emotional themes and lively comedic beats, it’s the animation that carries the film in its weaker and lagging second-half moments.  Dark and subversive with cool shadows and jagged edges, The Lion King flexes more than enough chiseled muscle early on to be courageous with its kid-friendly content when danger is about.

The background horizons are brightly bold and the lines around character’s faces are consistently strong and full of curious emotion; always strong, always engagin.  Time and time again, the picture bubbles with a classic cool charm that places Simba’s small cub paws in the outline of his father’s own steps.  And, in another, the bond between a father and son is established through the twinkling of the nighttime sky.

With a cast of voice talents that includes Rowan Atkinson, Cheech Marin, Whoopi Goldberg, and Madge Sinclair, The Lion King has more than its fair share of lovely moments that zing by like a greatest hits collection of classic lines.  Co-directors Roger Allers and Rob Minkoff work the actors and the action – which is heavy on the zooming close-up and pull-aways to keep the film from running completely out of steam once Scar has taken over.  Set pieces are dynamic and the film returns to its romance before the final nuances of its operatic reach outstay their welcome.

Arriving on blu-ray for the first time ever as part of their ongoing Diamond Edition collection, Walt Disney proudly treats The Lion King as the royalty it is with a beautiful release that celebrates the film’s stunning and continued dominance.  The cycle of life and death you know, it’s just oh so moving.

Blu-ray Review review of Walt Disney's The Lion King.

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