The Little Matchgirl (2006) Poster

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9/10
A rare glimpse of the post 2000 Disney at their creative best.
SevenStitches18 November 2006
I first saw this film streamed on youtube.com and had no idea that it was a Disney short. Sure it had Disney's beautifully fluid animation (in 2D no doubt, just like old times), but unlike Disney of late, it told a deeply emotional tale with inventive visuals and no compromises in its themes. Its based on the Hans Christian Anderson fable of a small Russian girl selling matchsticks on a harsh winter's evening, when no one seems to care less. Alone and without shelter, she rides out the night lighting her matchsticks for warmth in a street corner, allowing herself to be transported to hospitable, warmer places of fantasy.

By the end, i was deeply moved by what i'd seen, but as the credits rolled, i was astonished; directed by Roger Allers; executive produced by Roy E. Disney?! Who would've thought that the company currently responsible for such tat as "The Wild" and "Chicken Little" are still capable of such profound work as this? I thought that this kind of animation only existed in Japan. Apparently, Disney is still alive somewhere under all that commercialism. In a western culture that thrives on bland, generic animated comedies (fot the most part), in short and feature length, seeing this, and from the company that seems to have finally submitted its guard to that culture, is a breath of fresh air (to use a well worn cliché).

Get "The Little Mermaid" Platinum DVD release and give it a glimpse, the only place your likely to see this in an acceptable format. This is an improvement from Disney, hands down, not just on their most recent stuff, but from all their modern works. While the majority of the 90's showcased impressive and at times classic examples of Disney's animated division working at their best, no other film from their modern catalogue tackles such real ventures in human desperation and suffering. True, this is mostly due to the source text. But several of Disney's other adaptations of literature containing disturbing and tragic content have all but washed out those elements, so while the result was still universally great entertainment in an innocent way, it definitely missed out on the more emotionally rich possibilities that Japanese animation mines frequently, and Disney itself used to acquire from time to time in their earlier classics (Dumbo and Pinocchio to name a few). Not so here, Disney seems to have acknowledged this revelation from the east. In fact "The Little Matchgirl" is actually comparable to the profoundly depressing Studio Ghibli war time anime, Isao Takahata's "Grave of the Fireflies", in its sophistication, while also remaining fairly inexplicit to appeal to all but the youngest audience. Stuff like this has very rarely found its way into western animation, and pretty much never in the ones released as mainstream features. This may be only a short, but if Disney can somehow stick to this path of much more sophisticated and imaginative movie-making and implant that thinking into their feature output, we may well see their next Golden Age in animation sooner than planned. Fingers crossed.
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9/10
A little great short. Rare modern Disney masterpiece.
Atreyu_II2 February 2010
'The Little Match Girl' is a Disney animated short of enormous quality. In fact, it's a surprise to know that this is a relatively recent short, such are its high standards. It means that Disney wasn't as lifeless as it seemed, after all.

This short has potential to become a classic, for it lacks no ingredients to achieve that. It has a simple but emotional story, beautiful artwork and backgrounds, great animation, magic and a classic atmosphere. The music is beautiful too, capturing the essence of this mini-film: "Nocturne from String Quartet No. 2 in D Major" by Alexander Borodin. It feels much more like a short from Disney's good old days than something from recent years.

The story is sad and emotional, like I mentioned. It takes place in Russia and its artwork and backgrounds have a vaguely familiar feeling (resembling 20th Century Fox's "Anastasia"). The little girl of the story looks like Mulan, though.

This story is based on a Hans Christian Anderson's fable about a poor and homeless little girl trying to sell matches in a cold Winter night (when it's freezy and snowing), possibly to get some money for some food and possibly to find a warm and comfortable place. The story shows us the difficulties she has to deal with and her wishes. These wishes are shown through the visions she has (like being in a warm and comfortable place). There are no dialogs at all, but despite that it's very easy to understand the story and its message.

