A deformed bell-ringer must assert his independence from a vicious government minister in order to help his friend, a gypsy dancer.A deformed bell-ringer must assert his independence from a vicious government minister in order to help his friend, a gypsy dancer.A deformed bell-ringer must assert his independence from a vicious government minister in order to help his friend, a gypsy dancer.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 8 wins & 26 nominations total
- Esmeralda
- (voice)
- Hugo
- (voice)
- Brutish Guard
- (voice)
- …
- Guards
- (voice)
- …
- Oafish Guard
- (voice)
- Clopin
- (voice)
- Victor
- (voice)
- Phoebus
- (voice)
- Esmeralda
- (singing voice)
- Guards
- (voice)
- …
- Archdeacon
- (voice)
- Baby Bird
- (voice)
- …
- Laverne
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFor the scene where Judge Frollo sings "Hellfire" and sees Esmeralda dancing in the fire before him, the MPAA insisted that the Disney animators make Esmeralda's clothing more well-defined, as she seemed nude.
- GoofsAfter Quasimodo is crowned the King of Fools, among the food thrown at him are tomatoes. Tomatoes are native to Central America, which the Europeans had yet to discover at the time the film takes place.
- Quotes
Frollo: [opens his dictionary] Shall we review your alphabet today?
Quasimodo: Oh, yes, Master. I would like that very much.
Frollo: Very well.
[pours Quasimodo a wine]
Frollo: A?
Quasimodo: Abomination.
Frollo: [pours himself a wine] B?
Quasimodo: Blasphemy.
Frollo: [puts the cork back on the wine bottle] C?
Quasimodo: C-C-Contrition.
Frollo: [raises his cup] D?
Quasimodo: [smiling enthusiastically] Damnation!
Frollo: E?
Quasimodo: [points and winks] *Eternal* damnation!
Frollo: Good. F?
[sips his wine]
Quasimodo: [shrugs his shoulders] Festival.
Frollo: [spits out his wine, coughs, then wipes his lips] Excuse me?
Quasimodo: [realising his mistake] F-F-Forgiveness.
Frollo: You said...
[shuts the dictionary]
Frollo: "Festival."
Quasimodo: *No*!
Frollo: You're thinking about going to the Festival.
Quasimodo: I-It's just that, *you* go every year.
Frollo: *I* am a public official! I *must* go, but I don't enjoy a *moment*!
- Crazy creditsAt the end of the closing credits, the gargoyle Hugo says, "Good night, everybody!"
- Alternate versionsOn British VHS versions of The Hunchback of Notre Dame, it played Eternal's "Someday" over the closing credits.
- ConnectionsEdited into The Frollo Show: Frollo Faps to a Firefighters calendar (2011)
- SoundtracksThe Bells of Notre Dame
Music by Alan Menken
Lyrics by Stephen Schwartz
Performed by Paul Kandel, David Ogden Stiers, Tony Jay, and Chorus
The animation here is first rate and the entire thing is shot like a live-action film with some incredible long shots, great theatrical panning and even at one point, during Quasimodo's song "Out There" a realistic camera flare (I did a double take the first time I saw it!) Hunchback is filled with all sorts of great "tricks" like this. Lighting effects here are nothing short of magnificent often subtle they sometimes change in an instant dramatically altering the mood of the piece. Frodo's demonic song "Hellfire" is perhaps one the most sinister and frightening moments to emerge from Disney and the animators let loose.
The prologue to the movie alone is a minor masterpiece and, like Beauty and the Beast, marvelously prepares us for the whirlwind of a story to take place.
The complaints about the singing and dancing gargoyles Victor, Hugo and Laverne, are simply wrongheaded. I read the Hugo classic too, and know they're not in there. What the complainants fail to realize is these gargoyles live only in Quasimodo's imagination. He invented these companions to ease an otherwise tortured, lonely, friendless life. The culmination of all of this becomes obvious in the spectacular song "A guy like you" which finishes with pigeons flying and hearts and banners and ribbons and Quasimodo being celebrated and then BAM immediately upon the conclusion of the final notes, the room becomes the same dark, dank, splintering tower filled with relics, junk and heartbreak. It's one of the movie's most shattering effects.
While deserved praise goes to the animators and crew, the voice talent here is, in my opinion, Disney's very best. Tom Hulce goes to the very soul of Quasimodo and gives a performance that is as poignant and shattering as anything he has done (Hulce also happened to be the best Hamlet I've ever seen.) Certain lines ("I am a monster, you know") will ring in my ear forever. Hulce has a beautiful voice and renders "Out there" with such abandon and vigor it makes my hair stand on end. In the quiet "Heaven's light" (which sequences into a stunning shot of the bells frantically ringing the opening theme), Hulce brings a fragility to such lines as "no face as hideous as my face, was ever meant for Heaven's light" that only a heart of stone would not be moved. Switching from pathos to rage, Hulce lets us feel the hidden rage and danger that this character also possesses. It is a truly remarkable performance.
Demi Moore, Kevin Kline, Tony Jay, Paul Kandel and the rest of the cast all sound at the top of their game creating wonderful and vivid characters.
Alan Menkin and Stephen Schwartz get to the heart of the matter with score and songs a sound that are as integral a part of the telling of this story as the animation and voices.
Hunchback is a miracle of a movie!
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- El jorobado de Notre Dame
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $100,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $100,138,851
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $21,037,414
- Jun 23, 1996
- Gross worldwide
- $325,338,851
- Runtime1 hour 31 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1