The King and I (1999 film)

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The King and I

Original one-sheet poster.
Directed by Richard Rich
Produced by Peter Bakalian
Arthur Rankin Jr.
James G. Robinson
Written by Arthur Rankin (screenplay)
Oscar Hammerstein II (musical)
Margaret Landon (book)
Starring Miranda Richardson
Martin Vidnovic
Music by Richard Rodgers
Editing by Joe Campana
James Koford
Paul Murphy
Distributed by Warner Bros. Family Entertainment
Morgan Creek
Release date(s) 1999
Running time 86 mins
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language English
IMDb profile

The King and I is an animated film adaptation of the stage musical The King and I, which in turn is adapted from the Anna Leonowens story. The film was produced by Warner Bros. Animation, and released to movie theatres by Warner Bros. Family Entertainment in 1999. The animation was done by the Indian company Pentamedia Graphics and the US-based Rich Animation Studios.

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[edit] Synopsis

The story follows the introduction of an English schoolteacher to the royal family of Siam in the 1860s. A clash of cultures occurs when the strong-minded Anna Leonowens brings a different way of thinking to the King of Siam and his numerous children.

[edit] Differences for the Musical and 1956 Film

This animated version of the original musical contained numerous changes, so many, in fact, that the actually storyline of the original musical is nearly deleted from the film as a whole. Among the many changes:

  • In the original play, Tuptim falls in love with Lun Tha, who is absent from this film. He is replaced by an adult Chulalongkorn.
  • In in the original play, while the Kralahome is a cold and 'unfeeling' man, he never plots to destroy the king and take over the throne, as in this version. In truth, he actually is seen originally as very loyal to the king. Nor does he have a little assistant named Master Little.
  • Lady Thiang is never addressed by name, and only makes a small appearance during the "Hello Young Lovers" scene.
  • There is no appearance of a monkey, a baby elephant, or a panther in the original film. (Although, at the beginning of the original film, there are elephants in the streets of Siam)
  • Tuptim's love affair is discovered in the original film when she is trying to escape with Lun Tha. Here, she is seen wearing Chulalongkorn's white elephant pendant. Also, while in the play it is hinted that Tuptim is executed after she is caught, in the cartoon, she and Chulalongkorn are both given permission by the king to court happily.
  • The king does not have a 'scientific' experiments room, nor does he ever fly in a hot air balloon.
  • Anna never takes the children outside the palace.
  • In the 1956 film, Tuptim is very enthusastic about reading, and is openly allowed to do so, while in the animated film, it is expressivley forbidden for servants to read.
  • In the animated film, Edward Ramsey is seen only as a friend of Anna's, where in the original play, he was an ex-lover of hers.
  • Louis is a moderately major character in the cartoon, but he is a very small character in the play, and the same age as Chulalongkorn.
  • While the king comes close to death at one point, he doesn't actually die, as in the play.
  • The "Small House" ballet written by Tuptim is absent.
  • During the scene where Tuptim and her lover meet in the garden at night in the original movie, she and Lun Tha sing "We Kiss in a Shadow" and the instrumental version of "I Have Dreamed" plays momentarily in the background, but not sung. Interestingly, this is the exact opposite in the cartoon version of the scene with Tuptim and Chulalongkorn.
  • Over half the original songs are cut.
  • The solo numbers "A Puzzlement" and "Shall I Tell You What I Think Of You?" were shortened.
  • Anna ends up getting a house at the end of the film.

[edit] Voice cast

[edit] External links