
- #Smarty pant dance full#
- #Smarty pant dance series#
Classic locations such as Winnie the Pooh and Piglet's Houses are accessible, as well as the Muddy Path and Spooky Cave, making this world one of very few to show a change of day. When Sora enters the book, he lands on a version of the flat map of the 100 Acre Wood. It is special in both Kingdom Hearts and Kingdom Hearts II as a world within a world. In most games (with the exception of Coded, 358/2 Days, and Dream Drop Distance) it is optional, but beneficial to visit the 100 Acre Wood. It is simply a magic book containing the world that Merlin keeps with him. In the Kingdom Hearts series, the Hundred Acre Wood is called the 100 Acre Wood. Eventually, Pooh and his friends made peace with the Heffalumps (thanks to Lumpy) and the location was no longer forbidden. Originally, the area was forbidden to enter and bordered off from the rest of the woods by a fence. Heffalump Hollow: is the home of the notorious Heffalumps.
In the New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, where they are prominently shown, they are simple mining tunnels supported by wooden beams. In The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, it is shown he is prone to falling into them.
#Smarty pant dance series#
Gopher's Tunnels: a series of tunnels beneath the Hundred Acre Wood. #Smarty pant dance full#
In The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh and the 2011 Winnie the Pooh film, his yard is full of toys. In The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh his house is on a street in America (Judging by his mailbox which has USPS on it) named Hundred Acre Road. Many think it is the portal to the Hundred Acre Wood.
Christopher Robin's house: Described as a "Green Door in a Tree", but in most media it appears in the Hundred Acre Wood. It is shown only in the theme song "Winnie the Pooh" and in The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. When it was the place that Pooh discovers Eeyore's tail is missing, it appears dark with many overgrown plants and trees blocking sunlight. Most characters are seen hurrying past it and knocking it over (even Christopher Robin) it isn't shown explicitly until the 2011 film, Winnie the Pooh. Eeyore's Gloomy Place: where Eeyore's House is made of sticks. It appears less special as other characters treat it like it was a normal tree. In Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin, it is replaced with a tree on a curved hilltop. The Enchanted Place: a very special almost sacred place where Pooh and Christopher Robin go to say goodbye as Christopher Robin must attend school at the end of The Many Adventures of Winnie The Pooh. Pooh Sticks Bridge: a wooden or cobblestone bridge above the river where everyone engages in the game of Pooh Sticks. There's Pooh's house, Piglet's House, Owl's House, Rabbit's House, and Rabbit's garden, Gopher's House with a series of tunnels, Tigger's House, Eeyore's House, and Kanga and Roo's House. Tigger originally lived with Kanga and Roo, but was sometime given his own in The Tigger Movie. There are about eight houses in the Hundred Acre Wood. According to theory, it is actually located within Christopher Robin's imagination like Pooh and his friends, as well as a Winnie the Pooh book in Christopher Robin's family's summer home, in Sussex, England. In The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh and Winnie the Pooh, it seems to have a trail. The Hundred Acre Wood appears as a lush forest with many tall trees and grass.