Bartok the Magnificent is a 1999 American direct-to-video animated adventure comedy film directed by Don Bluth and Gary Goldman. It is a standalone spin-off to the 1997 film Anastasia, also directed by Bluth and Goldman, with Hank Azaria reprising his role from the previous film as Bartok, a bumbling small albino bat. [2]
Bartok is a comedic albino bat and the former secondary antagonist in 1997 Don Bluth feature film Anastasia, in which he serves as comic relief, and the main protagonist of its 1999 direct-to-video sequel Bartok the Magnificent.
Bartok is an albino bat who is a former con artist and Grigori Rasputin’s former sidekick. He performed magic acts all over Russia and has arrived in Moscow, impressing passersby and Tsarevich Ivan Romanov. A bear attacks right after Bartok's show, …
Bartok is a albino white bat who used to be Rasputin's sidekick until he turned good. He is the secondary antagonist-turned-anti hero and a comic-relief character in Anastasia (1997). And later he starred in his own movie Bartok the Magnificent (1999).
Bartok is a fictional albino bat, who appears as the secondary antagonist-turned-tritagonist in Anastasia. He was Rasputin's neurotic and somewhat reluctant assistant and sidekick. He is also the titular protagonist of the direct-to-video Anastasia spin-off entitled Bartok, the Magnificent.
Bartok is a small and slender albino bat with some pink eyeballs, a pink nose, some pink ears, some pinkish hands, and some pinkish feet from the 20th Century Fox film Anastasia and Bartok The Magnificent.
Bartok is the secondary antagonist in Don Bluth's 9th animated feature film Anastasia and the titular main protagonist of its 1999 direct-to-video prequel Bartok the Magnificent. He is a talking albino bat who serves as Rasputin's former sidekick.