6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- Beautiful Oscar-nominated cartoon treasure, 2 January 2002
Author:
jaybee-3 from New Jersey
Animated classic with a tremendous emotional impact. I saw this film in a
theatre way back in the 1970s and many people were crying at the end. Very
touching film from the Columbia cartoon folks. Hopefully, it will be
available some day on tape or DVD.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Hasn't aged a day; still works stunningly well!, 20 February 2001
Author:
pmsusana from New Orleans, Louisiana
I was fortunate enough to get hold of a Super-8mm sound copy of this
animated masterpiece. Every time I watch it I promise myself I won't choke
up, but it gets to me every time (and I'm not emotional as a rule). That
any film, regardless of subject matter or style, can still grip the
emotions
so strongly after sixty-odd years says something about the talents that
combined to make it. It excels on so many levels: One could watch it once
for its gorgeous use of color, once for its visual concepts, once for its
story - suffice it to say that it's a film I've never stopped discovering.
And since it tells its story with no dialog, its appeal is truly universal.
Why this hasn't been reissued on video by Columbia/RCA is anybody's
guess.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- The odds are against her!, 5 December 2005
Author:
Gblakelii from United States
Unfortunately it is the exception rather than the rule when a
screenwriter leaves the original story as it is. In this case, the
steps of the original were followed, but the details were changed. It
is almost as if the film script of this Columbia "color rhapsody" toon
was written with only one reading of the source-story, and it never was
consulted again. The mood does remain the same, however, and the world
may seem even a bit harsher in this particular adaption. The New Year's
Eve crowd is quite antagonistic to the poor little match seller. In
Andersen's 3 page story it is the weather and her father which are the
main adversaries, here it is the uncaring revelers which dominate.
Since the main essence of the story is left intact, and the treatment
is grandiose, what remains is an excellent cartoon on any level. The
combination of plot line and Brahm's Waltz in A-flat is a match made in
heaven! It is obvious much time and care went into the animation, and
the choice of colors were superb. Since images were used to convey
meaning rather than dialogue(only the words, "Happy New Year" are
heard)it seems that the important character of the grandmother had to
be dropped in place of an angel. If you haven't read the short story in
a long while, you may be willing to overlook this.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Beautifully crafted short all the more remarkable for the studio that did such exceptional work here., 14 December 2002
Author:
Robert Reynolds (minniemato@hotmail.com) from Tucson AZ
Charles Mintz saw gold in them there cartoons and thus jettisoned Walt
Disney and the contractual relationship they had to start in-house
production and make (he thought) even more for himself. But Mintz had a
gourmand's palate without the imagination or financial willingness to feed
such tastes. Columbia was rarely to come even within shouting distance of
Disney, MGM and Warner Brothers where animated shorts were concerned. They
just didn't much take the time or effort to go beyond nice, enjoyable fluff
to fulfill contractual obligations.
That makes The Little Match Girl all the more incredible, because it's an
emerald awash in a sea of shiny marbles. Much of the credit can go to Al
Davis and Sid Marcus, both exceptionally talented. This is probably the
crown jewel in Davis's career, a compliment, to say the least. They manage
to make this endearing and heart-wrenching without it becoming maudlin or
cloying. It's a remarkable piece of work and, had it been more properly
promoted at the time, might have won the Academy Award (and probably should
have). I don't usually go into detail about the contents of a film,
preferring to let the film speak for itself, but one point I need to make:
the decision to make the child smaller than normal in perspective to the
world around he was brilliant-to a child, the "grownup" world is huge and
more than a bit scary. It works wonderfully. That this isn't in print and
available is a shame, as it should be. Well worth hunting up. Most highly
recommended.
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The Little Match Girl (1937)
6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-

Beautiful Oscar-nominated cartoon treasure, 2 January 2002
Author: jaybee-3 from New Jersey
Animated classic with a tremendous emotional impact. I saw this film in a theatre way back in the 1970s and many people were crying at the end. Very touching film from the Columbia cartoon folks. Hopefully, it will be available some day on tape or DVD.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-
Hasn't aged a day; still works stunningly well!, 20 February 2001
Author: pmsusana from New Orleans, Louisiana
I was fortunate enough to get hold of a Super-8mm sound copy of this animated masterpiece. Every time I watch it I promise myself I won't choke up, but it gets to me every time (and I'm not emotional as a rule). That any film, regardless of subject matter or style, can still grip the emotions so strongly after sixty-odd years says something about the talents that combined to make it. It excels on so many levels: One could watch it once for its gorgeous use of color, once for its visual concepts, once for its story - suffice it to say that it's a film I've never stopped discovering. And since it tells its story with no dialog, its appeal is truly universal. Why this hasn't been reissued on video by Columbia/RCA is anybody's guess.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

The odds are against her!, 5 December 2005
Author: Gblakelii from United States
Unfortunately it is the exception rather than the rule when a screenwriter leaves the original story as it is. In this case, the steps of the original were followed, but the details were changed. It is almost as if the film script of this Columbia "color rhapsody" toon was written with only one reading of the source-story, and it never was consulted again. The mood does remain the same, however, and the world may seem even a bit harsher in this particular adaption. The New Year's Eve crowd is quite antagonistic to the poor little match seller. In Andersen's 3 page story it is the weather and her father which are the main adversaries, here it is the uncaring revelers which dominate.
Since the main essence of the story is left intact, and the treatment is grandiose, what remains is an excellent cartoon on any level. The combination of plot line and Brahm's Waltz in A-flat is a match made in heaven! It is obvious much time and care went into the animation, and the choice of colors were superb. Since images were used to convey meaning rather than dialogue(only the words, "Happy New Year" are heard)it seems that the important character of the grandmother had to be dropped in place of an angel. If you haven't read the short story in a long while, you may be willing to overlook this.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Beautifully crafted short all the more remarkable for the studio that did such exceptional work here., 14 December 2002
Author: Robert Reynolds (minniemato@hotmail.com) from Tucson AZ
Charles Mintz saw gold in them there cartoons and thus jettisoned Walt Disney and the contractual relationship they had to start in-house production and make (he thought) even more for himself. But Mintz had a gourmand's palate without the imagination or financial willingness to feed such tastes. Columbia was rarely to come even within shouting distance of Disney, MGM and Warner Brothers where animated shorts were concerned. They just didn't much take the time or effort to go beyond nice, enjoyable fluff to fulfill contractual obligations.
That makes The Little Match Girl all the more incredible, because it's an emerald awash in a sea of shiny marbles. Much of the credit can go to Al Davis and Sid Marcus, both exceptionally talented. This is probably the crown jewel in Davis's career, a compliment, to say the least. They manage to make this endearing and heart-wrenching without it becoming maudlin or cloying. It's a remarkable piece of work and, had it been more properly promoted at the time, might have won the Academy Award (and probably should have). I don't usually go into detail about the contents of a film, preferring to let the film speak for itself, but one point I need to make: the decision to make the child smaller than normal in perspective to the world around he was brilliant-to a child, the "grownup" world is huge and more than a bit scary. It works wonderfully. That this isn't in print and available is a shame, as it should be. Well worth hunting up. Most highly recommended.
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