The Willows in Winter (TV Movie 1996) Poster

(1996 TV Movie)

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7/10
A beautifully animated cartoon.
jack-smales16 October 2003
The Willows in Winter continues the story of Ratty,Mole,Toad and Badger and the other animals.We are also joined by moles nephew.Mole goes missing and the animals look for him.Toad also gets an airplane but crashes it on to someones conservatory.It turns out the persons conservatory is the judge who put him in prison in the last story.I will not give away too much of the plot and leave that for you to see what happens.

The animation in this is beautiful.It is very charming,enjoyable and funny.The character voices are well chosen,especially Rik Mayal as Toad,he is a winner.
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6/10
The Willows in Winter
jboothmillard23 June 2005
Warning: Spoilers
The first cartoon of Kenneth Grahame's book was pretty good, I didn't actually know he did a second book based in Winter. Basically Toad has completely given up motor cars and now has a very high interest in flying planes. Mole meanwhile goes missing after walking across the frozen river and it cracking. Rat, nephew Mole and Badger are now on the lookout to find their friend. When they believe he is dead he finally turns up at his funeral. Toad unfortunately goes to court for suspected murder, a lot of other bad stuff happens to him when he gets back as well. Again, the voice artists are just perfect. The British actors are still Alan Bennett as Mole, Michael Palin as Rat, Sir Michael Gambon as Badger, and my favourite actor and character of the cartoon, Emmy winning Rik Mayall as Toad. Also starring Vanessa Redgrave as Grandmother. It won the Emmy for Outstanding Achievement in Animation, and it was nominated for Outstanding Animated Program (For Programming More Than One Hour). Good!
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7/10
An Okay Sequel
Hollywood_Yoda15 September 2023
Sequels are rarely ever as good, or even rarer, are they better than the original film. This sequel is nothing fancy, and definitely cannot hold a torch to the 1995 Wind in the Willows. The animation in this sequel is nowhere near as beautiful as the original, and that's telling when they were only made a year apart. Its evident that Willows in Winter was made to be on television.

I believe if they would have taken the same time and care for this film as they had the first, it would have been better. The story is still fun, and kids will most likely enjoy the film, especially if watched back to back with the first, which is how it should be!
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10/10
I worked on this..
yatz58451 July 2017
It was a pleasure working on The Willows in Winter, as a cell painter. I have some very fond memories and a few copied cells on my walls. I think this was a lovely piece of work, I like to watch it at Christmas. Excellent example of great British hand made animation at its best. The Wind in the Willows was just as good.
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10/10
A continuation of Wind in the Willows that is perfect in every way
TheLittleSongbird10 August 2009
After the fantastic Wind in the Willows, The Willows in Winter was a wonderful continuation, with all the charm and likability of its predecessor. The animation was just stunning, and so was the music. The story(which was a great idea) and script were engaging, and the film is made memorable chiefly by its characters. The voice cast was perfectly refreshing, Rik Mayall reprising his role as Toad, and he was hilarious, but Alan Bennett, Michael Gambon and Michael Palin were also brilliant. And lovely narration from Vanessa Redgrave. On the whole, not quite as good as its predecessor, but beautiful and engaging nonetheless. 10/10 Bethany Cox.
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5/10
Good animation but not a patch on 'The Wind in the Willows'
adamlucien15 May 2021
I saw both 'The Wind in the Willows' and this growing up, and have vivid memories of most of the first one. This...well, I remember the tarantula in the greenhouse, and that's about it. I mean it's still OK, but boy does it become The Rik Mayall Show compared to the first one.

That must be a real treat if you love Rik Mayall - personally I think he was always best in small doses, like his occasional 'Blackadder' appearances. He was pretty exhausting in anything where he had a lead role, and the 1995 'Wind in the Willows' at least reined it in just enough. Plot seems a bit weakly clichéd, manic, and thrown together too, and the 'no-one knows it's Toad if he has the tiniest disguise' is stretched to breaking point, after just about working in the first film.

It speaks volumes (pun intended) that this was based on a sequel NOT by Kenneth Grahame, but someone else entirely. Dare I say it, neither book nor adaptation was necessary. The originals were understatedly beautiful. This has the same great animation...but it's a very poor cousin to the original in terms of story.
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