
A large box arrives for Donald on his birthday, three gifts inside. He unwraps one at a time, and each takes him on an adventure. The first is a movie projector with a film about the birds of South America; Donald watches two cartoons, one tells of a penguin who longs to live on a tropical isle and the other about a gaucho boy who hunts the wild ostrich. The second gift is a pop-up book about Brazil. Inside is Jose Carioca, who takes Donald to Brazil's Bahia for a mix of anim... (Full plot summary below)
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A large box arrives for Donald on his birthday, three gifts inside. He unwraps one at a time, and each takes him on an adventure. The first is a movie projector with a film about the birds of South America; Donald watches two cartoons, one tells of a penguin who longs to live on a tropical isle and the other about a gaucho boy who hunts the wild ostrich. The second gift is a pop-up book about Brazil. Inside is Jose Carioca, who takes Donald to Brazil's Bahia for a mix of animation and live action: the two cartoon birds sing and dance with natives. The third gift is a piñata, accompanied by Panchito. A ride on a magic serape takes the three amigos singing and dancing across Mexico. ¡Olé!
Leave your thoughts about The Three Caballeros.
| VarietyVariety StaffIt's a gay, colorful, resplendent conceit. |
| MovieMartyr.comJeremy Heilman[After the] headlong launch into that abstract fantasia of color and sound, it's difficult to deny the sexual nature of its characters' pelvic thrusts and rampant phallic imagery. Clearly, this is Disney's horniest animated feature. |
| Antagony & EcstasyTim BraytonBy far the strangest feature-length movie in the history of the Walt Disney Company, with virtually every new minute bringing something more insanely creative than the last. |
| Chicago ReaderDave KehrNo other Disney feature achieved this level of exuberant abstraction, or displayed the same sheer pleasure in the magic of the animator's art. |
| Combustible CelluloidJeffrey M. AndersonThe two films are as artistically astonishing as they are culturally clueless. |
| 7M PicturesKevin Carrless of a propaganda piece and more of a narrative story |
| User ReviewZack Pspectacular animation, an intoxicating soundtrack, Hilarious characters and although the film appears to get stoned near the end, this Latin american buffet of culture and classic vintage Disney animation at its finest will surely leave you with a satisfying rhythm to take with you forever. |
| User ReviewAkela AGrew up watching this movie so it makes me a little nostalgic... great movie! |
| User ReviewMac JHands down my favorite South American film. It's #19 on my list of favorite films. It has beautiful animation, and it's blended perfectly with live action to boot, which was the first Disney film to feature some of that. In a way, it's an extension of "Fantasia" because of the artwork, music, and the multiple segment thing. It's way, WAY, WWWAAAYYY better than "Saludos Amigos". Definitely check it out, it's worth your time. |
| User ReviewAldo Jonathan Rcolores y más colores, un clásico psicodélico |