BEAUTY AND THE BEAST 3D Review
by Matt Goldberg Posted:January 12th, 2012 at 2:51 pm
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I’ve loved Beauty and the Beast for twenty years. My grandmother bought me the VHS when I was a kid, I went to see the IMAX re-release as a teenager, I bought the special edition DVD later that year, then I bought the special edition Blu-ray back in 2010, and have been expecting the 3D version ever since I saw the opening number at Comic-Con back in 2008. I’m not 3D’s champion and Beauty and the Beast doesn’t need a 3D post-conversion. It’s perfect the way it is, but I’m willing to put on a pair of 3D glasses if it means I get to see it on the big screen again. But is it possible to improve upon perfection and if not, does that lower the quality?
The renaissance of Disney animation (wonderfully shown in the must-see documentary Waking Sleeping Beauty) slowly began to grow after the The Black Cauldron flopped in 1985, and truly blossomed once the studio reached The Little Mermaid in 1989. Some will argue that the renaissance reached its apex in 1994 with The Lion King (re-released in 3D last year), and commercially that’s true. It’s the highest grossing of all the 90s Disney movies, but it’s not the best. The plot is fine but it lacks the grandeur of a storybook tale. The songs are memorable, but they’re not on par with what Alan Menken was able to do with the late, great Howard Ashman on Mermaid and Beauty.
After a brief prologue with a wonderful stained-glass exposition a vain prince became the Beast (voiced by Robby Benson), we get the fantastic “Belle”. It’s a number that would be right at home in a stage musical, but the animation adds wonderful sweeping visuals set against a storybook style. The number not only sets up Belle’s character (Paige O’Hara), but perfectly sets up the overall theme and foreshadows what makes the town so oppressive to our heroine. But most of all and most importantly, it’s a wonderful song. Ashman and Menken never talk down to their audience in their lyrics and that’s why the songs have no problem throwing in words like “provincial” and “expectorating”. The visuals and the tone of the song help children understand what’s happening and the adults can appreciate the craft.
There’s also the simple message every kid can take home: people who are ugly on the outside can be good on the inside and people who are beautiful on the outside can be ugly on the inside. As an adult, it’s still interesting to see how the movie approaches the superficial. Exploring that approach may seem ridiculously high-minded for a movie with singing dishware, but when it comes to the human characters, it’s neat to see how the filmmakers approached Belle. The town is baffled by her not because she reads books. They think she’s odd because she’s beautiful and she doesn’t need to spend time developing her mind when there’s a handsome stud like Gaston (Richard White) waiting in the wings.
As for the Beast, he’s the anti-Prince Charming. The animators decided to base Gaston on a grotesque version of what a “prince charming” character should look like, and they make Beast work to become a Prince Charming whose inner beauty will earn him back his outer beauty. I don’t remember if Beast scared me as a child, but he doesn’t start out as warm and cuddly. He’s not misunderstood; he has a terrible temper and while it may be a result of loneliness and self-pity, it’s still a trait he has to overcome. Furthermore, the movie starts out with the servants unquestionable accepting that Belle will be the woman to break the spell. To them, she is a function rather than a person and it takes the meaning out of “falling in love.” Beast’s love only becomes real at the end when he has to let her go and accept that he’ll never break the spell. True love means sacrifice, not simply proving you’ve learned how to dance in a CGI ballroom.
Again, kids will understand the basic message, and they’ll also be drawn in by the animation. Beauty and the Beast was always a gorgeous movie and the recent upgrade to HD (made on the must-own Blu-ray) makes it look even better. The CGI ballroom sequence should feel dated and if you focus on the pillars on the background you’ll see how CG doesn’t age well. But your eyes won’t wander to the background because the scene is so well-choreographed and skillfully blended with the 2D animation. The computer animation always supported the scene rather than overshadow it.
3D post-conversion presents the same challenge of trying to enhance the scene rather than providing a distraction. Last year, The Lion King did an adequate job of showing how Disney’s 3D would add depth to the picture but not throw objects out of the screen. The 3D effect works much better in Beauty and the Beast because it feels better suited to the material. When the movie opens and we push into the stained glass portraits, the flora in the foreground adds a kind of “pop-up” effect, so the original storybook quality now becomes a pop-up storybook. Most of the movie has this subtle quality, but the conversion process really shines during “Be Our Guest”. There are so many planes working in that number with the combination of chorus lines and Busby Berkeley-style shots, and the skillful use of 3D prevents the re-release from feeling like a half-hearted cash-grab.
The 3D of Beauty and the Beast doesn’t ruin a single frame of the movie nor does it make the movie significantly better because you could watch it in 2D and it would be just as magical. Like the 3D re-release of The Lion King, the real treat is getting to see Beauty and the Beast back on the big screen and seeing it a new high-definition transfer. The re-release also makes the smart decision to leave out the number “Human Again”, which isn’t a bad song, but it’s nowhere near as good as the rest of the number and it slows down the pacing. Beauty and the Beast 3D is a shinier version where the gleam doesn’t make the original come off as gaudy. Beauty and the Beast remains the enchanting and magical movie I fell in love with twenty years ago.
Rating: A+
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Related Links
- WAKING SLEEPING BEAUTY DVD Review
- Trailer for BEAUTY AND THE BEAST 3D
- Short Film TANGLED EVER AFTER to Play in Front of BEAUTY AND THE BEAST 3D
- New Posters for CARNAGE, THE DARKEST HOUR, and BEAUTY AND THE BEAST 3D
- Disney Announces Plans for 15 3D Blu-Ray Releases in 2011, Including THE LION KING, TANGLED, BEAUTY AND THE BEAST and TRON: LEGACY





Hi there, I’m French!
I read your review and i think that you summed up my thoughts about this movie. I saw it 14 years ago and Beauty and the beast is my favourite Disney of all and it will be like that for a very long time because Disney doesn’t make movies like this one anymore.
But I have to disagree on the bluray edition part. I got the dvd from a friend and I think that the bluray format screws up the magic of the movie. What I loved about it were the faded colours that made it so old and magical with all these incredible songs. When I saw all those flashy colours and all the contrast of the characters, I couldn’t help myself but think “What the hell is that?!”. It’s just my opinion but for me, the original form of the movie is the best.
Well, I don’t know if it’s going to be released in France, but I think that I’m going to see it just to feel again the same magical feeling that you felt.
I would have loved it if it hadn’t been in 3D. It frequently breaks the illusion of the film, and in some cases, the 3D reveals the deliberate persepctive distortions in the backgrounds in ways that are very unfavourable.
Great film, but misguided presentation.
There are always theater that show in 2D. Where I saw Lion King, the 2D screening was in the next auditorium.
Well my comment didn’t work out but Mark just summed up what I thought about the 3D conversion of Disney Movies.
When it will be released in France (if it’s released), I’m going to see it, because it’s Beauty and The Beast, but I’m afraid that nothing can match the magic of an old Disney 2D VHS.
Ryan, you might actually be incorrect. Lion King did MUCH better in 3D than it did in 2D. So expect that there will be a huge lack in 2D presentations. That said, this sounds like a decent 3D film and one I would pay to see (I see them for free, though).
@Nope
Totally agree, it was so much better in 3D it was magic lolll. It makes the movie feel more alive.
I hope they will make Aladin in 3D that would be nice
Lion King in 3D was surprising and effective for me. Loved it that way. I was expecting Beauty and the Beast to be less suited for 3D so this is encouraging.
Unless I am misreading my theater listings, there are NO 2D showings of Beauty and the Beast here.
That makes me a very sad panda.