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The Emperor's New Clothes DVD - Classic Animated Fairy Tale Movie for Kids & Family Movie Night
The Emperor's New Clothes DVD - Classic Animated Fairy Tale Movie for Kids & Family Movie NightThe Emperor's New Clothes DVD - Classic Animated Fairy Tale Movie for Kids & Family Movie Night

The Emperor's New Clothes DVD - Classic Animated Fairy Tale Movie for Kids & Family Movie Night

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Product Description

Product Description Hans Christian Andersen's classic fairy tale gets a lavish makeover in this whimsical live-action comedy starring showbiz legend Sid Caesar (Grease), who plays the eccentric Emperor with his "trademark foreign language gibberish and nervous delivery" (Variety). Full of mischief, merriment and mayhem, this delightful twist on a beloved story weaves a hilarious family adventure you wont soon forget! The Emperor's blinding vanity makes him an easy mark for con artists, especially the two phony tailors hired to make him a dazzling outfit for his daughter Gilda's (Lysette Anthony) wedding. While the elder crook (Robert Morse) schemes to steal the royal jewels, his nephew (Jason Carter) is busy stealing Gilda's heart. In the midst of it all, it takes a child to reveal the truth that no one else can see! Amazon.com Part of Cannon's Movietale series, The Emperor's New Clothes is a frenetic musical take on Hans Christian Andersen's fable. The good news is that Sid Caesar makes for an entertaining Emperor. The bad news is that the incessant slapstick grows tiresome, though the tunes, like "Clothes Make the Man" ("Change 'em every hour/that's how a politician stays in power") aren't bad. In David Irving's adaptation, Caesar's Emperor insists on wearing only the "most beautiful, most exquisite" outfits. When he meets tailor Henry Dispenser (two-time Tony winner Robert Morse) and his assistant, Nicholas (Babylon 5's Jason Carter), who offer to make him a suit stitched with diamond thread, he showers them with jewels. In return, the con men give him, well, nothing. Only the smart, they explain, can see their fantastic creations. Since the Emperor's minions don't wish to seem stupid, they praise his fleshy resplendence. Naturally, the Emperor discovers the awful truth--not only has he been had, but he looks like an idiot. Irving is also behind Cannon's Sleeping Beauty and Rumpelstiltskin (starring his sister, Amy Irving). Not too surprisingly, The Emperor's New Clothes feels like it was churned out fairly quickly, but the crazy costumes are a hoot. Most would give fashion critic Mr. Blackwell conniptions, but their garishness is what makes them amusing. This Movietale installment is fine for families, but more mature viewers would be better off with the Emperor's edition of Shelley Duvall's Faerie Tale Theatre. --Kathleen C. Fennessy

Customer Reviews

****** - Verified Buyer

I own several other versions (animated) of this story, and this acted is the best of them all.Update: This famous story is probably the best allegory for what we today call "political correctness" which is, "A crusade to ignorance characterized by the denial of Truth that conflicts with an ideology." In this story, a person is unworthy of his position if he can't see the emperor's clothes when in fact the emperor is naked, so everyone goes around commenting on how beautiful his new clothes are. Consider what is happening. Truth: The emperor is naked. Ideology: The emperor wears only the finest; therefore, his clothes are handsome, never mind he is being bamboozled himself by some con artists. Today, in the U.S. and many other countries, you are unworthy of your status as a student, your job position, and even your social status if you don't toe the liberal "in" thought of the day; at your job or at school, you are made to attend "re-education" training if you don't. As a result, you have to pretend you don't know things you do know. The next time you board a commercial airliner and have to undergo a search, think about what the Homeland Security agents have to do and see if you agree.

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