Umka (1969) Poster

(1969)

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10/10
Polar bear beauty
TheLittleSongbird24 March 2021
After seeing a few of their later works a few months back, there was the decision to revisit some of Soyuzmultfilm's older work and also watch a selection of some not seen before. 1969's 'Umka' was one example of the latter, somehow it was not familiar to me at all until recently when stumbling upon it by chance. Which is very surprising as this is the kind of work of theirs that appeals to me the most, the very simple but very charming and emotional ones.

'Umka' is a must watch and am still kicking myself at how it took me so long to see it. It may not be one of Soyuzmultfilm's most ambitious works, one of the ones adapting famous Soviet stories and family literature, ones revolving around pre-existing music or ones that have a political emphasis. It is as said above one of the Soyuzmultfilm efforts to keep things simple and all the better for it. It is a shame that 'Umka' isn't better known than it is, it really does deserve to be and to me it is among the studio's best works. And this is coming from a big fan of most of their output.

For one thing, 'Umka' looks absolutely beautiful. The traditional animation is very beautifully rendered, the colours and backgrounds are elegant, moving very smoothly from one frame/scene to the next, and the characters move very convincingly. The music accompanies the story very sensitively, the distinctive Soviet style of it is sumptuous and not overpowering. The most famous aspect of 'Umka' is the song "She-Bear's Lullaby", which is absolutely sublime in all senses.

It's extremely well written too and target audience doesn't come into question. It isn't hard to follow while also not being simplistic, making it ideal for people of all ages. It also flows well, when seeing it with English subtitles it's quite poetic and meaningful as well without going overboard on the schmaltz.

The story is immensely charming and tenderly told, there is a very strong emotional core here while not being over-sentimental or too serious. It is also genuinely sweet without being sugary, complete with some very relevant and relatable values. All the characters are engaging and have personalities that aren't too thin and are easy to identify with.

Concluding, truly beautiful and couldn't be recommended more highly enough. 10/10
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6/10
Sweet tale about family and friendship
Horst_In_Translation13 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Umka" is a Soviet 10-minute short film from 1969, so not too long anymore until it has its 50th anniversary. It has color and sound, but you may want to find a good set of subtitles unless you are fluent in Russian. The first half of the film is about Mother Polar Bear telling her child an important lesson and the second half is about the cub making friends with a human and experiencing all kinds of stuff he has never seen before in his life. All this with the sky watching over him. I thought this was a nice little movie. Good story, interesting characters and nice animation. Sucks to see there is no sequel to this one while inferior (Soviet) animation films have even more than one sequel sometimes. I certainly recommend "Umka".
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