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Pinocchio is a 1940 American animated musical fantasy film produced by Walt Disney and based on the story written by Carlo Collodi in 1883 called The Adventures of Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi. It is the second animated film in the Walt Disney Animated Classics series. Made after the success of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Pinocchio was released to theaters by RKO Radio Pictures on February 7, 1940.

The plot of the film involves an old wood-carver named Geppetto who carves a wooden puppet named Pinocchio who he wishes was a real boy. Upon doing so Pinocchio is brought to life by a blue fairy, who tells him he can become a real boy if he proves himself "brave, truthful, and unselfish". Thus begin the puppet's adventures to become a real boy, which involve many encounters with a host of unsavory characters.

The film was adapted by Aurelius Battaglia, William Cottrell, Otto Englander, Erdman Penner, Joseph Sabo, Ted Sears, and Webb Smith from Collodi's book. The production was supervised by Ben Sharpsteen and Hamilton Luske, and the film's sequences were directed by Norman Ferguson, T. Hee, Wilfred Jackson, Jack Kinney, and Bill Roberts.

Pinocchio won two Academy Awards, one for Best Original Score and one for Best Original Song for the song "When You Wish Upon A Star".

Characters[]

  1. Jiminy Cricket (Cliff Edwards) - A cricket who acts as the partial narrator of the story and who eventually becomes Pinocchio's conscience.
  2. Pinocchio (Dickie Jones) - The wooden puppet made by Geppetto and turned into a living puppet by the Blue Fairy.
  3. Geppetto (Christian Rub) - A toymaker who creates Pinocchio and wishes for him to become a real boy.
  4. Figaro (Clarence Nash) - Geppetto's black and white house cat.
  5. Cleo - (Evelyn Venable) - Geppetto's goldfish Figaro's love interest.
  6. J. Worthington "Honest John" Foulfellow (Walter Catlett) - A sly fox who tricks Pinocchio.
  7. Gideon (Mel Blanc) - Honest John's feline accomplice, and a minor antagonist.
  8. Stromboli (Charles Judels) - A large Italian puppeteer who forces Pinocchio to perform onstage in order to make money and former employer of Honest John and Gideon.
  9. The Coachman (Charles Judels) - A corrupt coachman who owns and operates Pleasure Island.
  10. The Blue Fairy (Evelyn Venable) - The magical fairy who causes Pinocchio to become alive and who eventually turns him into a real boy.
  11. Lampwick (Frankie Darro) - A naughty boy Pinocchio meets on his way to Pleasure Island.
  12. Monstro (Thurl Ravenscroft) - The killer whale that swallows Geppetto, Figaro, and Cleo whole during their search for Pinocchio, and finally swallowing also the latter.

Medvirkende[]

1978[]

  • Pinocchio - Daimi Gentle, Alexander Glæsel
  • Jesper Fårekylling - Ove Sprogøe
  • Gepetto - Helge Kjærulff-Schmidt
  • Stromboli - Poul Bundgaard
  • Mikkel From - Claus Ryskjær
  • Feen - Susanne Bruun-Koppel
  • Kusken - Bjørn Puggaard Muller
  • Slaphans - Jesper Klein

1950[]

  • Pinocchio - Ingeborg Brams
  • Jesper Fårekylling - John Price
  • Gepetto - Sigurd Langberg
  • Stromboli - Gunnar Strømvad
  • Feen - Tove Maes
  • Mikkel From - Knud Heglund
  • Kusken - Kai Holm
  • Slaphans - Buster Larsen

History[]

Release: reactions and criticisms[]

Pinocchio was not commercially successful when first released, and Disney only recouped about half of its $2.3 million budget, which was due in part to poor timing, with the cut-off of European markets, due to World War II. By the time the film was released, the mood of Americans had also darkened, also due to the war. People just weren't as keen on seeing fairy tales as they were in the days of Snow White.

But there were other reasons why Pinocchio didn't quite pan out on initial release as it received mixed reviews. One thing that Snow White had that Pinocchio didn't was romance. There wasn't much in the way of "falling-in-love-at-first-sight" in Pinocchio as there had been in Snow White, which apparently was what people had come to expect of in Disney. To add insult to injury, Paolo Lorenzini, nephew of the original story's author, had beseeched the Italian Ministry of Popular Culture to charge Walt for slander in portraying Pinocchio "so he easily could be mistaken for an American," when it was perfectly obvious that the little puppet was in fact Italian. Nothing had apparently come of the protest.

