Synopsis
The magic dragon teaches a boy to believe in his own creative abilities.
The magic dragon teaches a boy to believe in his own creative abilities.
My inner completionist is irking me. Fuck it, I guess I'll finish the trilogy.
"Imaginary friends are mirrors of your heart."
Terry is a kid with a wild imagination who is shunned by people his age who perceive his as being weird. In a world where he can't make friends, Mr. Nobody, a duck with a feathered frying pan for a hat became his imaginary companion. When he is confronted with having to grow up, Mr. Nobody leaves and Terry feels lost without him. Thankfully Puff the Magic Dragon is there to catch him and accompany him on his journey.
Puff the Magic Dragon: The Incredible Mr. Nobody continues to drag the groovy kid's music of the 1970s screaming and…
Bordering on demented- an unironic incarnation of the animated drug trip scene from A Very Brady Sequel. It could obviously (it's 1982 after all) be a great deal more outrageous but there's no lack of whiplash-caliber laughs to be had from its otherworldly attempts to plug into the problems facing children of the time. Did you know a genre of mirth entitled "squishy jokes" was once a thing? Naturally, The Adults just don't get it and authority figures are professional creativity killers. Which leads the little boy in the story, Terry, to jump out his bedroom window (fall from a rope made out of poorly knotted bedsheets) and Dorothy Gale his way into a magical world in the sky where…
Not me finding out that this caused me to say spaghetti as psaghetti as a child. Someone take me to the land of Honah Lee
This Puff, the Magic Dragon sequel is better than second one and I love it