BEAUTY AND THE BEAST 3D (U, 84 mins) ***** Featuring the voices of Paige O’Hara, Robby Benson, Richard White, Jerry Orbach, David Ogden Stiers, Angela Lansbury, Bradley Pierce, Rex Everhart. Directors: Gary Trousdale, Kirk Wise

More than 20 years after Beauty And The Beast became the first animated feature to contest the Oscar for Best Picture, Disney’s “tale as old as time” returns to multiplexes in a glorious new 3D print.

The fairytale still casts a heady spell, fashioning glorious family entertainment from the familiar European folk tale, with the clever additions of talking furniture and infectious songs.

The tunes, conjured by composer Alan Menken and lyricists Howard Ashman and Tim Rice, are jaunty and lyrically wicked (“I’m especially good at expectorating!”).

They are the musical equivalent of sherbet, fizzing pleasantly on the tongue, building to a rousing crescendo with the Busby Berkeley-esque Be Our Guest with lothario candlestick Lumiere as the crazed ringmaster of a three-ring kitchen circus.

Ballads gently tug the heartstrings, particularly Belle and the Beast’s dance beneath a twinkling chandelier performed to the haunting theme song.

But it’s the film’s huge heart which beats loudest, reducing us to tears as the final petal of the enchanted rose falls.

The story follows spirited Belle (voiced by O’Hara) as she swaps places with her inventor father (Everhart) as prisoner of the accursed Beast (Benson) and falls for her hirsute host.

Musclebound rival suitor Gaston (White) leads the torch-wielding villagers against the Beast, but the rabble meets its match in the enchanted servants led by tightly-wound pendulum clock Cogsworth (Stiers) and flirtatious candlestick Lumiere (Orbach).

Beauty And The Beast is arguably Disney’s finest hand-drawn animation, edging ahead of The Little Mermaid and The Lion King in terms of heartfelt emotion.

We completely believe the relationship between the central characters, and their love for each other.

Gaston is a delicious, swaggering villain, with a cleft chin that could topple empires, while Cogsworth and Lumiere provide much of the comic relief, some of it going above the heads of younger audiences.

“If it ain’t baroque, don’t fix it!” jests the clock during a guided tour of the castle’s impressive architecture.

The screen bursts with colour throughout, and even though the animation looks dated now, which is to be expected, the characters still retain impressive detail, especially in their facial expressions.