The Little Prince (1979) Poster

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6/10
"Draw me a sheep"
Rodrigo_Amaro30 May 2014
Here's an animated version of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's famous grown-up/children/everyone fable, directed by Oscar winning director Will Vinton. I can't describe the book's effect on me, I read a long ago and just remember the sensation of seeing it all yet feeling "Is all that there is in life?", questions after questions but it was a lovely novel. Now, the film was very depressive, and not in the engaging, provocative way, something that keeps you going in watching it and more like in just feeling incredibly low and awkward afterwards. But that's the story, anyway...

But Mr. Vinton is truly imaginative with his drawings and effects recreating Exupery's world inhabited by a prince living on a planet and his rose and its volcanoes, along with the story's narrator, a pilot who crashed his plane on the boy's planet. Together, they try to uncover the mysteries and the meaning of life. Great sequences, accompanied by the voices of Cliff Robertson (as the narrator) and Michele Mariana (as the Prince; years later, she'd play one of many memorable voices of "Talk Radio", being Rhoda the most recognizable and fun role).

Well, animations can't go wrong and this is a good one, completely harmless. 6/10
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7/10
a Remarkable Animated Masterpiece
sandlot19922 May 2021
This is probably one of the best adaptation of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's classic story. And the animation done by Will Vinton is marvelous and I recommend checking this out for any fan of animation as well Will Vinton and the book as well!
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8/10
Claymation Prince
Rectangular_businessman5 February 2023
Warning: Spoilers
The animation style gives the story a rather bizarre, yet whimsical vibe, as if it was something straight out of a dream. Some scenes, like the imaginary dance between the Little Prince and the Rose were simple gorgeous, though I'm not really sure of the aesthetic choice for the character designs, which at moments had a bit uncanny look. The same goes for some of the voices: The narrator was fine, but the rose and the fox sounded a bit weird at moments.

Still, this is a rather impressive effort, and I appreciate the heavy faithfulness to the source material, even if the short lenght made a couple of scenes a bit rushed.

Glad Vinton kept the ambiguous melancholic ending of the book.
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