The Sword in the Stone

The Sword in the Stone(1963)

G
12/25/1963 (US)Animation, Family, Fantasy1h 19m
7.2

"Tired of living in a Medieval mess... Merlin uses all his magic powers to change a scrawny little boy into a legendary hero!"

Overview

Wart is a young boy who aspires to be a knight's squire. On a hunting trip he falls in on Merlin, a powerful but amnesiac wizard who has plans for him beyond mere squiredom. He starts by trying to give him an education, believing that once one has an education, one can go anywhere. Needless to say, it doesn't quite work out that way.

Wolfgang Reitherman

Director

Bill Peet

Screenplay

Bill Peet

Story

Where to Watch

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Media

The Sword in the Stone - 1963 Theatrical Trailer (35mm 4K)

The Sword in the Stone - 1963 Theatrical Trailer (35mm 4K)

Trailer

The Sword in the Stone - 2008 45th Anniversary Edition DVD Trailer

The Sword in the Stone - 2008 45th Anniversary Edition DVD Trailer

Trailer

The Sword in the Stone - 1985 Reissue Trailer

The Sword in the Stone - 1985 Reissue Trailer

Trailer

The Sword in the Stone - 1983 Reissue Trailer

The Sword in the Stone - 1983 Reissue Trailer

Trailer

The Sword in the Stone

The Sword in the Stone

Trailer

Social

K
A review by Kamurai
5.0

Written on July 11, 2020

Decent watch, probably won't watch again, and can't recommend.

Now it's been a while since I've seen this one, and now I remember why. There just isn't anything in the well in which to return. Sure all the magic is amusing, and the animal adventures are cute, as well as a nice reminder of how good we have it as humans, but I really feel like we ruined that squirrel's life, and I'm sad about it.

The actual story of the sword in the stone is very short, because it's not interesting: it's all the adventures that Arthur has growing the kingdom, establishing rule over (what would be) England, and his adventures as an adult king (most of which were his knights') to include warring with neighbors.

While the jocks versus nerds analogy through the movie is interesting, it feels polarizing, and the message of education / knowledge is mixed throughout the movie. Future references to the (1963) present just dates the movie and aren't all that funny, and it tells the audience that just because you have knowledge, doesn't mean you can use it. Then in the 3rd act, we start a controversy over having knowledge / skills can be used to better or worsen things, and other than inspiring Star Wars, I don't know what the point of it was.

My favorite part was when Archimedes got to laugh: he seemed like he really needed it.