Cathardincu
Surprisingly incoherent and boring
Contentar
Best movie of this year hands down!
Kodie Bird
True to its essence, the characters remain on the same line and manage to entertain the viewer, each highlighting their own distinctive qualities or touches.
Skyler
Great movie. Not sure what people expected but I found it highly entertaining.
Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de)
"Ben and Me" is an animated short film from 1953, so this one will have its 65th anniversary next year and if you take a look at the cast, you will find really many writers for a 20-minute film. The director is Hamilton Luske, who won an Oscar a decade later and worked on pretty many films that are considered classics somehow these days. You can find the list in his body of work. This one we have here is about inventor Benjamin Franklin and the various impacts he had on American history. All this is told through the eyes of a mouse who is depicted as one of the driving forces behind Franklin's spirit. It is a bit of an odd idea admittedly, but it somewhat fits in nicely with Disney's fantasy take on things frequently. This one here is without a doubt among Disney's more educational films and it is fitting that it was nominated for an Oscar in the short reel category and not in the cartoon category. Maybe this is even a movie that was shown in schools at some point. By the way, it lost the Oscar o another Disney work. The story here is fine, even if I did not really develop any deep interest in Ben Franklin. Maybe the premise was a bit too odd for my liking. The voice acting is decent too, but that's really a given with Sterling Holloway in the cast. As a whole, a fairly good work I believe, but nothing near Disney's best in terms of animation or story-telling and the comedy aspect is really negligible here. Thumbs up.
TheLittleSongbird
Well, not as neglected as it was but Ben and Me is still one of Disney's most under-appreciated short films. And unjustly, because it is a treasure. It's animated beautifully, all the characters are well drawn, with a couple that are reminiscent of a couple from Disney's Cinderella(like a cat that looks like Lucifer) and it is hard not to admire the sumptuousness of the backgrounds. There is a music score that brims with energy too, and the dialogue has humour that amuses and it educates as well. The story is probably Ben and Me's biggest strength, it is cute without being too cutesy, it is good-natured in its funny parts and very warm-hearted. It is also very educational and there is a great lesson to be learnt without showing any signs of preaching, even at the end when we see how the declaration of independence comes about. The characters have engaging personalities and are in no way superfluous to the story, they are easy to relate to as well. Ben and Me is also brilliantly voiced, particularly by Sterling Holloway as mouse Amos who has the lion's share of the written material as well(considering that the story is told from his viewpoint). His voice-work is warm, witty and moves the storytelling forward rather than trying to over-explain(like a few shorts with Holloway narrating, The Pelican and the Snipe comes to mind). I prefer Hans Conried in villain roles but he is very distinguished here and like Holloway you recognise his voice immediately. Charles Ruggles is very endearing as Ben. So all in all, an animated treasure that ought be better known. 10/10 Bethany Cox
robinj22
This is by far one of the cutest animated "history" lessons anyone can watch or show to children. Of course it is fictional with a mouse as the hero and main character but does present the founding of our nation and the writing of the constitution in a very entertaining matter. Amos is really portrayed as the hero in place of Benjamin Franklin, with Franklin portrayed as somewhat of a bumbling, "absent-minded" professor type. We are also shown some of Benjamin Franklin's inventions as well as some of his famous sayings scattered throughout the short movie. We do have a video version of this and I believe it is still available. I highly recommend this very entertaining and educational 25 minute feature by Disney at his best.
dcorr123
Amos is as poor as a church mouse, if fact he is a church mouse. He leaves home to seek his fortune is 18th century Philadelphia, finding employment with a news publisher, Benjamin Franklin. Amos rides about in the brim of Ben's tri-cornered hat; and you thought those hats were only for style. Amos, it turns out is the real source of many of Franklin's inventions. Possibly a spoiler if you ever get a chance to see this film: Eventually Franklin sends Amos on a kite ride, ostensibly to gain a new perspective on news gathering. When Amos learns the "shocking" truth he's led to drastic measures. Franklin is reading Amos' declaration as Thomas Jefferson is fretting over how to word his own Declaration...The rest is history. I wish Disney studios would someday release this little gem to tape.