Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too (1974) Poster

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8/10
Rocking the Forest
utgard1415 December 2013
This is a great cartoon short with lots of (almost) everybody's favorite, Tigger. Rabbit is tired of Tigger bouncing on him so he comes up with a plan to stop it. It backfires and he winds up having to be rescued by Tigger. Later, when Tigger is stuck up a tree, he makes a promise to never bounce again if he is saved. But can Tigger possibly keep such a promise? Will his friends even expect him to? This is another Pooh classic. Some great animation and wonderful voicework, especially by Paul Winchell as Tigger. A sweet, memorable, fun cartoon with terrific characters and lots of heart. Great for kids but for adults as well.
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7/10
It's pretty difficult to figure out . . .
pixrox17 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
. . . where one Pooh pot ends and the next begins, especially when Dizzy Mega Corporation seems unwilling to label anything with a semblance of historical order. TIGER TOO seems to be comprised of a foggy part and a snowy part, crammed together for no apparent reason. Naturally, it would make a lot more sense to have released these Pooh pieces separately with more specific titles such as POOH IN THE FOG and POOH'S SNOWY DAY. Having failed to follow this logical course, the least Dizzy should have done was some sort of Black Box warning such as "The bits of this are a haphazard conglomeration, so any incoherence is NOT the fault of your screen or streaming provider."
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10/10
Really sweet and definitely memorable!
TheLittleSongbird2 September 2009
I don't think Tigger Too is quite as good as Honey Tree and Blustery Day, but I definitely recommend it. Sure there are no songs apart from the reprise of The Wonderful Thing About Tiggers, but the incidental music is absolutely beautiful.

The animation is spot on, and the story is still a nice idea. And it is entertaining, and what makes it entertaining is Tigger. What wonderful voice work from Paul Winchell.

The other voice actors also do very well with a good script, and Roo is really cute. There is one part that sticks out for me though- the part when Rabbit tells Tigger he can never bounce again, and Tigger goes off on his own, with his head down. That part never fails to bring tears to my eyes, and I still don't know why. Perhaps it was because I couldn't bear to see Tigger so sad.

Very sweet and memorable! 10/10 Bethany Cox
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10/10
Disney again does an excellent job of adapting Pooh
llltdesq16 October 2001
Disney has been criticized (often justifiably) for the sometimes very loose adaptations of other works to animation. But they generally have done quite well by the Winnie-the-Pooh adaptations. This short, nominated for an Academy Award in the excellent year of 1974, is a first-class adaptation of the denizens of the 100-Acre Wood. Personally, Tigger is my second favorite character (after Eeyore) so I particularly like this one. Disney used animation to actually create the feel of the A.A. Milne books and did very well by the stories. Highly Recommended.
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10/10
A really great short film.
Greatlife67517 May 2006
This is the third of the four Winnie the Pooh featurettes. I should find this as satisfying as Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree and Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day. But it really focuses on Tigger. The voice cast is great as the other 2 films, and the music is great as well. And the plot? Well, let's say that it satisfies me. I am disappointed on one thing however. It was nominated for an Academy Award, but it lost to Closed Mondays. (I haven't heard of or seen that one yet, but it's not a Pooh film.) But still, I recommend this film as well as the other three. You should see them all. They can really satisfy you.
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10/10
Wonderful and sweet
planktonrules13 February 2008
I have watched and reviewed a ton of Academy Award nominated animated shorts and this is a rare situation where I saw two films in this category in the same year that I think earned a 10--one of which was this wonderful film from Disney. The other, CLOSED MONDAYS, I loved because of its amazingly cranky main character and the uniqueness (at the time) of Claymation. Both are great and worth seeing, though I can't help but prefer WINNIE THE POOH AND TIGGER TOO!--it just had a timeless magical quality about it.

However, I can certainly understand the Oscar people not giving this Pooh film an Oscar--after all, in 1969, WINNIE THE POOH AND THE BLUSTERY DAY earned the award in this category, so it wasn't like this Tigger film was super-unique--which CLOSED MONDAYS certainly was.

