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7.3/10
2.3K
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Winnie the Pooh and friends decide to throw a birthday celebration for gloomy, old Eeyore.Winnie the Pooh and friends decide to throw a birthday celebration for gloomy, old Eeyore.Winnie the Pooh and friends decide to throw a birthday celebration for gloomy, old Eeyore.
Hal Smith
- Winnie the Pooh
- (voice)
- …
Ralph Wright
- Eeyore
- (voice)
Laurie Main
- Narrator
- (voice)
John Fiedler
- Piglet
- (voice)
Dick Billingsley
- Roo
- (voice)
Julie McWhirter
- Kanga
- (voice)
- (as Julie McWhirter Dees)
Paul Winchell
- Tigger
- (voice)
7.32.3K
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Featured reviews
Winnie the Pooh and a Day for Eeyore
"Winnie" is having an amble when he finds a fir cone. He drops it into the river - inadvertently discovering the game of "Pooh Sticks" - and is soon playing with his friends "Rabbit", "Piglet" and "Roo". Their game is disrupted by a large floating object - and that turns out to be the glass-half-empty character that is "Eeyore". What's he doing in the river? Seems he was "bounced" into it - and there can only be one culprit for that. "Tigger" denies all knowledge but a bit of intervention from the narrator proves who did what and reminds us that it's also the gloomy donkey's birthday! Quickly they decide that they have to get him some gifts - but what chance "Pooh" is actually ever going to remember his task. "Owl" might be able to help out? "Piglet" has got him a balloon - or has a balloon got him a "Piglet"? "Pooh" eventually gets him an useful pot and "Christopher Robin" gets everyone together for a nice birthday tea - well it's nice until "Tigger" arrives and we are soon all back where we started - on the bridge with the sticks! It's a little bit long, this animation, but the characters and the friendly nature of the story makes for an easy watch with just about everyone in on the act and trying to pull together to cheer up "Eeyore".
Calling it 'Stick Race' would have been more appropriate
It's Eeyore's birthday, but none of his so-called friends have bothered to notice. Pooh has made a new game involving chucking sticks into the river to see which one wins in a race. He calls it 'Pooh Sticks'. Now, where I come from that particular noun means something completely different.
When Eeyore comes floating along they realize that he is more depressed than usual. When he reveals why the day is supposed to be so special they all run off to find makeshift presents and prepare a party. It actually works, and he cheers up.
A fine Winnie the Pooh short, with the great animation and wonderful backgrounds we've come to expect. It also keeps Christopher Robin to a minimum.
When Eeyore comes floating along they realize that he is more depressed than usual. When he reveals why the day is supposed to be so special they all run off to find makeshift presents and prepare a party. It actually works, and he cheers up.
A fine Winnie the Pooh short, with the great animation and wonderful backgrounds we've come to expect. It also keeps Christopher Robin to a minimum.
A Classic that everyone should own!
This is a classic video that everyone should own. It shows true friendship when the friends make effort to make Eeyore's birthday cheerful. It is a great edition to the Pooh series. The animation is good, the voices are great, the illustrations and color are nice, and the story is entertaining and enjoyable. This video is based on two ideas from the original books by A.A Milne. It is based on a part where Pooh invents a game, and where Eeyore has a party. Out of the four Pooh movies,two, The Honey Tree, and Blustery Day are better than this. One, Tigger too, is not as good, but only by a little bit. This video is so much fun, that adults and kids will watch this over and over. It is great.
A worthy installment
This forth installment in Disney's Winnie the Pooh series of short is in many ways the most endearing and rewarding of the four. The story revolves around Eyeore's forgotten birthday and Pooh and friends' attempts to make amends. It rings true in its themes of isolation, desiring and achieving companionship, and true friendship.
Thankfully, this short is available in the supplemental material on the DVD (2002 release, Region 1) edition of `The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh'. If you have this DVD, don't pass over this delightful extra.
Thankfully, this short is available in the supplemental material on the DVD (2002 release, Region 1) edition of `The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh'. If you have this DVD, don't pass over this delightful extra.
Still enjoyable.
This is the last of the four Winnie the Pooh featurettes. It's not as good as the first three, but it is still enjoyable. One reason I'll tell you why it it not as good as the others is because almost the whole cast is different. But John Fiedler and Paul Winchell still gave their original voices to Piglet and Tigger which is a good thing. This film really focuses on Eeyore by the way. The music is really good too, and it really sets to the tone of Eeyore. So if you haven't seen this or the others yet, you're in for a treat. So please watch it for me and tell us how you like it.
P.S. Try playing Pooh-sticks yourself.
P.S. Try playing Pooh-sticks yourself.
Did you know
- TriviaThe theatrical release of this film in the USA was as part of the reissue of The Sword in the Stone (1963).
- GoofsDuring Eeyore's birthday party, Piglet and Christopher Robin are the only ones shown without napkins around their necks. As the camera zooms out when Christopher Robin is thinking about Pooh sticks, Piglet has a napkin around his neck.
- Quotes
Narrator: Now one day, Pooh and Piglet, Rabbit and Roo were all playing Pooh sticks together.
Winnie the Pooh: But why call it Pooh sticks? I thought I started with fir cones.
Narrator: You did, Pooh, but sticks are easier to mark.
[Pooh thinks to himself, then smiles]
Winnie the Pooh: Oh yes, now I remember.
Narrator: [clears throat] Now one day, Pooh and Piglet, Rabbit and Roo were all playing Pooh sticks together.
- Crazy creditsThere are no end credits at the end of this feature. All credits are at the beginning of the feature.
- Alternate versionsRe-dubbed version on VHS, DVD and Blu-Ray releases of The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. Jim Cummings as Winnie the Pooh, Tress MacNellie as Kanga, Ken Sansom as Rabbit, Trevyn Savage as Christopher Robin and Aaron Spann as Roo
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Making of 'Winnie the Pooh' (1998)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- A Day for Eeyore
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $12,000,000
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $2,230,614
- Mar 25, 1983
- Runtime
- 25m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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