Jump to content

The Land Before Time III: The Time of the Great Giving

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Land Before Time III:
The Time of the Great Giving
Original VHS cover
Directed byRoy Allen Smith
Written byDev Ross
Based onCharacters by
Judy Freudberg
Tony Geiss
Produced byRoy Allen Smith
Zahra Dowlatabadi
Starring
Edited byJay Bixsen
Music byMichael Tavera
James Horner (themes)
Production
company
Distributed byMCA/Universal Home Video
Release date
  • December 12, 1995 (1995-12-12)
Running time
70 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Land Before Time III: The Time of the Great Giving is a 1995 direct-to-video animated adventure musical film directed by Roy Allen Smith. It is the second sequel to The Land Before Time and the third film in the film franchise.

Plot

[edit]

Meteorites near the Great Valley cause a drought that threatens the inhabitants' lives. Mr. Threehorn becomes incredibly protective of the remaining water and mean to the inhabitants, forcing Littlefoot and the others to set out to find more water. The group is pursued by a trio of teenage dinosaurs consisting of a Hypsilophodon named Hyp, a Muttaburrasaurus named Mutt, and a Nodosaurus named Nod, who inadvertently cause Mr. Threehorn to think that Littlefoot is a bad influence. When Littlefoot and the others find a small lake, the bullies emerge and claim the waterhole for themselves, demanding Littlefoot and the others to keep silent about their discovery. Littlefoot and the others flee from the bullies but during the pursuit, the Hyp, Mutt and Nod are chased away by a wasp, and the children discover the reason behind the blockage of the water source.

Before they can return and tell the other inhabitants the truth, lightning strikes a tree, igniting a wildfire that spreads throughout the Great Valley. The dinosaurs barely make it to safety at the edge of the Mysterious Beyond. When the children tell the adults of their discovery, disagreements about what to do erupts among the adults. Hyp, Nod, and Mutt set out into the Mysterious Beyond on their own to get to the water first. Anticipating danger that Hyp and his cohorts have gotten into and recognizing commonality with them, Littlefoot and the others follow to help if necessary. It becomes so when Hyp mistakes a tar pit for water and gets stuck in it. After Littlefoot and his friends haul Hyp out, the adults arrive and Hyp is harshly scolded by his father. Realizing that he has been acting no different than Hyp’s father and feeling sorry for Hyp, Mr. Threehorn kindly lectures Hyp's father on how Hyp is a bully from being mistreated. Afterwards, they all decide to work together to find the water.

Before they can take further steps, the herd is attacked by a pack of Velociraptors. The pursuit leads to a dam of boulders created by the meteorites that caused the drought. As the raptors and the adults battle, the children, including Hyp and his cronies, work together to break the dam. They all watch as the freed water washes away the raptors. The water also puts out the fires which are still burning in the valley. Finally, they manage to survive and land on the opposite bank. The herd returns to the Great Valley, but they discover that the fire has destroyed most of their green food. Luckily, the dinosaurs find the spots in the Great Valley where green food still grows. They proportionately move from one verdant area to another and share everything they find. This pattern results in the event being called the Time of the Great Giving.

Voice cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

Songs

[edit]

All tracks are written by Michele Brourman and Amanda McBroom.

No.TitlePerformer(s)Length
1."When You're Big"Whit Hertford, Jeff Bennett & Scott Menville 
2."Standing Tough"John Ingle 
3."Kids Like Us"Scott McAfee, Candace Hutson, Heather Hogan & Jeff Bennett 
4."If We Hold on Together"  

Reception

[edit]

In a brief Entertainment Weekly review, Michael Sauter criticized some modernisms in the dialogue but said that "Littlefoot and his friends still retain their youthful charm".[1] In August 2014, the New York Post ranked each of the 13 Land Before Time films released up to that point and placed The Time of the Great Giving at number 2, noting the "genuinely terrifying" velociraptors.[2] The film holds a 60% "Fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with an average critic score of 5.4 out of 10.[3]

In his 2002 book Welcome to the Desert of the Real, Slovenian Marxist philosopher Slavoj Žižek cited a song from this movie, "When You're Big", as an example of "hegemonic liberal multiculturalist ideology". Quoting the song's lyrics, Žižek wrote: "The same message is repeated again and again: we are all different — some of us are big, some are small; some know how to fight, others know how to flee — but we should learn to live with these differences, to perceive them as something which makes our lives richer". Žižek notes the inconsistency of this vision in the fact that the dinosaurs prey on each other, and have other irreconcilable differences: "The problem, of course, is: how far do we go? It takes all sorts - does that mean nice and brutal, poor and rich, victims and torturers? The reference to the dinosaur kingdom is especially ambiguous here, with its brutal character of animal species devouring each other - is this also one of the things that 'need to be done to make our life fun'? The very inner inconsistency of this vision of the prelapsarian 'land before time' thus bears witness to how the message of collaboration-in-differences is ideology at its purest".[4]

The film won "Best Animated Video Production" at the 24th Annie Awards in 1996,[5] and was nominated for "Best Genre Video Release" at the 22nd Saturn Awards that same year, losing to V: The Final Battle.[6]

Award Date Nomination Nominee Result
Annie Award November 10, 1996 Best Animated Video Production The Land Before Time III Won
Saturn Award June 25, 1996 Best Genre Video Release The Land Before Time III Nominated

Home media

[edit]

The original VHS release contained a sneak preview of The Land Before Time IV: Journey Through the Mists (1996) prior to the film, which is a music video for the song "It Takes All Sorts".

  • December 12, 1995 (VHS and laserdisc)[7]
  • May 13, 1997 (VHS and laserdisc - The Land Before Time Collection)
  • December 1, 1998 (VHS and laserdisc, the last laserdisc release - Universal Family Feature)
  • December 4, 2001 (VHS)
  • December 10, 2002 (DVD)
  • December 2, 2003 (VHS and DVD - 4 Movie Dino Pack (Volume 1) and 9 Movie Dino Pack)
  • September 27, 2005 (DVD - 2 Dino-Mite Movies)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Sauter, Michael (1995-12-08). "Video Review: THE LAND BEFORE TIME III: The Time of the Great Giving". EW.com. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2009-12-29.
  2. ^ Miller, Gregory E. (2014-08-13). "A rundown of the best and worst 'The Land Before Time' movies". New York Post. Retrieved 2016-12-30.
  3. ^ "The Land Before Time III: The Time of the Great Giving (1995)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved February 20, 2019.
  4. ^ Žižek, Slavoj (2002). Welcome to the Desert of the Real. Verso Books. pp. 68–70. ISBN 1781680310.
  5. ^ "Annie Awards - 24th Annie Awards". Annie Awards. Retrieved February 15, 2019.
  6. ^ "22nd Saturn Awards". IMDb. Retrieved February 15, 2019.
  7. ^ Liebenson, Donald (October 22, 1995). "Warm Up That VCR for Winter Releases: 'Batman', 'Apollo 13' and family favorites like 'The Santa Clause' top the list of big films coming to video-- just in time for the holidays". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved November 19, 2019.
[edit]