Disney at its best does something almost unfair. It gets into people early, when feelings are huge and language is still catching up, then somehow stays just as powerful decades later when the viewer has grown up enough to understand the sadness, fear, loneliness, and longing hiding under all that color and music. That is why the truly loved ones never feel like just kids’ movies and feel like emotional landmarks.
And the lovely thing is that they are lovely in completely different ways. So this ranking is not just about importance. It is about that deep, lived-in affection, the kind that makes someone’s face light up the instant a song starts. That is what these 10 movies below have carried over decades.
10
‘Moana’ (2016)
Moana has such a bright, living heartbeat. It feels windblown and sunlit and restless in the best way, like the ocean itself is nudging the whole movie forward. Moana (Auliʻi Cravalho) is not chasing romance, she is not trying to impress anybody, she is not waiting around for permission to become interesting. She already has that pull inside her from the first minutes, that feeling of standing at the edge of something huge and knowing the safe life in front of you is not the life meant for you. That feeling is so simple and so enormous at the same time.
Then the movie keeps paying it off scene by scene. Her conflict with Chief Tui (Temuera Morrison) hurts since he is not cruel. He is scared. Maui (Dwayne Johnson) is funny and vain and grand, though the film gets even better once his swagger starts cracking and you can feel the old shame inside him. Te Fiti and Te Kā turn the whole journey into something more tender than it first appears. By the end, when Moana walks toward the raging figure and sees the lost self inside the monster, the movie becomes something quietly beautiful about identity, damage, and remembering what was taken from you.
9
‘Mulan’ (1998)
Mulan is so loved and even as a kid, you can feel that this one is carrying more weight than a lot of animated adventures. The film follows Mulan (Ming-Na Wen) in a world already pressing down on her from every direction. The matchmaker sequence is funny and chaotic, yes, but the pressure underneath it is painful. She is trying to perform the version of womanhood her society wants from her and failing in front of everyone, including herself. Then her father Fa Zhou (Soon-Tek Oh) is called to war, and the whole movie snaps into focus. She goes in, and goes since the alternative is watching her old, injured father march toward death.
That choice gives every later scene more force. Training is not a cute montage detached from the stakes. It is survival. Her friendships in the army work because they are built under actual danger. Then the avalanche scene arrives and suddenly the movie feels huge. From there on, Mulan is fighting enemies, expectations, humiliation, and the constant risk of being exposed all at once. The lovely thing is how the film lets her win through intelligence, nerve, and adaptability rather than brute strength. It makes courage feel active, inventive, and deeply personal.
8
‘Tangled’ (2010)
Tangled is warm, funny, fizzy, romantic, and yet it has that strange little ache running underneath it the whole time. Rapunzel (Mandy Moore) is introduced with all this bubbling curiosity and creative energy, and it is adorable, though the movie is smart enough to show how sad that energy becomes when it has nowhere to go. She has been raised in a tower by Mother Gothel (Donna Murphy), someone who praises her while quietly shrinking her world down to nothing. That is why the first few minutes after she leaves the tower are so wonderful. She is thrilled, terrified, guilty, ecstatic, all within seconds, and it feels exactly right.
That wild swing between “I am free” and “I am the worst person alive” is one of the most emotionally accurate things Disney has ever animated. Flynn Rider (Zachary Levi) helps the movie bounce, though Rapunzel is the soul of it. The lantern scene gets all the love, deservedly, but the story has already earned it by then. Gothel is such a good villain. Her manipulation is recognizably emotional rather than purely theatrical. She keeps Rapunzel dependent by making love feel conditional and fear feel responsible. So when Rapunzel finally understands who she is and what has been done to her, the release feels massive. It is romantic, yes, though it is also about reclaiming a stolen self.
