The Sword in the Stone - 1983 Reissue Trailer
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The Sword in the Stone (79 min)
Synopsis: When King Uther Pendragon dies, he leaves his sword encased in a stone, claiming that only the true king will be able to remove it. One day, the great but absent-minded wizard Merlin has a premonition about a special young boy. With the help of his trusted owl Achimedes, Merlin finds Arthur, called “Wart,” working as a page-in-training. Merlin travels with Wart to the castle of Sir Ector and his son Sir Kay, who do not take kindly to their visitors. As Merlin helps Wart with his chores, Wart learns that knowledge and understanding are what makes the world go round. He transforms into a fish, a squirrel and a bird. His adventures bring him to the magnificent, marvelous Madam Mim, who challenges Merlin to a wizard’s duel. Merlin’s and Wart’s journey takes them all the way to a tournament in London, where Wart’s true destiny with the sword in the stone awaits him.
Cast: Ricky Sorensen (Wart), Karl Swenson (Merlin), Junius Matthews (Archimedes), Sebastian Cabot (Sir Ector/Narrator), Norman Alden (Sir Kay), Martha Wentworth (Madam Mim).
Songs: “The Sword in the Stone,” “Higitus Figitus,” “That’s What Makes the World Go Round,” “A Most Befuddling Thing,” “Mad Madame Mim,”
Directed by Wolfgang Reitherman.
Premiered in New York on December 25, 1963.
US Theatrical Reissues: December 22, 1972 and March 25, 1983
US Home Media Releases: March 25, 1986 (LD/VHS); July 12, 1991 (VHS/LD); October 28, 1994 (VHS/LD); March 20, 2001 (DVD/VHS); June 17, 2008 (DVD); August 6, 2013 (BR/DVD);
Trivia:
• Frames: 113,760
• Based on the book by T. H. White.
• Throughout the course of the three-year production, 300 artists created the world of The Sword in the Stone, using 1,325,650 pencils to produce over a million individual drawings, which were then transferred onto film using the Xerography process.
• Painting the characters on celluloid, the backgrounds and all other color effects in the film required 800 gallons of very special paint weighing nearly five tons— enough paint to color the exteriors of 135 average homes.
• The film received an Academy Award nomination for Best Score – Adaptation or Treatment
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