As for this film, it is available now in a DVD with several other early Pooh shorts and is a must-have for fans of Pooh. It is simply perfect--charming and expertly crafted--with some of the best Disney animation you'll ever see.
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10/10
A great Pooh story, but is missing something. Warning;Contains Spoilers!!
piccione200011 September 2002
Warning: Spoilers
This video is hard to find, and I have been looking to find it for a long time, so I could add it to my Pooh collection. This is a great Pooh story, and the story is so much fun. The Honey Tree, the Blustery Day, and the Day for Eeyore,( even though Day for Eeyore was released later), are better than this. Even though Day for Eeyore was released later and this is older, it is better , because the fist two and the last one are better than this, because two of the best characters are missing. Eeyore did not appear, and Owl did not either. I think that the ones that are missing some of the characters are not as good. In this story, they take Tigger on a long explore to lose him, and Rabbit gets lost, and is scared, and the rest make it back. In the next part, Roo and Tigger get stuck in a tree, and if they help Tigger down, he can not ever bounce again. The story is a little dark and mean.

Despite the characters are absent, this story is still good, and your kids will love it so much. It is great.
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4/10
To bounce or not to bounce? - That's the question.
Horst_In_Translation15 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This is the third and last of the Winnie Pooh trilogy by Wolfgang Reitherman and Sterling Holloway. Just like the second, it got nominated for an Academy Award, but this time it did not win. After watching all three of these I have to say that I prefer the 3 Soviet Films about Winnie Pooh. They have as much action as these American films, but it's much more essential as not all of the Russian films run for 20 minutes. There's just not enough happening in here. I even wondered after the first how Rabbit became a friend of everybody and after watching this third film I have to ask that question again. I mean he is really mean to Tigger here. Yes the bouncing may be annoying, but why forbid him to do it. And what was up with that Hansel & Gretel idea of leaving him alone in the deserted forest? Seriously? That's just cruel. In any case, I do not recommend this third film either.
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10/10
One of my favourite movies!
madeline-186 January 2007
I have seen this movie about 10 times and every time I watch it I love it!This movie is not very long,but that does not mean it's a bad film. This movie has it all,it's funny,sad,happy,and it's a mini adventure!the first time I saw this movie I thought it would be boring because it was made in 1974,but when I watched it I thought is was one of the best short movies I had ever seen.Then I began to watch even older Winnie The Pooh movies and I loved them all,but this short Winnie The Pooh movie is my favourite one!I disagree with other people's revues on this short movie. It is great.In conclusion I think this movie has everything and that is what makes it so great.So if you ever get a chance to see this movie it's a great one so give it a try!
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10/10
Tigger and his bounces
Atreyu_II28 July 2007
This is the third short of Winnie the Pooh and his friends. In my opinion, it's the funniest of all and just as good as the earlier 2 shorts. This one isn't simply the funniest, it is also the bounciest. This is full of classic humor and great fun! Yes, our friend Tigger bounces a lot here. He's full of surprises and he bounces to his friends when they less expect. He bounces to Winnie the Pooh, Piglet and Rabbit. He surprises Pooh, scares Piglet, angers Rabbit and amuses little Roo and Kanga. However, he does a special "small bouncing" for Piglet because he is so tiny and he doesn't really bounce to Roo or Kanga, perhaps in respect for Kanga.

And oh, it's so delightful to hear Tigger amusingly saying «Hi hi! She called me dear!» - there's also some vanity in the way he says it. It's equally delightful to hear Tigger calling Pooh «the one who's stuffed with fluff» and «very comfy, too», as well as to hear him call "Long ears" to Rabbit.

Rabbit, of course, likes Tigger as much as the others, but he doesn't accept very well Tigger's bounces. In fact, he decides to have a meeting of protest with Pooh and Piglet because he has a plan to "unbounce" Tigger. The plan consists in taking Tigger to the forest and leave him alone in a far place, so that he gets lost and stops bouncing.

But the plan doesn't work the way they expect. Ironically, Rabbit, Pooh and Piglet are the ones who get lost and Tigger ends up finding them and bounces them, one by one. However, Rabbit is the one who feels humiliated after Tigger assures that «Tiggers never get lost» and keeps wondering «Why oh why oh why?». Tigger is just too smart to get lost.

Later, Tigger decides to take Roo with him to teach him all about bouncing. Tigger gets overexcited, bounces until the top of a tree and that's when something hilarious happens: Tigger is too afraid of heights, so much that he doesn't have courage to even try to get out of that sticky situation. He even promises not to bounce anymore (without really meaning it, of course). It's so hilarious to see our friend Tigger scared of heights.

These Winnie the Pooh's old shorts are real classics. Timeless and very charming. They also give us that "nostalgia" feeling about childhood and classic Disney. In Tigger's words, instead of a goodbye, I'll just say «Halloo!» :)
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10/10
Roo Bounced Down From The Tree Warning: Spoilers
Roo is bouncing up and down on the tree branch. The scene was in it. There is Roo hold his two feet for a split legs to bounced down from the tree to the coat of Christopher Robin. Kanga caught him for rescuing him.

