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Mulan II (2004 Video)
7/10
Entertaining, surprising, yet a little off
14 February 2006
I didn't think Mulan II was awful and I certainly didn't hate it. I found the material to be pretty sophisticated for a Disney movie, particularly for a sequel. The relationship issues were were complex and thoughtful, and I agree with a previous comment that the movie does a good job of building and expanding on what we saw in the first movie. I enjoyed the addition of the the three daughters as characters as well and the return of Ling, Yao, and Chien Po. Overall I thought the movie was charming, entertaining, and it made me grin. There were also some very dramatic scenes in the movie that I thought were just outstanding and ground-breaking for a Disney animated feature.

Having said that, I also have to say that I was disappointed that the feel of the movie did not match the first. In fact it was completely different, and I found many of the characters to be extremely out of character, particularly Shang and Mulan. They just did not seem like themselves, based on our understanding of who they are from the original film. There are moments in which the way they react to events is completely over the top (for example, Shang's anger when he thinks Mulan is gossiping about him to the princesses). His facial expressions even become exaggerated in cartoon fashion. Basically, the movie did not have the serene, serious, yet beautiful feeling of the first. Instead it was like the movie was completely thrown to a group of writers and directors who were given semblances of who the characters are and then ran off with it. Shang, Mulan, and Ling acted so off sometimes that it seemed like their voice actors changed. I was surprised that B.D. Wong, Ming-Na, and Gedde Watanabe were still doing their parts, despite how familiar I am with their voices.

Mulan II is enjoyable, but it's nothing like the first. I think I could best describe it as watching a Mulan fan fiction come to life.... entertaining but with a few ummms in there.
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After Jimmy (1996 TV Movie)
Very realistic and heartfelt portrayal
5 August 2001
I don't have any qualms either with admitting that I cried like a baby during this film. Everything about it was so "real" that it seemed like the family had actually lost their son to that suicide. The part of the denying mother Maggie, and the family's suffering and healing was very genuine also. This was an excellent film on the subject. I've seen the '80s film "Silence of the Heart" about a teenaged boy's suicide, but it doesn't compare with this one. I liked it very much, but I don't think my eyes could handle a second viewing.
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Absolutely heartbreaking ...
5 August 2001
It's impossible to watch this film without crying. Even after it is over, you are left with a hovering depression, yet a new window on war, survival, love, and life. This is the most realistic anime feature I've ever seen, and definitely the most emotional. "Grave of the Fireflies" was recommended to me at a board, and I purchased it in English last month at Anime Expo. A find such as this is rare. Anime fan or not, I urge you to see it. It will change you forever.
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Mulan (1998)
Three cheers for Mulan!
20 February 1999
Like most of us have recognized, Disney's animated features became downhill after their remarkable feature, The Lion King. I was pretty disappointed with movies like The Hunchback of Notre Dame and Hercules, which missed the usual joy I got out of animated features from Disney. Mulan is definitely, in my opinion, the best movie since The Lion King. What does Mulan have that all the previous movies don't? For starters, Mulan lacks the Barbie figure from Pocahontas and helpless princess personality from Ariel and Jasmine. Mulan is one tough chick. In the beginning of the movie, we find that Mulan is having trouble becoming a respected bride in order to bring her family honor. It is then that Mulan takes her father's place in the army, going under the name of "Ping," clad in armor with her horse, Khan. In this movie, the heroine's goal is not to win love from a man, but to prove her strength and respect. Along with the movie's breath-taking action, beautiful animation, Chinese scenery, and meaningful plotline, it includes a hilarious and unforgettable cast of characters. There's, of course, Mulan (Ming-na Wen), Mushu (Eddie Murphy), Grandmother Fa (June Foray), Captain Shang (B.D. Wong), Crickee, and Shan-Yu (Miguel Ferrer). And I couldn't possibly leave out Mulan's ragtag, comical soldier friends, Yao (Harvey Fiersten), Ling (Gedde Watanabe), and Chien-Po (Jerry Tondo), who I just can't get enough of every time I watch Mulan. Congratulations to Disney with this remarkable feauture! Three cheers for Mulan!
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