
When we attended WAKING SLEEPING BEAUTY (2009) last spring, the screening was held in the small theater in the Frank Wells building where the Disney Archives are housed.
Tonight's packed event was in the much larger, full-sized Studio Theater, a beautiful venue which even has its own overture and light show preceding the start of the movie. (No photos were possible due to ultra high security...they were even wanding looking for cameras as guests entered the theater.) The movie was screened in 3D. It was a treat to see the film in such a wonderful setting, surrounded by fellow Disney fans.

Mandy Moore (A WALK TO REMEMBER) voices Rapunzel, a princess who was kidnapped as a baby and raised by an old crone (Donna Murphy) who remains young and beautiful thanks to Rapunzel's magical hair. Rapunzel lives in a high tower, ostensibly because her "mother" wants to protect her from the outside world, but in reality, of course, the old woman is selfishly saving Rapunzel's magic for herself.
One day Flynn Ryder (Zachary Levi of CHUCK) sails in through the window and changes Rapunzel's life forever. With her mother away, Rapunzel induces Flynn to take her on a "forbidden road trip" (one of my favorite lines) to see some magical lights which appear in the sky every year on her birthday...
The characters are all very well done; for instance, I loved the depiction of Rapunzel's conflicting joy and guilt when she sneaks out of her castle tower for the first time. The scene where she starts an impromptu dance when she reaches the village is lovely. I liked that although Rapunzel starts out as a very sheltered girl -- her perplexed reaction to a tiara will call to mind Ariel and the "dinglehopper" -- she's no milquetoast, not by a long shot. She expertly wields her hair to deal with problem situations and is quite daring. There's also a great running gag about her ability to use a frying pan as a weapon which carries on until the last sequence in the movie.
Flynn's name surely must have been inspired by Errol Flynn, and he shares some of the same rascally characteristics as Flynn's movie characters. He's not a perfect hero like Prince Charming or Prince Phillip, but he's perhaps more interesting because of it. He's also quite funny.

The movie has sequences of true beauty, including the aforementioned dance and the lanterns in the sky. It's a film with great visual appeal to go along with its heart and its humor. The final sequence is enough to make any Disney fan tear up happily.
The one drawback to the movie which keeps it from being quite on the level of films like THE LITTLE MERMAID or BEAUTY AND THE BEAST is the lack of a memorable musical score. (2009's THE PRINCESS AND THE FROG, on the other hand, had a fairly strong score but a weaker, more forgettable storyline.) The Alan Menken music is pleasant but there aren't any particular tunes that one hums leaving the theater.
TANGLED was directed by Nathan Greno and Byron Howard.

Disney expert Leonard Maltin loved it too.
I highly recommend this film, a delightfully funny, feel-good movie in the finest Disney tradition.
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