Find Walt Disney's famous fawn with this superb Bambi Poster which will take you back to your childhood!
- Paper characteristic:
- 🎨 Canvas: world standard in terms of printing and imitating a “painting canvas” appearance .
- By default, the poster contains a 4 cm white border for framing (frame not included). If you don't want it, please choose "without white border".
- ✅ Size: several choices available . ✅
- Great UV resistance .
- Maximum color vibrancy, without reflections .
- Recycled paper, guaranteeing respect for the environment.
- Poster carefully packaged and delivered in a protective tube for total protection .
-
FREE STANDARD DELIVERY .
⚠️ Frame not included. ⚠️
Description of this Bambi Poster
Bambi is a 1942 American animated film directed by David Hand (supervising a team of sequence directors), produced by Walt Disney, and based on the 1923 book Bambi, A Life in the Woods by Austrian author and hunter Felix Salten. The film was released by RKO Radio Pictures on August 13, 1942, and is Disney's fifth animated feature film.
The main characters are Bambi, a white-tailed deer, his parents (the Great Prince of the Forest and his unnamed mother), his friends Thumper (a pink-nosed rabbit) and Flower (a skunk), and his friend childhood and future companion, Faline. In the original book, Bambi was a deer, a species native to Europe, but Disney decided to base the character on a mule deer from Arrowhead, California. Illustrator Maurice "Jake" Day convinced Disney that mule deer had large "mule-shaped" ears and was more common in western North America, but that the white-tailed deer was more recognized throughout America.
The film received three Academy Award nominations: Best Sound (Sam Slyfield), Best Song (for "Love Is a Song" sung by Donald Novis) and Original Score.
In June 2008, the American Film Institute presented a list of its "Top 10" – the ten best films in each of the ten classic genres of American cinema – after surveying more than 1,500 people in the creative community. Bambi placed third in the animation field. In December 2011, the film was added to the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, and aesthetically significant".
In January 2020, it was announced that a photorealistic computer-animated remake was in development.
A doe gives birth to a fawn named Bambi, who will one day take the place of Grand Prince of the Forest, a title currently held by Bambi's father, who protects the creatures of the woods from the dangers of hunters. The beast quickly becomes friends with an energetic and enthusiastic rabbit named Thumper, who helps him learn to walk and talk. Bambi becomes very attached to his mother, with whom he spends most of his time. He soon makes other friends, including a young skunk he mistakenly calls "Flower" (who is so flattered that she keeps the name) and a female fawn named Faline. Curious and inquisitive, Bambi often asks questions about the world around him and his loving mother warns him of the dangers of life as a creature of the forest. One day, in a meadow, Bambi briefly sees the Great Prince but does not realize that it is his father. As the Great Prince walks up the hill, he discovers that the human hunter, called "Man" by all the animals, is arriving and rushes into the meadow to bring everyone to safety. Bambi is briefly separated from his mother during this time, but he is escorted back to her by the Great Prince and all three return to the forest just as the man draws his gun.
During Bambi's first winter, he and Thumper play in the snow while Flower hibernates. One day, his mother takes him with her to find food when the man reappears. As they escape, its mother is shot by the hunter, leaving the little fawn sad and alone. Taking pity on his abandoned son, the Great Prince takes Bambi home and reveals to him that he is his father. The following year, Bambi grew into a young deer and his childhood friends also entered adulthood. They are warned against "chirping" by friend Owl and know that they will eventually fall in love, although the trio views the concept of romance with contempt. However, Thumper and Flower soon meet their handsome romantic counterparts and abandon their old ideas about love. Bambi himself meets Faline in the form of a beautiful doe. However, their courtship is quickly interrupted and challenged by a belligerent old deer named Ronno, who tries to take Faline away from Bambi. Bambi manages to defeat Ronno in battle and earn the right to the doe's affections.
Bambi is then awakened by the smell of smoke; he follows it and discovers that it leads to a hunter's camp. His father warns Bambi that the man has returned with other hunters. Although Bambi is separated from Faline in the turmoil and searches for her along the way, the two escape to safety. He soon finds her cornered by the man's vicious hunting dogs, which he manages to ward off. Bambi escapes from them and is shot by the man, but she survives. Meanwhile, at the Man's camp, their campfire suddenly spreads into the forest, causing a forest fire from which the inhabitants flee in fear. Bambi, his father, Faline and the forest animals manage to take shelter at the edge of a river. The following spring, Faline gives birth to twins under the watchful eye of Bambi, the new Grand Prince of the forest.