The Three Caballeros
While traveling around South America, Donald meets a flying donkey and Pablo the Penguin, who hates the cold. The three take the name 'The Three Caballeros' and together they head down to Rio.
11 February 1904, Jundiaí, São Paulo, Brazil
July 4, 1912 in Fort Worth, Texas, USA
18 May 1904, Kansas City, Missouri, USA
January 5, 1900 in Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
19 February 1908, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
7 December 1904, Watonga, Oklahoma, USA
18 February 1926, Frederick, Colorado, USA
1920
15 November 1911, El Mineral Del Oro, Estado de Mexico, Mexico
August 20, 1913 in San Antonio, Texas, USA
September 07, 2008
This is one of the most dazzling achievements of the cartoon genre.
April 30, 2008
The menu buttons are shaped like sombreros. I trust I needn't say more.
March 25, 2006
A brilliant hodgepodge of Mr. Disney's illustrative art-a literal spinwheel of image, color and music which tumbles at you with explosive surprise.
May 24, 2003
Particularly notable is the animated train travelling through a garden of real flowers.
September 20, 2014
less of a propaganda piece and more of a narrative story
September 07, 2008
It's a gay, colorful, resplendent conceit.
November 03, 2009
By far the strangest feature-length movie in the history of the Walt Disney Company, with virtually every new minute bringing something more insanely creative than the last.
January 01, 2000
No other Disney feature achieved this level of exuberant abstraction, or displayed the same sheer pleasure in the magic of the animator's art.
May 01, 2008
The two films are as artistically astonishing as they are culturally clueless.
February 12, 2003
[After the] headlong launch into that abstract fantasia of color and sound, it's difficult to deny the sexual nature of its characters' pelvic thrusts and rampant phallic imagery. Clearly, this is Disney's horniest animated feature.
November 16, 2009
That rare event, a Disney failure.
October 17, 2003
A wonderful blending of live action, animation and good South American music.

