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45 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Collecton of Old Disney Nature Films
These nature films, if you could find them at all, were previously only on VHS. I had already seen two of the films on the set on VHS, "The Vanishing Prairie" and "The Living Desert", and I was amazed how these old films from the 50's had such good cinematography considering the times. Now on DVD, these films have been cleaned up even more, and the video is not hard on...
Published on February 13, 2007 by calvinnme

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Natures Strangest Creatures
Al and Elma Millotte spent some months at my father's animal reserve on Queensland's Gold Coast in 1955...they built a special film set so the platypus could be filmed from beneath and above water....Al and Elma Millotte were equipped with 16 mm and 35 mm cine cameras with Cinemascope Lenses...and yet the film ended up only 15 minutes duration and in normal format...what...
Published 1 month ago by S. J. Fleay


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45 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Collecton of Old Disney Nature Films, February 13, 2007
This review is from: Walt Disney Legacy Collection - True Life Adventures, Vol. 2 (DVD)
These nature films, if you could find them at all, were previously only on VHS. I had already seen two of the films on the set on VHS, "The Vanishing Prairie" and "The Living Desert", and I was amazed how these old films from the 50's had such good cinematography considering the times. Now on DVD, these films have been cleaned up even more, and the video is not hard on the eyesight at all. 30 years before the Discovery Channel, it is truly amazing to see what Disney was doing in the realm of nature films.

"Seal Island", produced in 1949, is known as Disney's first nature documentary and runs 26 minutes. It studies animal life on Seal Island, which is a small island in the Bering Sea. The life cycle of the seals is the dominant theme, of course, although the documentary talks about the other animal residents of the island too. Because it was Disney's first attempt at a nature documentary, it is awkward at spots. It tends to get very slow at one point, and then picks up the tempo with a bloody battle between feuding male seals fighting for dominance that tends to be a bit graphic.

"The Living Desert" won the Academy Award for Best Feature Documentary in 1953, and its theme is a day in the wildlife of the American desert southwest. On the humorous side, the best scene involves a couple of square-dancing scorpions, and on the dramatic side the best scene is probably a fight between a tarantula and a wasp. The commentary is well done, but some people might find it just a bit too jokey at points. It runs 70 minutes.

"The Vanishing Prairie" also won the Academy Award for Best Feature Documentary in 1954 and runs 71 minutes. Again, the photography is excellent, but the narration is depressing and the conclusions no longer true. Thanks to ecology minded films such as this one, efforts were started to help insure that the prairie and its wildlife don't disappear. Thus its overall message is best taken in a historical context. There are some great shots of prairie dogs that will remind you quite a bit of Meerkat Manor. Other featured animals include bighorn sheep, the Pronghorn antelope, mountain lions, coyotes, and buffalo.

"Nature's Strangest Creatures" (1959), is the shortest of the films at only 15 minutes in length. It focuses on the wildlife of Australia 35 years before the Crocodile Hunter made these creatures more familiar to us all. Animals shown besides the requisite kangaroo include the giant bat, flying squirrel, and the duck-billed platypus.

"Islands of the Sea" (1960), was nominated for an Academy Award for that year. This 28-minute film discusses and photographs the wildlife on the islands of Galapagos, Guadelupe, the Falklands, and Midway. Of course, they show the turtles of the Galapagos, and also the penguins of the Falklands. Although overall the film focuses more on birds, there is also quite a bit on the reptile inhabitants of these islands. One of the funniest segments include a penguin attempting to "sing" and an albatross attempting a clumsy landing in what had to be one of its less graceful moments.

The extras include "Backstage with Roy Disney at Disney's Animal Kingdom: Desert Insects", which actually is more of a retrospective on Roy's movie career than anything else. "Backstage with Roy Disney at Disney's Animal Kingdom: Snakes" focuses on the Orlando Animal Kingdom theme park and its snakes. "Filmmakers' Journal" is very interesting for those of us who wondered how the filmmakers accompished some of the shots they got in the making of the five featured films. This 40 minute bonus piece talks extensively with people who actually worked on the films and they tell you how certain shots were obtained and talk about various tricks that were employed. "Collectors' Corner" is a short three minute piece in which Disney artist and historian Stacia Martin shares some promotional items tied to the DVD's films. "Trailers & Promos" is the aptly named section on the original trailers and promos for the five featured films, both when they were shown on TV and in the theatres.

This is a truly great collection of nature films. You'll probably recognize in each of them the basic Disney "formula" for such films - They generally blended very good photography and narration on the overall wildlife being spotlighted. Mixed with that will be numerous humorous moments with animals doing what appear to humans as crazy stunts along with dramatic predator/prey moments and wildlife fight scenes that often end up in tragedy for one of the animals involved. On top of this, each of the films is well scored, with the music matching the mood of the scene being shown. Highly recommended.
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40 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Classic Nature Films! The Vanishing Prairie and The Living Desert at last!, October 12, 2006
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This review is from: Walt Disney Legacy Collection - True Life Adventures, Vol. 2 (DVD)
At least two of the films, Living Desert and Vanishing Prairie, are full length and were Academy Award winners. At the time(1950's) nature photography was quite difficult with huge, heavy, bulky cameras, long before the National Geographic channel or Animal Planet. So these films are literally the ground floor of nature photography. I am expecting a wonderful set, restoring the original color and sound. When I saw them in the 70's the color had already metamorphed into green skies, for example. Disney has promised us a full restoration. Do you remember seeing the tarantula and the birth of a buffalo calf? Through it all we have the wonderful humor of Winston Hibler's narration. I can't wait!
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another fine Disney Classic, March 14, 2007
This review is from: Walt Disney Legacy Collection - True Life Adventures, Vol. 2 (DVD)
These DVDs are incredible! Just as I remember as a child. The digital restoration is beautifully done...Highly recommend that these be purchased by Disney lovers and families looking for good old wholesome entertainment.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Big Surprise, April 18, 2007
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This review is from: Walt Disney Legacy Collection - True Life Adventures, Vol. 2 (DVD)
I teach a college class in popular culture. We were reading a book on Walt Disney, and I bought True Life Adventures just to show to the class. I wasn't expecting to watch it for fun. What a mistake. This is fantastic. Today we have Animal Planet and all the other educational networks, but the Disney documentaries are just so much better from an entertainment standpoint. The scenery just brings oohs and aahs, and the humor and plotting, while maybe annoying to the scientific-minded, just make the stories flow.