7
‘Beauty and the Beast’ (1991)
Beauty and the Beast has that rare storybook glow where everything feels enchanted and bruised at the same time. Belle (Paige O’Hara)’s longing arrives right away. She is bored by the little life the village wants her to settle for, and the film never mocks that longing or treats it like arrogance. She wants a bigger inner life, more beauty, more thought, more possibility. Then she walks into the Beast’s castle and the movie turns that yearning into an actual emotional test. The first stretch in the castle matters so much. The Beast (Robby Benson) is frightening, rude, wounded, explosive. Belle is trapped, angry, observant, and not remotely charmed by him at first.
That gradual thaw is where the movie earns its place in people’s hearts. Tiny shifts matter here. Him giving her the library. Their awkward dinner. The snow scene. Her beginning to see pain where she first saw menace. And him learning that love cannot be demanded like obedience. The enchanted objects make the whole thing sparkle, but the reason the movie stays beloved is simpler. It understands how lonely it is to be misread, and how frightening it is to be truly seen. The whole film, by that beautiful end, just feels so complete.
6
‘Aladdin’ (1992)
Aladdin is just so ridiculously watchable. It has speed, charm, color, danger, romance, and one of the all-time great comic performances with the Genie. But underneath all that fun, it is really about shame. That is the thing people sometimes glide past. Aladdin (Scott Weinger) is not only poor. He feels lesser. He has already absorbed the idea that someone like him cannot be enough as he is. So when he gets the lamp, the wish that matters most is not wealth in itself. It is transformation. He wants to become the version of himself the world would stop dismissing.
That is why the Prince Ali stuff is so fun and so sad at once. It is dazzling, and it is a lie. Jasmine (Linda Larkin) is trapped in her own way too, boxed in by royal expectations and men trying to decide her future like she is furniture in a palace. Their chemistry works because both of them are suffocating under identities other people have assigned them. Then Genie (Robin Williams) brings in this huge burst of heart. He is hilarious, obviously, but he is also the film’s purest expression of longing. He wants freedom more than anything. So when Aladdin finally uses his last wish on Genie instead of himself, the movie clicks into something deeper. It becomes about dropping the costume and choosing honesty.
5
‘Cinderella’ (1950)
Cinderella has a softness people mistake for weakness, and that is why it keeps surprising them when they revisit it. This movie knows exactly how cruel a household can become when one person is made to carry all the contempt, all the labor, all the blame, and still expected to remain graceful under it. Cinderella (Ilene Woods) is not passive in some empty way. She is enduring. She keeps her interior life alive in a place designed to flatten it.
That is what makes all the lovely parts feel so lovely. The mice sewing the dress, the little bits of companionship in the house, the way she protects her own gentleness like a tiny flame. Then the stepfamily destroys the dress, and it is honestly brutal. It is not just fabric being ruined. It is hope being publicly clawed apart by people who cannot bear the thought of her touching beauty. So when the Fairy Godmother (Verna Felton) arrives, the whole transformation lands like relief after pressure. The gown, the carriage, the horses, the night itself suddenly opening, all of it works because the film has made you feel what deprivation looks like first. And the slipper is such a perfect little object in the end. Fragile, shining, undeniable. Proof that the dream really happened.
4
‘The Little Mermaid’ (1989)
The Little Mermaid feels like youth. That is its superpower. Not youth in some vague decorative way, but the specific emotional madness of being young and wanting something so badly you would wreck your whole life just to touch it. Ariel (Jodi Benson) is not curious in a small, tidy way. She is consumed. The human world has gotten under her skin before she even sees Eric properly, and once she does, that longing becomes reckless. That is why the movie still feels electric. It understands desire before wisdom arrives to manage it.
And King Triton (Kenneth Mars) is such an important part of why the story works. He loves her, but his love becomes control. He does not know how to respond to her hunger except by smashing it. That scene where he destroys her grotto is devastating since it is one of those awful parent-child breaks where protection turns into violation. Then Ursula (Pat Carroll) enters and gives Ariel the exact kind of deal desperate hearts always fall for, immediate change at terrible cost. Losing her voice is such a smart wound for the movie to choose. She gets the legs, she gets the chance, but the one thing she most needs to explain herself is gone. The Little Mermaid is romantic and heartbreaking and impulsive and lovely all at once.