But Archer Winsten, who had criticized Snow White, wrote: "The faults that were in Snow White no longer exist. In writing of Pinocchio, you are limited only by your own power of expressing enthusiasm." Also, despite the poor timing of the release, the film did do well both critically and at the box office in the United States. Finally, Jiminy Cricket's song, "When You Wish Upon a Star," became a major hit and is still identified with the film, and later as a fanfare for The Walt Disney Company itself. Pinocchio also won the Academy Award for Best Song and the Academy Award for Best Scoring of a Musical Picture. The film has been deemed "culturally significant" by the Library of Congress and in 1994 was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. In 2005, Time.com named it one of the 100 best movies of the last 80 years. Overall, Pinocchio is considered a true-blue classic today, and many film historians consider this to be the most technically perfect of all the Disney animated features while numerous people in general hail it as one of the most beautifully animated ever.

Re-releases: theatrical and home video[]

Pinocchio 1940

With the re-release of Snow White in 1944 came the tradition of re-releasing Disney films every seven to ten years. Pinocchio has been theatrically re-released in 1945, 1954, 1962, 1971, 1978, 1984, and 1992. The 1992 re-issue was digitally restored by cleaning and removing scratches from the original negatives one frame at a time, eliminating age-old soundtrack distortions, and revitalizing the color. The film also received three video releases in 1985 being a hot-seller, 1993, (both of those releases were released as Walt Disney Classics videos) and 1999 as a 60th Anniversary edition. It also had a Disney DVD "Limited Issue" release that year before it was added to the Gold Classic Collection in 2000. It was also released on a special edition DVD overseas in 2003.

"Pinocchio" Theatrical Release History[]

  • February 7th, 1940 (Original Release)
  • October 17th, 1945 (Re-Release)
  • February 18th, 1954 (Re-Release)
  • January 18th, 1962 (Re-Release)
  • July 7th, 1971 (Re-Release)
  • December 16th, 1978 (Re-Release)
  • December 21st, 1984 (Re-Release)
  • June 26th, 1992 (Re-Release)

Pinocchio home video release history[]

  • July 1985 (VHS and Beta, Classics edition)
  • March 26, 1993 (VHS, restored Classic edition)
  • October 26, 1999 (VHS, 60th Anniversary edition, as well as a Limited Issue DVD)
  • March 2009 (DVD and Blu-ray, 70th Anniversary Platinum Edition)

Cast and crew[]

Voice cast[]

Animation direction[]

  • Fred Moore (Lampwick)
  • Frank Thomas (Pinocchio, also as marionette)
  • Milton Kahl (Pinocchio, Jiminy Cricket)
  • Vladimir Tytla (Stromboli, Gepetto)
  • Ward Kimball (Jiminy Cricket)
  • Art Babbitt (Gepetto)
  • Eric Larson (Figaro and Cleo)
  • Woolie Reitherman (Monstro the Whale, Jiminy Cricket)
  • Ollie Johnston (Pinocchio)
  • Norman Ferguson (Honest John & Gideon)
  • Jack Campbell (Blue Fairy)
  • Shamus Culhane (Honest John & Gideon)

Songs[]

Songs in film[]

The songs in Pinocchio were composed by Leigh Harline, Oliver Wallace, and Ned Washington. Leigh Harline and Paul J. Smith composed the incidental music score while Oliver Wallace served as the uncredited conductor as Charles Wolcott and Frederick Stark served auncredited orchestrators.

