

Ronno's character is never named in the original movie. An additional twist is that in the book, Ronno was quite respectable (though a bit of a whiner as he is portrayed in the movie), and there was nothing at all personal about his rivalry with Bambi over Faline. In the original book on which Bambi was based, Ronno was already a stag when Bambi was born, instead of being mere weeks-to-months older than he was as in the movie.

"Let's Sing a Gay Little Spring Song" (Chorus) – 1:44."Main Title (Love is a Song)" (Donald Novis) – 2:56."Bambi and the Great Prince/End Credit Suite" (Broughton) – 3:34."Being Brave (Part 2) (Broughton) – 1:13."Being Brave (Part 1) (Broughton) – 1:22."Snow Flakes in the Forest" – ( Bruce Broughton) – 1:40."The Healing of a Heart" – ( Anthony Callea) – 2:43."Through Your Eyes" – ( Martina McBride) – 4:07."First Sign of Spring" – ( Michelle Lewis) – 3:49."There is Life" ( Alison Krauss) – 2:19.Produced by Matt Walker, the CD included 9 songs from the movie, as well as three tracks from the original movie. Coinciding the with film's DVD release, the soundtrack was released by Walt Disney Records in the United States on February 7, 2006. Soundtrack īambi II's musical score includes instrumental pieces by Bruce Broughton, and new vocal songs by several noted artists, including Alison Krauss, Martina McBride, and Anthony Callea.
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Movie fans were much more positive, according to ratings on. It was praised for its animation - regarded as some of the best among the Disney direct-to-video sequels - but the story was thought to be lacking and easy to make.

It holds a score of 60% "Fresh" in Rotten Tomatoes and has a rating of 6.3 stars out of 10 in IMDb.
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The movie generally received a positive rating from professional critics. The movie sold 2.6 million DVDs in its first week in the United States. Following its moratorium strategy, in which releases are made available for a limited time only, Disney gave the DVD a 70-day window for its US release.

As major studios continue to phase out VHS, this was the last Disney animated movie released on VHS. It broke the world record for the longest amount of time between two related movies made in a series, being released 63 and a half years after the first movie. While the movie was a direct-to-video release in countries like the United States, Japan, Canada, mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan, it was a theatrical release in some countries like the United Kingdom, France, Austria, Mexico, Dominican Republic, Brazil, Australia and some other European countries. The movie was released on home video at differing dates, due to it being a theatrical release in some countries.
