Disney's new paid streaming service, Disney+, is launching this November in the United States, and there will be quite a lot of content available right at the start. This includes all 30 seasons of The Simpsons (totalling more than 650 episodes), as well as at least the first episode of the new Star Wars show The Mandalorian.
Also available at the start will be 18 Pixar movies and every one of their theatrical shorts, as well as numerous Star Wars movies. Not only that, but the entire 13-movie "Signature Collection" of Disney classics will be there as well, including Bambi, Snow White, Pinocchio, and others. There will also be a new Lady & The Tramp live-action movie, and more than 5,000 episodes of Disney Channel TV shows with the inclusion of Marvel Studios' latest, Captain Marvel and Avengers: Endgame!
Launch is just the beginning, as Disney has major plans to develop lots more original TV shows and movies over the first year and beyond.
Disney+ Launch Lineup:
Movies:
101 Dalmatians
A Bug's Life
Aladdin
Avengers: Endgame
Bambi
Beauty and the Beast
Brave
Captain Marvel
Cars
Cars 2
Cars 3
Cinderella
Coco
Finding Dory
Finding Nemo
Frozen
Inside Out
Iron Man
Iron Man 3
Lady & The Tramp
Moana
Monsters Inc.
Monsters University
Peter Pan
Pinocchio
Ratatouille
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
Sleeping Beauty
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
Star Wars: A New Hope
Star Wars: Attack of the Clones
Star Wars: Empire Strikes Back
Star Wars: Return of the Jedi
Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith
Star Wars: The Force Awakens
Star Wars: The Phantom Menace
The Good Dinosaur
The Incredibles
The Incredibles 2
The Jungle Book
The Lion King
The Little Mermaid
The Mandalorian (at least Episode 1)
The World According To Jeff Goldblum
Thor: The Dark World
Toy Story
Toy Story 2
Toy Story 3
Toy Story 4
Up
Wall-E
Zootopia
100 Various Disney Channel Original Movies
TV
The Simpsons (Seasons 1-30)
The World According To Jeff Goldblum
The Mandalorian
Disney Channel (5,000 episodes of various shows)
250 hours of National Geographic shows
Disney+ launches on November 12 in the United States. It costs $7/month or $70 a year. The service will launch first in the United States, with plans to release in other markets later.
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