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INDIAN IN THE CUPBOARD (DVD/WS 1.78/DSS/ENG-SUB/FR-SP-BOTH) DVD Movie

INDIAN IN THE CUPBOARD (DVD/WS 1.78/DSS/ENG-SUB/FR-SP-BOTH) DVD


1.78:1: Alternate Wide Screen
1.33:1: Pre-1954 Standard

PN: 043396116429     Release: 04/22/2008
Starring: Hal Scardino, Litefoot, Lindsay Crouse
Director(s): Frank Oz


The Indian in the Cupboard
Based on the popular children's book by Lynne Reid Banks, this fantasy concerns a young boy who discovers that his toys are developing lives of their own -- which presents him with unexpected responsibilities. Omri (Hal Scardino), a young boy growing up in Brooklyn, receives an odd variety of presents for his birthday: a wooden cabinet from his older brother, a set of antique keys from his mother Jane (Linsday Crouse), and a tiny plastic model of an Indian from his best friend Patrick (Rishi Bhat). Putting them all together, Omri locks the Indian inside the cabinet, only to be awoken by a strange sound in the middle of the night. Omri opens the cabinet to discover that the tiny Indian has come to life; it seems that he's called Little Bear (Litefoot), and he claims to have learned English from settlers in 1761. Omri hides this remarkable discovery from his mother but shares it with Patrick; as an experiment, Patrick locks a toy cowboy into the cupboard, and soon Little Bear has a companion, Boone (David Keith), though predictably, the cowboy and the Indian don't get along well at first. Omri comes to the realizations that his living and breathing playthings are also people with lives of their own, and he begins to wonder how much control he should really have over their lives. The Indian in the Cupboard was directed by Frank Oz, best known as one of the original puppeteers for The Muppets and the voice of Miss Piggy. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
Cast
Hal Scardino as Omri
Litefoot as
Lindsay Crouse as Jane
Richard Jenkins as Victor
David Keith as Boone
Crew
Arthur Repola - Associate Producer
Michelle Wright - Associate Producer
Margery Simkin - Casting
Deborah L. Scott - Costume Designer
Michele Panelli-Venetis - First Assistant Director
Frank Oz - Director
Ian Crafford - Editor
Robert Harris - Executive Producer
Bernard Williams - Executive Producer
Randy Edelman - Composer (Music Score)
Art Rochester - Musical Direction/Supervision
Randy Edelman - Songwriter
Felicity Bowring - Makeup
Leslie McDonald - Production Designer
Russell Carpenter - Cinematographer
Jane Startz - Producer
Frank Marshall - Producer
Kathleen Kennedy - Producer
Erin Kemp - Set Designer
Michael Lantieri - Special Effects
James M. Halty - Stunts
Pete Antico - Stunts
Eric Brevig - Supervisor/Manager
Melissa Mathison - Screenwriter
Alex Funke - Visual Effects

The Indian in the Cupboard
The second-best movie about toys coming to life released in 1995, although not by the margin one might think, The Indian in the Cupboard is one of the least pandering and most socially progressive children's films ever released. While it may lack Toy Story's sense of carefree fun, in deference to a warm multicultural message about resolution of differences and respect for heritage, it makes up for that in sheer earnestness of purpose. Frank Oz's return to children's fare after a string of adult comedies is actually very much an adult entity in its own right. Rarely has a children's movie dealt so honestly with issues of death and the consequences of violence; instead of playing it soft, Oz astutely transforms these challenging topics into unobtrusive lessons. The film may be square in spots, but they are few. Not only does veteran special effects supervisor Michael Lantieri handle the miniaturization with subtle efficiency, but Oz coaxes an absolutely true performance from doe-eyed child actor Hal Scardino as a seamless complement. Native American actor Litefoot also brings real feeling to a role that could have been one-dimensional in less skillful hands. The narrative agenda of author Lynne Reid Banks -- namely, her challenge of cultural generalizations -- is evident in even the most minute design details. For example, the Caucasian boy is named Omri, while his Asian-Indian friend goes by the WASPish name Patrick (and also refers to his friend's mother by her first name). It's a joy to watch the film move from something so apparently basic toward something so effortlessly multi-textured. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 
(no awards)

General Specifications:

Language Options:English, French, Spanish
Subtitle Options:English, French, Spanish
Sound Processing:DDS: Dolby Digital Surround
Additional Features:Digitally mastered audio & anamorphic video Widescreen and full-screen presentations Audio: English [Dolby Surround], Spanish, French Subtitles: English, Spanish, French Director's commentary Photo gallery Bonus trailers Talent files Production notes Scene selections Interactive menus
DVD Aspect Ratio:1.78:1: Alternate Wide Screen
1.33:1: Pre-1954 Standard
MPAA Rating:PG
DVD Discs Included:1
DVD Sides:2
DVD DVD Region Code:1
Content Length:97 min
 

DVD Chapters:


Side #1 -- WIDESCREEN
0. Scene Selections
1. Start [3:08]
2. "Happy Birthday" [1:37]
3. Just an antique [:32]
4. The key [2:26]
5. Indian in the cupboard [4:31]
6. Vanishing American [1:43]
7. Little Bear [3:30]
8. The teepee [2:15]
9. Action figures [1:18]
10. "I've decided to stay." [2:05]
11. Outside [2:05]
12. Tommy Atkins [6:09]
13. Ready to build [2:53]
14. Distant thunder [1:13]
15. An old Mohawk [3:49]
16. Huge responsibility [4:13]
17. Patrick meets Little Bear [2:42]
18. Boone [3:07]
19. Cowboys & Indians [4:28]
20. Putting differences aside [4:06]
21. Plastic people [2:36]
22. Missing key [5:09]
23. Massacre! [2:46]
24. "He's alive." [2:26]
25. Key retrieval [3:20]
26. Tommy Atkins returns [4:59]
27. Forest walkabout [6:00]
28. Time to go home [2:35]

Side #2 -- FULL SCREEN
0. Scene Selections
1. Start [3:08]
2. "Happy Birthday" [1:37]
3. Just an antique [:32]
4. The key [2:26]
5. Indian in the cupboard [4:31]
6. Vanishing American [1:43]
7. Little Bear [3:30]
8. The teepee [2:15]
9. Action figures [1:18]
10. "I've decided to stay." [2:05]
11. Outside [2:05]
12. Tommy Atkins [6:09]
13. Ready to build [2:53]
14. Distant thunder [1:13]
15. An old Mohawk [3:49]
16. Huge responsibility [4:13]
17. Patrick meets Little Bear [2:42]
18. Boone [3:07]
19. Cowboys & Indians [4:28]
20. Putting differences aside [4:06]
21. Plastic people [2:36]
22. Missing key [5:09]
23. Massacre! [2:46]
24. "He's alive." [2:26]
25. Key retrieval [3:20]
26. Tommy Atkins returns [4:59]
27. Forest walkabout [6:00]
28. Time to go home [2:35]


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