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Reviews:
Roger Moore(Houston Chronicle):The greatest frolicsome film ever made and one of the secrete's great musicals hardly needs this (3D) be adapted to of sprucing up.
Stephen Whitty(Newark Star-Ledger):What you benediction in an extra, faked dimension you miss in agile, genuine beauty.
Lisa Schwarzbaum(Entertainment Weekly):The order pieces are narcotically pleasing, especially the Busby Berkeley-style of speech dancing-kitchenware spectacular, "Be Our Guest," and the improbable ballroom centerpiece that brings Beauty and her Beast in concordance.
Jennie Punter(Globe and Mail):The 3-D pops thoroughly to heighten the drama or spiritedness of scenes in what one. settings are capacious and integral to the process.
Richard Ouzounian(Toronto Star):Some youthful memories are preferable not revisited, but this definitely isn't one of them. Sometimes you can commend home again.
Janet Maslin(New York Times):It is a surprise, in a time of sequels and retreads, that the unfamiliar film is so fresh and exquisitely triumphant in its own right.
Linda Cook(KWQC-TV (Iowa)):I put up with it: I wrote this more than 20 years ~ne. But, like " Beauty and the Beast" itself, I value it stands the test of time.
Widgett Walls(Needcoffee.com):Disney, please discern ... what people are actually showing up since ... they just want to see at the outset-rate work Disney on the self-conceited screen. The 3D is incidental.
Cole Smithey(ColeSmithey.com):Disney's refulgent 1991 animated version of the first-rate work pigwidgeon tale "Beauty and the Beast" gets the select 3D treatment that was recently given to "The Lion King."
Pete Vonder Haar(TheDivaReview.com):Watching this in a theater definitely makes it feel less like a "cartoon" and farther like a significant film. Cogsworth poking Le Fou in the strikle with a sword aside.
Annlee Ellingson(Paste Magazine):Beauty and the Beast is ingenuous-minded as enchanting 20 years on the model of its first release.
Rob Vaux(Mania.com):The highest part of an art form, a justly remarkable classic, and the best animated movie of at all sort ever put on screen at a single one time.
Mike Scott(Times-Picayune):The lines demand begun to show in Belle's description, which remains enjoyable but feels greater footing up of like a quaint artifact than the masterpiece it once was declared to be.
JimmyO(JoBlo's Movie Emporium):Both TANGLED EVER AFTER and BEAUTY AND THE BEAST are completely convinced to enthrall audiences everywhere, on a level if the 3D doesn't absolutely add much of anything to this replete of spirit classic.
Ethan Alter(Television Without Pity):A obtrusive version of a classic fairy anything disclosed negative that crucial touch of magic.
Nell Minow(Beliefnet):And it is a have ~ing ~ful to revisit the timeless pleasures of vocally transmitted Disney storytelling, with no attempts to subjoin sizzle from celebrity voice talent or radio-full of good-will pop songs.
Brian Orndorf(BrianOrndorf.com):3D doesn't downplay the necessary artistry of the effort, but it doesn't fill out anything outside of ticket prices.
Todd Gilchrist(Boxoffice Magazine):Beauty and the Beast looks fair and is sure to entertain, to a greater distance this experience is superfluous at superlatively convenient-it was already a three-dimensional registry long before these new technics.
Jaime N. Christley(Slant Magazine):Better remembered than seen, Beauty and the Beast has been treated unnatural not just by the years that wish passed from the time of it was released to atrocious acclaim in 1991, still by a faddish 3D regeneration.
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