  1. "When You Wish Upon a Star" - Jiminy Cricket; Chorus
  2. "Little Wooden Head" - Geppetto
  3. "Give a Little Whistle" - Jiminy Cricket; Pinocchio
  4. "Hi-Diddle-Dee-Dee (An Actor's Life for Me)" - J. Worthington Foulfellow
  5. "I've Got No Strings" - Pinocchio
  6. "When You Wish Upon a Star (Reprise)" - Jiminy Cricket; Chorus

Songs written for film but not used[]

  1. "I'm a Happy-Go-Lucky Fellow" - Jiminy Cricket (this song eventually showed up in Fun and Fancy Free)
  2. "As I Saying To the Duchess" - J. Worthington Foulfellow
  3. "Three Cheers For Anything" - Lampwick; Pinocchio
  4. "Monstro the Whale" - Chorus

Goofs[]

  1. Pinocchio and Lampwick are seen hanging out by playing eight ball pool together but eight ball pool didn't exist until about after 1900 and this film is presumably set in the 19th century.
  2. When Pinocchio is surrounded by sea horses, Jiminy Cricket rides up to him on another sea horse. After it neighs, Jiminy Cricket says, "Steady there, Nelly!" in a regular voice, suddenly his speaking voice switches back to the processing that created under-the-water sound that was used previously.
  3. If you look very closely to the scene where Lampwick looks at his refection at the billiard's mirror when his transformation has begun. You will notice that Lampwick's refection has gray hair while the Lampwick outside the mirror has black hair.
  4. Even though Lampwick is seen using his toy catapult 3 times if you look carefully there are no stones being fired.
  5. When Pinocchio plays with the candle, he burns his left hand, but Gepetto puts Pinocchio's right hand into the water.
  6. In the pool game on Pleasure Island, the yellow 1-ball turns into a red 3-ball.
  7. When Pinocchio becomes entangled with the Russian dancer marionettes, two extra marionettes suddenly appear.
  8. When trying to free Pinocchio from Stromboli's cage, Jiminy Cricket takes his jacket and hat off and puts them on the padlock. In a later scene, they are no longer there.
  9. When Jiminy cozies up to sleep on the end of a fiddle, he kicks his shoes off in front of him. But when he is aroused by the Blue Fairy's arrival and grabs his shoes, they are now some distance away, sitting neatly heel to heel.
  10. As he approaches the entrance to the rough house with Lampwick, Pinocchio takes a bite out of the big pie he's holding in his left hand. A few seconds later, just before he throws it away, the pie appears to be intact.
  11. When Pinocchio meets Honest John and Gideon, he carries a book and apple (which Honest John eats). When the three go marching throughout the town, Pinocchio's apple core and book vanish.

Titles in different languages[]

  1. Arabic: بيونوكيو (Beonokeo)
  2. Bosnian: Pinokio
  3. Bulgarian: Пинокио
  4. Cantonese Chinese: 木偶奇遇記 ("A Puppet's Extraordinary Encounters")
  5. Croatian: Pinokio (also Pinocchio)
  6. Czech: Pinocchio
  7. Danish: Pinocchio
  8. Dutch: Pinokkio
  9. Finnish: Pinokkio (also Pinocchio)
  10. French: Pinocchio
  11. German: Pinocchio, das hölzerne Bengele (later Pinocchio; known as Die abenteuer des Pinocchio in Austria)
  12. Greek: Πινόκιο
  13. Hebrew: פינוקיו
  14. Hungarian: Pinokkió
  15. Icelandic: Gosi
  16. Indonesian: Pinokio
  17. Italian: Pinocchio
  18. Japanese: ピノキオ (Pinokio)
  19. Korean (South Korea): 피노키오
  20. Mandarin Chinese: 木偶奇遇記
  21. Norwegian: Pinocchio
  22. Persian: پینوکیو
  23. Polish: Pinokio
  24. Portuguese: Pinóquio
  25. Romanian: Pinocchio
  26. Russian: Пиноккио
  27. Serbian: Pinokio
  28. Spanish: Pinocho (also Pinocchio in Latin America)
  29. Swedish: Pinocchio
  30. Thai: พิน๊อคคิโอ
  31. Turkish: Pinokyo
  32. Vietnamese: Pinocchio

Videos[]

References[]

  1. Maltin, Leonard (1973). Pinocchio. In Leonard Maltin (Ed.), The Disney Book, pp. 37. New York: Crown Publishers, Inc.
  1. Pinocchio. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved on June 10, 2009.
Wikipedia
This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original article was at Pinocchio (1940 film). The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with MOVIEPEDIA, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
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