Wilhelm Busch - The cartoon parade: Max and Moritz and other pranks

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Movie
Original title Wilhelm Busch - The cartoon parade: Max and Moritz and other pranks
Country of production Germany
original language German
Publishing year 1978
length 85 minutes
Age rating FSK 6
Rod
Director Hermann Leitner
script Eckart Hachfeld
John Halas
production Hans-Adolf Seeberg
Gyula Trebitsch
music Peter Thomas
camera Hans Jura
Peter Petronio (trick camera)
cut Axel from Koss
Torq Stewart
occupation

Wilhelm Busch - The Animated Film Parade: Max and Moritz and Other Pranks is a German-British animated film from 1975 to 1977 by Hermann Leitner . The template comes from Wilhelm Busch . Heinz Rühmann and Theo Lingen , whose last film work this was, could be won as speakers . The native Hungarian John Halas was responsible for the animation.

Author of the humorous original: Wilhelm Busch, here in a self-portrait from 1894

action

" Max and Moritz " and seven other stories by Wilhelm Busch were put together as short animated films for this 85-minute long film, which three German production companies and a British company had been involved in making.

Production notes

Wilhelm Busch - The Animated Film Parade: Max and Moritz and other pranks was created between March 1, 1975 and October 1, 1977 in the Hamburg studio . The filming locations were Busch's birthplace Wiedensahl and the municipality of Ebergötzen. The completion of this film took place in March 1978, the world premiere took place in four German cities (Hamburg, Cologne, Nuremberg, Braunschweig) on ​​May 15, 1978.

Heinz Rühmann spoke the "Max and Moritz" passages, Theo Lingen the Hans Huckebein .

Herbert Kirchhoff was responsible for the film construction. Producer Hans-Adolf Seeberg also took over the production management. Sylvia Vrethammar was singing . The song "Wilhelm Busch" was written by Rolf Zuckowski .

criticism

In the lexicon of the international film it says: "A very carefully set in motion, but overall not particularly original cartoon, which does not exactly encourage the imagination of young viewers through the exaggerated interpretation of the narrators Heinz Rühmann and Theo Lingen."

Individual evidence

  1. ^ German Institute for Film Studies (Ed.): German Films 1978, compiled by Rüdiger Koschnitzki. P. 241
  2. Wilhelm Busch - The cartoon parade: Max and Moritz and other pranks. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed June 10, 2019 .Template: LdiF / Maintenance / Access used 

Web links