On This Day: July 2, 1982 – The Secret of NIMH Premiered in Theaters

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On This Day: July 2, 1982 – The Secret of NIMH Premiered in Theaters
On this day July 2, 1982, The Secret of NIMH premiered in theaters and marked the directorial debut of Don Bluth, a former Disney animator who set out to revive the art of traditional animation. With a budget of 7 million dollars and a cast that included Elizabeth Hartman, Hermione Baddeley, John Carradine, and Dom DeLuise, the film told a haunting and beautifully animated story that stood apart from typical children's fare of the time.

Based on the novel Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH, the story follows a widowed field mouse named Mrs. Brisby who seeks the help of genetically enhanced rats to save her ill son from the dangers of a farmer’s plow. The film blended dark themes, glowing hand drawn visuals, and mature storytelling in a way that pushed the limits of animated film in the early 80s.

Though it earned 14.7 million dollars at the box office, its real success came in later years through home video, where it gained recognition as a cult classic and a milestone in 80s animation.

80s insight: The Secret of NIMH showed that animated films didn’t need to rely on comedy or musicals to be powerful. It helped open the door for more emotionally driven and visually ambitious storytelling in animation during the 1980s.

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