The Ballad of Nessie (2011) Poster

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8/10
A must-see for Scots
Horst_In_Translation25 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
"The Ballad of Nessie" is a 5-minute cartoon from 4 years ago written and directed by Emmy winner Stevie Wermers. It tells us the story of Nessie and how her tears created Loch Ness. I think this was a pretty good watch. There is decent drama in here, nice heart and emotion and also some funny moments, everything an animated film needs and it's usually not so easy to include it all in such a short piece. The narrator is Billi Connolly, fittingly one Scotland's most famous. I believe that this is a must-see if you are from Scotland, almost a national treasure, but it also makes a good watch for everybody else, especially if you love animation. Walt Disney Animation Studios sure showed us they still got it with this one. Highly recommended and if they ever decide to make a full feature based on this very short movie, I'd watch it in a heartbeat. thumbs up.
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6/10
Okay....
planktonrules19 December 2015
This is a slight little film starring a cute cartoon Nessie and, naturally, it's set in Scotland...and an odd Scotland it is, with plaid-colored mountains and scenery. The cute little Nessie is enjoying its lake when along comes some jerk who takes it away and builds a golf course there instead. Brokenhearted, Nessie then goes in search of a new lake. And, in the end, it has a very schmaltzy solution to its problem.

The animation is nice enough but overall it's not exactly a memorable film. You may like the story as narrated by Billy Connelly but I wasn't captivated. Decent and mildly interesting and nothing more.
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7/10
This film helps explain the great mystery behind . . .
pixrox15 July 2022
Warning: Spoilers
. . . Lake Superior. During THE BALLAD OF NELLIE, some rich duffer makes the title character cry so much that she creates her namesake lock. Similarly, the giant lamprey blamed by most nautical experts for sinking the Edmund Fitzgerald off Lake Superior's Whitefish Point had to cry its home body of water into existence first. Some ill-informed viewers may ask what Superior's monster had to cry about. After all, there are few if any golf courses along that frigid lake's icy shores. But ask any local, and they'll be quick to tell you that before any military-style assault rifle rolls off the assembly line, it begins its life as a bunch iron ore pellets shipped across Superior down south to the steel mills and gun factories. Being a seer as well as a ship-sinking monster, Bambi--as it's known up North--cried one tear drop for each victim of gun violence in American history, start to finish. All of this firearm havoc created the biggest lake on the planet Today.
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7/10
A small piece of lovely-ness.
southdavid12 August 2022
Another few minutes to myself on Disney Plus, so I decided to continue running through the short films on there and watched "The Ballad of Nessie" a short that originally aired before the 2011 "Winnie The Pooh" feature.

Happy and playful, Nessie is enjoying her life in pond in the Scottish Highlands. Her life is upset though by a developer who destroys the pond and levels the surrounding land for a golf course. Having searched for weeks for a replacement waterway, Nessie becomes despondent and starts to cry. She cries nonstop for weeks on end, until she can't cry anymore, at which point she discovers that she has flooded the area with her tears and created Loch Ness.

There's a nice little lesson at the heart of "The Ballad of Nessie", one which you might argue wasn't really needed given the strength of the animation and the quality of Billy Connolly's narration. The idea that keeping a stiff upper lip and bottling up your emotions aren't a good thing is the message and it's a noble one.

The animation style is good, a soft edged pencil style with calls back to Disney's 70's style. The whole piece is written like a poem and performed as such by Billy Connolly in the way only he can.

It's charming and pleasant rather than life alteringly brilliant, but that's all you really need.
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9/10
Absolutely charming
TheLittleSongbird17 July 2011
I saw this short before seeing the wonderful new Winnie the Pooh movie. And I for one found it absolutely charming. The animation is beautiful with a real charm to it, whether it was in the character designs, the background art or the colouring. Michael Giacchino's music is stunning as well with a warm, heartfelt and nostalgic feel to it, plus it was careful not to overshadow the narration or the storytelling. The story is swiftly told, is very heart-warming, full of pathos and emotion and I think it would appeal to children and adults, the writing is amusing and poignant and Billy Conolly's narration is note-perfect.

Overall, I recommend this short for all, it is absolutely charming. 9/10 Bethany Cox
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9/10
Boundin' 2D
J-Hunt2130 September 2011
Perhaps drawing a great deal of inspiration from Pixar's 'Boundin'' in its structure and emotion, 'The Ballad of Nessie' follows suit with a traditionally animated short, narrated (affectionately by Billy Connoly) with the same comic poetry that made the former effort so endearing. Coincidentally, the Scottish setting is shared with the upcoming Pixar feature 'Brave', presenting 'Ballad' as a worthy warm-up act for that release and suppressing any disbelief of mine that the location could prove to be hit or miss.

Following Nessie's search for a home after her idyllic residence is destroyed, the short is funny, heartwarming and unique in style, unfolding in a manner very much like a pop-up storybook; this makes for beautiful transitions between shots, creating a fluid pace to accompany the quirky visuals, tuned to Michael Giacchino's gentle scoring.

'The Ballad of Nessie' is a clear indication that Disney are capable of still being innovative not only with traditional animation, but with the short film format also.

9/10
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10/10
It is an awesome and fantastic short from Disney
arielsiere29 October 2022
The plot was about Nessie playing his rubber duck until all of a sudden a lot of people arrive at her lake and they turn it into a golf camp with a very weak villain named Tycoon Mcfroogle despite having the same voice actor Billy Conolly who voiced Fergus (Brave) and he also did the movie The Muppets Treasure Island, now Nessie needs to find a new home without crying like baby does even though we sometimes cry whenever something bad happens to all of us, she tried to find the perfect lake but she failed so she started to cry using her tears and turning everything into a big lake and the ending was alright, when the credits start to roll we see that Tycoon Mcfroogle is crying like a spoiled brat just like Prince John (Robin Hood) and this is the end. Also this short was released when Winnie The Pooh was about to release in theatres back in 2011, but on the dvd opening after Lady And The Tramp, The Muppets and Cars 2 i saw that a short named Tinkerbell And The Pixie Hollow Games premeired on Disney Channel.
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