Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin (also known as Winnie the Pooh's Most Grand Adventure in some countries) is a 1997 direct-to-video film from Walt Disney's The Many Adventures of Winnie-the-Pooh. The film follows Pooh and his friends on a journey to find and rescue their friend Christopher Robin from the "Skull". Along the way, the group confront their own insecurities throughout the search, facing and conquering them in a series of events where they're forced to act beyond their own known limits, thus discovering their true potential. Unlike the film's predecessors, this film is an entirely original story, not based on any of A. A. Milne's Pooh stories (however, some elements come from a story in House at Pooh Corner, "In Which Rabbit Has a Busy Day and We Learn What Christopher Robin Does in the Mornings").
Because of the film's somewhat dark themes and imagery, it received generally mixed reviews from critics and became the first Disney direct-to-video film. However, it is also the first Winnie the Pooh film ever to have its own special edition.
Christopher Robin is unable to tell Pooh that he must begin going to school, and leaves him with the advice,
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