This is a true classic. This may have been written 25 to 30 years ago, and that movie was made a few years after I believed. This is a family oriented video, a great book. It stimulates imagination and teaches several wonderful courses
In this story, a small boy named Omri was given a cupboard and when he inserted a small plastic stuff it turned out they lived. The first person is a small Indian called the Iroquo tribe Little Bear. Later Omri 's best friend, Patrick, put the cowboy (Boone) in a magical cupboard, and he lived. Omri learned that he can not only use creatures as toys. He also learned that he had certain responsibilities for himself and his new friends in Boone.
The movie is very moving, making this movie (and the book) very meaningful. Little Bear is happy to teach Omri. He is angry and frustrated (he is different in a big world, when it is small). He is not only angry, he is angry. He used this as a teaching moment and began teaching Omri about man and responsibility. Omri must help Little Bear handle foods, dwellings and other substances, but Bear has to teach Omri about growth.
Boon and Patrick are part of this story, but they are truly part of the story and the main part of the story evolves around Omri and Little Bear. In fact, in a sense they are the opposite of Little Bear and Omri. Boone does not have the ability (or motivation?) To tell Patrick about his situation. Instead of teaching with that moment he is also very angry and angry. In addition, Omri takes care of Boone, sending Little Bear and Boone to the house, he must make strict decisions.
Today's standard is to anger everyone and worry about avoiding any stereotypes. That's too bad
One of the reasons is that people who have read this book or those who have read this book since childhood will regain it in our children's lives. One of the reasons to make a book classic or video classic is that it has a life course. In this case, responsibility, about the power of personality, grow into adulthood, respect and more courses. It's not just an imaginary story about the big people who are taking care of small people and small people - there are many similar books there. This book stimulates the imagination, teaches the lessons of life, and that is why people return to this story.
"Indian of the Cabinet" is a 1995 American family fantasy instructed by Frank Oz, written by Melissa Matheson, based on the book of Rin Ridderbanks of the same name. The story relates to the boy who received the cupboard as a gift on the 9th birthday. He later discovered that after locking and unlocking, he was put in a cabinet to brighten the toy character. The movie consists of Hull Scaldino as Omri, Lightfoot as Little Bear, Lindsay Cruise, Richard Jenkins, Richibat as a friend of Omri's Patrick, Steve Coogan as Tommy Atkins, and David Keith as Booing the Cowboy. It was issued by Columbia Pictures (non-US theaters, TV rights and US video distribution) and Paramount Pictures (American Theater and non-US video distribution).
I like the Indian In the Cupboard series of Lynne Reid Banks as I think that it is a way to analyze magic when I grow up. When a small boy in the center of the story, Omri, realizes that he can revive his toys with magic keys, he will respond like any other child. He experimented. Or remember. Indeed, Omri soon learned these rules (it locks the toy to the container to make it work, locks it to send it back, only the plastic items will be genuine). He will be satisfied to claim his first discovery, a 2-inch-high Iroquois named Little Bear. He gave his friend Patrick a toy of his own life - a drunken, cowardly cowboy named Boone, but he insisted that they do not abuse their power or not to hurt Did. Do not make a small adventure, dear, I narrow the children, or somehow let Omri save his new friend, ETT (Frank Oz's 1995 Adapter was written by ET) .