Sword in the Stone

Uncle Walt-a-thon: Sword in the Stone

Richard Carroll
<– Uncle Walt-a-thon: 101 Dalmatians Besides the English setting, Sword in the Stone has another common Disney trope in that it opens with a picture of a book with some narration. This may have had some novelty value the first time they did this, and I understand that they’re trying to create a certain feeling for the story, but setting up the story with straight narration like this is very easy, and having seen it multiple times now it also feels cheap.

Uncle Walt-a-thon: 101 Dalmatians

Richard Carroll
<- Uncle Walt-a-thon: Sleeping Beauty It’s another dog story set in London. This does allow some cameos from Lady and the Tramp side characters, but between these two films and Peter Pan, part of me wonders whether it’s just a coincidence that Disney chose to adapt three works all set in England so shortly after each other (more than that if one includes Alice in Wonderland and Sword in the Stone).