Three Little Pigs (film)

The Three Little Pigs is an American animated short film directed by Burt Gillett from the year 1933.

Action

Three little pigs build their own houses: Fifer itself builds a house out of straw, and then plays the flute. Fiddler has to play the violin after the rapid Holzhausbau time. Only Practical builds his house of stone and has so busy no time for making music. The other two pigs mock the home builders, who warns of the big bad wolf and their non - stable homes. Then start the two pigs the satirical song Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf? (Eng. Who is afraid of big bad wolf) to sing.

Words fail them in shock speechless when all of a sudden the big bad wolf in front of them. Fifer hiding in his house, but it is vice blows from the wolf. Fifer now saves to Fiddler, but also holds the wooden house was not the blow of Wolf. Both pigs rush now in the stone house of the third piglet. In vain the wolf tried to blow it. When he wants to penetrate through the chimney into the house, he ends up in the underneath boiling cauldron, has also recently been unprecedented in the Practical turpentine. According howling of the wolf runs away. Fifer and Fiddler, which then again Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf? sing, Practical quickly brings to his senses: he imitates the knocking at the door, whereupon both hide anxiously under his bed.

Production

The film is based on the English tale The Three Little Pigs. The film was released on 27 May in 1933 in the context of Disney's beloved film series Silly Symphonies. It was a great success and played a total of around 250,000 U.S. dollars, so the studio brought out several sequels: The Big Bad Wolf ( 1934), The Three Little Wolves (1936) and The Practical Pig ( 1939).

The title Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf? , Which Frank Churchill had written for the film, was a hit and an unofficial anthem of the Great Depression.

Synchronization

Award

The Three Little Pigs won the 1934 Oscar in the category " Best Animated Short Film ".

In 2007, the film from the Library of Congress has been included in the National Film Registry.

237381
de