I have read somewhere that Lemuria is sometimes referred to as Mu.They are not.
Here an English (because I'm French) article about it : The Lost Continents of Mu and Lemuria | Historic Mysteries
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I have read somewhere that Lemuria is sometimes referred to as Mu.They are not.
Here an English (because I'm French) article about it : The Lost Continents of Mu and Lemuria | Historic Mysteries
I have read somewhere that Lemuria is sometimes referred to as Mu.
Well, Lemuria is the one with the most connection to Atlantis.It is but this made up stuff is often mixed together.
Well, Lemuria is the one with the most connection to Atlantis.
Never heard about it.I'm more familiar with Mu because of the TV show The Mysterious Cities of Gold.
Never heard about it.
I've read that Atlantis started out as a Lemurian colony. Later, they had different ideals and declared war on each other.
Atlanteans held themselves in high regard and wanted to be in charge, to control other civilizations.
Something of a "world police". Sounds a little familiar.
But one of your links claims Lemuria sank before Atlantis rose to power.
Why are there different versions of the story?
I've bought a book about Lemuria & Atlantis. Let's see what it's about.
In the Disney Vault , where it BELONGS!Where
the ****
is The Black Cauldron?
I wasn’t aware Atlantis was considered a financial failure.YES. I love the original and it takes some balls to remake a financial failure into possibly a better and more successful film. A worthy experiment in my eyes.
I wasn’t aware Atlantis was considered a financial failure.
It was in a line of expensive failures for Disney that caused the death of 2D animation at the studio; Atlantis, Brother Bear, Treasure Planet and Home on the Range. Only Lilo & Stitch was a hit at that time.
I feel like all those flicks with the exception of Home on the Range were underrated.
The Emperor's New Groove can also be added to that list. Hilarious but it also had disappointing box office results.
To this day I haven't seen Treasure Planet or Brother Bear in their entirety. I should check them out on Disney+. Not at all interested in watching Home on the Range. Never was, never will be. Roseanne as the main character in any movie? No thanks.
The Emperor's New Groove can also be added to that list. Hilarious but it also had disappointing box office results.
That one I do remember seeing, not in theaters but I think I rented it from Blockbuster back in the day. It was meh. It's also notable for being Don Bluth's last movie (as of now). It's not technically Disney but they do own it since it was a Fox release, along with Bluth's previous movie Anastasia. Now THAT'S a movie that a lot of people mistake for a Disney release. It's also ironic that they own those Bluth films since he was their greatest competition in the '80s after he left the company. Up until The Little Mermaid, Bluth's films often outperformed Disney's.You and I both, or Emperor's New Groove for me.
It's not technically a Disney movie (maybe it is now because of the acquisition) but I have to check out Titan AE too. I remember that one didn't fare too well either at the box office.
There's a pretty great documentary that was never officially released about how Emperor's New Groove came to be.
It was originally going to be called Kingdom of the Sun and was on the epic scale of those 90s Disney movies but eventually shifted to be the comedic film we know today. Roger Allers, director of Lion King, was the original director who's vision it was until he was fired which is all depicted in the documentary.
That one I do remember seeing, not in theaters but I think I rented it from Blockbuster back in the day. It was meh. It's also notable for being Don Bluth's last movie (as of now). It's not technically Disney but they do own it since it was a Fox release, along with Bluth's previous movie Anastasia. Now THAT'S a movie that a lot of people mistake for a Disney release. It's also ironic that they own those Bluth films since he was their greatest competition in the '80s after he left the company. Up until The Little Mermaid, Bluth's films often outperformed Disney's.
I'm that one person on the internet who doesn't see The Emperor's New Groove as an underrated gem. I agree with the others though. I like Hercules more than The Emperor's New Groove and I don't even like that film.The Emperor's New Groove can also be added to that list. Hilarious but it also had disappointing box office results.
To this day I haven't seen Treasure Planet or Brother Bear in their entirety. I should check them out on Disney+. Not at all interested in watching Home on the Range. Never was, never will be. Roseanne as the main character in any movie? No thanks.
I doubt it would be worse than the original film.
I was born in 1988 so I grew up with the Disney Renaissance films but The Land Before Time, An American Tail and All Dogs Go To Heaven were right there in the rotation with them. I liked All Dogs but it's a strange one. The Land Before Time is a classic but all those DTV sequels made my head spin even as a kid, there were so many of them.Bluth kicked Disney's ass in the 80s. Certainly from a quality standpoint. The Great Mouse Detective was fun but Secret of NIMH, An American Tale, and The Land Before Time were the big newly released animated films for me growing up (well those three and The Last Unicorn from Rankin-Bass). All Dogs Go to Heaven was good too, but ran into the buzzsaw that was The Little Mermaid as they were released at the same time. Bluth as also animation director on The Rescuers, the last big Disney hit prior to The Little Mermaid.
Then Rock-a-Doodle was garbage right at the time Disney was entering its biggest period since the 50s and Bluth never really recovered.