Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Flower Fashions: Book and Flower Press (Disney Fairies)


Flower Fashions: Book and Flower Press (Disney Fairies)
The Never Fairies love making clothing out of flowers. Now you can learn how, too! Read this beautifully illustrated 24-page guide to Never Fairy fashion, then make your very own fairy outfits! Press petals, leaves, and entire flowers using the flower press included in the kit, and glue them onto blank dress forms to create gorgeous fairy gowns. Then dress the fairy dolls in your own designs! This value-packed kit includes book, flower press, four sturdy cardboard dolls, sixteen blank dress forms, twelve clips, four doll stands, and an instructional poster. Plus, there's a tube of glitter glue to lend a little pixie-dust sparkle to each outfit!

Customer Review: Paper Doll Fairies
I couldn't quite figure out what to get my boyfriend's nieces for Christmas, then I came across this book. I thought it would be perfect for her! It's paper dolls, but with the Disney fairies that all little girls enjoy. You get to pick from a number of dresses to dress them in as well as make your own.
Customer Review: It's too small
Hi well to start I saw this on the disney fairies site and I fell in love with it. But when I got it and opened it I found this: It's really small and boring, there are only four dress designs, the flower press is made of cardboard and hard to work, And most of all IT'S TOO SMALL!!! each doll can't be more then an inch tall and there's not a lot of stuff to do. But the book was entertaining but please do not get this!!! Well gotta go hope this was helpful Brooke.


Disney's Flubber
Disney couldn't resist the temptation to remake 1961's popular comedy The Absent Minded Professor, so they cast Robin Williams as Professor Philip Brainard (a role vaguely related to the character originated by Fred MacMurray), and the result is a comedy that, frankly, doesn't fully deserve its modest success. It's admittedly clever to a point, and certainly the digitally "flubberized" special effects provide the kind of movie magic that's entertaining for kids and parents alike. The professor can't even remember his own wedding day (much to the chagrin of his fiancée, played by Marcia Gay Harden), and now his academic rival (Christopher McDonald) is trying to steal his latest and purely accidental invention--flying rubber, or ... flubber. The green goo magnifies energy and can be used as an amazing source of power, but in the hands of screenwriter John Hughes it becomes just another excuse to recycle a lot of Home Alone-style slapstick humor involving a pair of bumbling would-be flubber thieves. There's also a floating robot named Weebo and some catchy music by Danny Elfman to accompany dancing globs of flubber, but the story's too thin to add up to anything special. Lightweight fun, but, given the title, it lacks a certain bounce. Of course, that didn't stop Disney's marketing wizards from turning it into a home-video hit. --Jeff Shannon
Customer Review: poor remake
Robin Williams is a great comic talent. The Absent Minded ProfessorThe Absent-Minded Professor (Widescreen Edition) was a great movie in its day and still is a good movie today in the year 21st century. Disney studios should not try to remake great old movies with great current talents in order to make more money. This is not something that Walt would have wanted. Instead Disney studios should take the money they use to remake old hits and make great new movies.
Customer Review: Flubber
Fun and excitement throughout the movie. This will be part of a Christmas give along with the original Disney classics starring Fred McMurray.

No comments:

Post a Comment