What I really liked was you could watch The Vanishing Prairie, then on Disc 2 there is the segment of Disney's Wonderful World of Color, where you can see how he used the TV show to market the movie, then the Filmmakers Journal where you get some great behind the scenes footage on how the film was made. (Wait till you see the snow-mobile!)

I bought this for class. I'm getting all the others in the series for fun.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Disney DVD, January 7, 2007
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This review is from: Walt Disney Legacy Collection - True Life Adventures, Vol. 2 (DVD)
Great to see the old films . A must have for Disney fans.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Disney True Adventure, August 24, 2007
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This review is from: Walt Disney Legacy Collection - True Life Adventures, Vol. 2 (DVD)
Could you rate it a 10 or 100. Who couldn't love Disney's True Adventures. Yes, there is even a whole channel for animal adventures now, but they were the first--and they were the best. They are pack in a great package; durable and imaginative. The added interviews and backstage scenes are great. I can remember seeing them on their program (in black and white) when I was in first grade. They are wonderful. It was a treat to learn about the couple who filmed them too. Spending years and years filming things they thought was funny or interesting. Then bringing them back and someone putting them together into a story that is loved forever. I have all four of them. And we watch them over and over.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Natures Strangest Creatures, December 26, 2011
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This review is from: Walt Disney Legacy Collection - True Life Adventures, Vol. 2 (DVD)
Al and Elma Millotte spent some months at my father's animal reserve on Queensland's Gold Coast in 1955...they built a special film set so the platypus could be filmed from beneath and above water....Al and Elma Millotte were equipped with 16 mm and 35 mm cine cameras with Cinemascope Lenses...and yet the film ended up only 15 minutes duration and in normal format...what happened? I am told my father the naturalist David Fleay disagreed with the filming techniques..and so my father's animal reserve did not even get a mention in the credits....we have the DVD and on seeing the result I can agree that there was cruelty inflicted on the subject matter......a platypus out in the freezing snow in daylight skidding down a slope,(obviously the animal had been pushed) and eventaully finding water...no night shooting as we see now on BBC nature series...all staged and set up.
The platypus is such a delicate animal and only comes out in the natural state at night...then there were possums and sugar gliders, also animals of the night out in the daylight, obviously being launched by an unseen human....some of the animals landed badly which may have caused injuries.
I cannot stand cruelty to animals, birds or reptiles!
Back then we used to think those True Life Adventures were terrific....thank goodness for the BBC...the BBC natural history unit really cares and never inflicts harm on our unique wildlife.....
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Love this series!!!, October 26, 2009
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amylou (Boston, MA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Walt Disney Legacy Collection - True Life Adventures, Vol. 2 (DVD)
My boyfriend and I LOVE to watch this series! Not only is it beautifully done, it has that wonderful nostalgic feel that old Disney cartoons and shows have. The narrator's voice took me back to childhood, as did the music. So great.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent reissue, November 22, 2008
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This review is from: Walt Disney Legacy Collection - True Life Adventures, Vol. 2 (DVD)
This is an excellent reissue of these classic Disney True-life adventures.
Although heavily choreographed (use of forward and reverse filming, for instance - classically in the scorpion hoe-down in The Living Planet), they were often the first warning bell of things to come and, in their time, one of a very few films to depict wildlife "in the wild".
The colors have been digitally corrected so they now look much better than the originals (1950s).
Nice presentation tin as well.
The DVD also plays on a multi-region player in the UK (NTSC compatible player and TV).
It's still entertaining (although the style of presentation seems a little outdated now but it set the benchmark for those to come)even after 50+ years and this series should be in every Disney lovers collection.
The Vanishing Prairie sounds ominous in it's tone and predictions but this film actually helped preserve what was left so although they thought it would vanish forever, it hasn't (possibly thanks to this film).
A landmark in wild life documentaries.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It's Disney at his best, February 15, 2008
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Jeff, Young Old-Timer (Lakeland, Florida United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Walt Disney Legacy Collection - True Life Adventures, Vol. 2 (DVD)
Walt Disney, the ultimate family entertainer, struck the purest gold with his True Nature series. I don't remember for certain, but I think there were seven features in the whole series. "The Vanishing Prarie" was one of my favorites as was "The Living Desert." I remember the cougar that got chased up a tall, long-spiked cactus by an angry peccary. Don't you know that kitty was sore for a while! The series was extremely entertaining as extremely educational at the same time. Good ol' Disney. Much of the material is considered dated now, but the basic information about the wildlife is still good. Disney was considered ahead of his time, and this series is just another of many wonderful examples. Get it and enjoy it with the whole family.
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Walt Disney Legacy Collection - True Life Adventures,  Vol. 2
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