3
‘Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs’ (1937)
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs is a classic. It has an innocence that still feels almost unreal now, and I mean that in the best way. It has this clear fairytale simplicity that makes the emotions hit in pure forms. Jealousy looks absolute. Fear looks immediate. Kindness looks radiant. Snow White (Adriana Caselotti) is wanted dead by the Queen (Lucille La Verne) out of vanity so cold it turns murderous, and the film never softens that. It sends this sweet, openhearted girl running into a forest that suddenly becomes one of the scariest spaces in old Disney. The branches claw, the shadows stare, the whole world looks like it wants to swallow her.
And then the cottage shifts everything. The dwarfs are not just comic relief. They create shelter. They turn the middle of the movie into this charming little found-family haven where work, music, chaos, and affection all pile together. That warmth is why the poisoned apple lands with such force later. Evil does not simply arrive as force. It arrives disguised, patient, smiling. Then the movie closes on one of the most hauntingly beautiful endings Disney ever made, with grief suspended in glass and love interrupting death like something sacred. It is lovely in the oldest fairytale way, tender and eerie at the same time.
2
‘The Lion King’ (1994)
We all grew up with The Lion King, at least some version of it. It is one of those films that almost feels too big for the word beloved. People do not just like it. It gets woven into them. And that starts with how perfectly it builds Simba (Matthew Broderick)’s emotional journey. At first he is a child looking at adulthood like it is a crown-shaped adventure. He wants power without understanding responsibility, and that innocence is so charming. Then Scar (Jeremy Irons) tears the center out of his world. Mufasa (James Earl Jones)’s death is still one of the hardest blows Disney ever put in one of these movies, and the cruelty of it goes beyond the death itself. Scar makes Simba believe he caused it. That guilt becomes the story’s real villain.
So when Simba runs away and falls into that carefree life with Timon (Nathan Lane) and Pumbaa (Ernie Sabella), the relief is real, but it is also a dodge. The movie knows it. “Hakuna Matata” is delightful, though it is also avoidance turned into a philosophy. That is why Nala (Moira Kelly)’s return matters so much. She drags the truth back into the room. Rafiki (Robert Guillaume) does too, in that beautiful way the film has of making wisdom feel playful and piercing at once. And then Simba has to go home not merely to fight Scar but to face the version of himself that has been hiding from grief. That is why the final return hits so hard.
1
‘Mary Poppins’ (1964)
Mary Poppins feels like the happiest sort of spell, though it is doing something deeper than sprinkling charm everywhere. It enters a family that has gone emotionally crooked. Jane Banks (Karen Dotrice) and Michael Banks (Matthew Garber) are lively but adrift. Their mother Winifred Banks (Glynis Johns) is loving but scattered. Their father George Banks (David Tomlinson) has become all schedule, discipline, and distance. The house functions, technically, but the feeling inside it is off. Then Mary Poppins (Julie Andrews) arrives, and just starts changing the air.
That is what is so lovely about it. Every magical set piece has emotional purpose. The chalk painting world, the children being invited into delight. The laugh-on-the-ceiling scene feels like joy breaking the rules of a house that has grown too stiff. Feed the Birds is one of the most beautiful turns Disney ever took, quietly shifting the entire film toward tenderness and compassion. And Mr. Banks becoming the real emotional project of the story is such a gorgeous decision. He is the one who has forgotten how to feel wonder without embarrassment. So when the movie finally brings him back toward his children and toward something softer in himself, it becomes more than magical. It becomes generous. That is why people love it so fiercely. It leaves the heart tidier than it found it.
Mary Poppins
- Release Date
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December 17, 1964
- Runtime
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139 minutes
- Director
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Robert Stevenson
- Writers
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Bill Walsh, Don DaGradi
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