Roo did that. The song from "Give a Little Whistle" with Jiminy Cricket and Jiminy bounced on the whistling saw. Those are my favorite scenes. Roo and Jiminy are split legs for bouncing. It was fun. There are awesome work, excellent work. In fact, Jiminy starting to bounce on the saw a bit. Then, he landed on one of the clocks, tap dancing a bit before changing the clock to 11:30. He then knocked on the door, marching while the wooden carving of a farmer, wife, and cow began ringing bells with the cricket leading them. Then, he stopped near the door as the wooden carvings began going in while the carving of the daughter was seen. Roo loved to bounced down from the tree.
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10/10
the joys and occasional trials of being a Tigger (and Rabbit, too)
Quinoa198428 August 2015
This was the third 'act' of The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, which is how I first saw this as a very young child (probably a baby, now that I think about it). Though the whole feature was kind of ingrained into my system at an early age, I think this final section always left an impression on me. It was because of Tigger being this main subject here - in later years he'd get his own movie, The Tigger Movie as it was pretty obviously called - though really moreso about how he was perceived, that made it so funny and captivating and even a couple of times scary and almost-borderline sad.

The two things that happen in Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too involve Rabbit in a big way, and it's little wonder from a storytelling perspective; they're diametrically opposed, with Tigger and his, to put it lightly, carefree attitude, and Rabbit being, to also put it mildly, fastidious. He likes his garden and Tiggers bouncy ways mess it up. Can the bounce go away for a while? A personality adjustment could do it, so he, Pooh and Piglet go out into the woods with the plan to abandon him (just for the night, as Rabbit proposes to a hilariously sleepy Pooh by the way), but it backfires as Rabbit is the one who gets stuck (not unlike, say, Snow White in her feature).

The other thing is that Tigger does get some emotional shock when he is stuck up high on a tree - he even talks to the Narrator Sebastian Cabot, which I found both young and today absolutely hysterical - and maybe does, just for a moment question or lose his bounce (by, you know, 'request' of a sort). This second part may not be completely as masterful as the first segment, but the two compliment each other and work together as two stories in one whole: what does it mean for other people around Tigger? Or just Rabbit, for that matter? If all you do is bounce around and have fun, is it fun for everyone else around you, or will some people not 'get' it, or completely match up to that fun (ala Roo, if memory serves).

Ultimately, as it's shown, being 'bouncy' is a good thing, certainly if one is a Tigger. But what I've always liked about these stories here is that it's actually not Pooh challenging the springy fella, it's the character who we probably shouldn't stand really, the 'grown up' curmudgeon guy. Maybe some day kids will have to stop bouncing, but for now, it's alright, and certainly for comedy sake, that is.
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5/10
Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too!
jboothmillard23 June 2005
Warning: Spoilers
This was another chapter in the very popular short Walt Disney animation cartoons. Winnie the Pooh, bear with little brain, meets the well loved Tigger again. He keeps bouncing into everyone, he even ruins Rabbits vegetable patch. Rabbit is so sick he proposes to get Tigger lost in the forest to stop his bouncing. Unfortunately, Rabbit, Pooh and Piglet end up getting lost themselves in the mist. Eventually when they get out of the forest they end up in snow. Tigger unfortunately while playing with Roo ends up in a high tree, and he is afraid of the height that he can't find the courage to get down. A good story with a loved character, kids will love it. It was nominated the Oscar for Best Short Film, Animated. Winnie the Pooh was number 55 on The 100 Greatest Cartoons. Worth watching!
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Tigger the Bouncer
Michael_Elliott15 December 2013
Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too (1974)

*** (out of 4)

Charming Disney short has everyone growing tired of Tigger bouncing around and especially annoyed at him bouncing on people. Owl, Pooh and Piglet come up with a plan to finally teach Tigger a lesson. WINNIE THE POOH AND TIGGER TOO certainly has its charming moments and these here are enough to make it worth viewing even to a somewhat non-fan such as myself. There were some very good moments scattered throughout this film but the highlight from me was a very funny sequence where Rabbit is trying to ice skate when Tigger comes along, bouncing, and makes a mess of everything. While all of the supporting players are on hand here, there's no question that the film belongs to Tigger whose bouncing ways make for many great scenes. This includes the ending, which I won't spoil but it's quite funny to see the trouble that Tigger gets himself in.
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