This short is included as an extra in 'The Little Mermaid' Platinum Edition DVD released in 2006. After getting that DVD, that is how I got to know this short.
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9/10
The plight of a little girl set in turn of the century Russia.
rmetzger-46 October 2006
One of the saddest cinematic displays I have ever seen. It is 2D rendered 3D animation overlaid with traditional illustrations as well. The animation is well done and coordinates well with the score. The film is very short, 11 min or so, but it is a simple plot with only one main character (the match girl), and by the end of the picture you are totally engaged in the girls plight. H.C. Anderson had a way with human despair, and this film captures that nature without one word uttered. I recommend this film despite its graphic illustration of society's malevolence and disregard. To be honest I have never read the original Anderson story, but it seems to have a similar tone to his other works (not the Disney adaptations).
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10/10
Brings out the ultimate potential in 2D hand drawn animation.
julito329 December 2007
I never read the original story, so I had no idea what this was about. Needless to say by the end of the short (which is about 6 minutes) I was felt a heaviness in my chest an my eyes were teary. Mind you, I'm an action/horror movie guy - I don't emote much. :-) THIS is the full potential of what animation can do - even without any words spoken. The expressions and fluidness of the characters simply would not emote the same way if it was CGI and as this was the final hand drawn 2d work by Disney's studio it looks to be their final true masterpiece.

Its BURIED in the Platinum edition of the Little Mermaid DVD, be sure to find it on the 2nd disk Why a person would tell this story to their child is really beyond me.
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10/10
A small Disney masterpiece: Such a beautiful and touching story
TheLittleSongbird17 June 2010
Ever since I was a little girl, I have been deeply moved by Hans Christian Andersen's story. It is so beautiful, so touching and so poignant, yet I don't consider it depressing in any way. From the very start, I had immediate sympathy for the Little MatchGirl of the title, and I was hoping this Disney short would do this amazing story justice. And it does.

The Little MatchGirl in my opinion is a small Disney masterpiece, it is very short, but it is beautiful in every meaning of the word. I am a huge fan of Disney, not only of their films(Beauty and the Beast especially) but also of their Silly Symphonies like The Old Mill and Flowers and Trees. The Little MatchGirl is yet another favourite of mine from them.

The short has no dialogue or voices, all through visuals and music, and this worked. The animation is simply stunning, the backgrounds, character features, the architecture of those beautiful Russian buildings and colours are consistently amazing. And I have to say the music is outstanding, this was a piece of music- Borrodin's String Quartet no. 2, Nocturno- that I really underestimated, it is a truly beautiful work that is put to perfect use and beautifully performed. The story is still poignant and touching in tone, the title character I related to immediately and the pacing is just right.

Overall, a superb short, like I said with The Old Mill, I forgot I was watching a cartoon and thought I was watching a work of art. 10/10 Bethany Cox
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10/10
The greatest Disney short ever... in my opinion
Blissey012 November 2006
I had heard a lot about this short film called "The Little Matchgirl" in the last few months, like how it was originally created for an aborted "Fantasia" sequel, how it was based on a short story by "Little Mermaid" author Hans Christian Andersen, yadda yadda. But, when I finally got the 2-disc "The Little Mermaid" Platinum Edition DVD on which "Little Matchgirl" is found, I was totally blown away. Roger Allers did a (pardon my language in a comment on a Disney film)damn fine job on this short. I do believe that if nominated for an Oscar, "The Little Matchgirl" will blow all those other shorts out of the water.

Just a friendly word of advice, folks: bring a lot of Kleenexs...
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10/10
The Saddest of Tales
Hitchcoc5 April 2019
A little girl, living in Russia in the winter, has a few matches to sell. She is shunned by all who see her. They have no empathy. Finally, she finds a corner between some buildings. She begins to strike the matches. As each one burns, she experiences (in her mind) all the things that she doesn't have: heat, food, safety, and love. There is that same ending that we have come to know.
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Conveys endless emotions
Gordon-111 November 2008
This short cartoon is about a poor homeless girl in a snowy winter. She tries to sell match sticks but faces constant rejection. She can only find comfort in her imagination.

I have great sympathy for the little girl. She enthusiastically approaches strangers, hoping someone would buy a matchstick, but people coldly reject her. Her disappointment and sadness cannot be missed. She then curls up in a corner, cold and hungry. She faces a dilemma about what to do with the match sticks, and struggles painfully. It is saddening to see her in such a state.

This short animation has no dialog, but conveys endless emotions. It has got that special touch, that resonates into viewers' hearts. It has great potential to be transformed into a full length film. Watch this if you have the chance.
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7/10
Matches in a snowstorm
ackstasis7 October 2008
Warning: Spoilers
I didn't get my first taste of Hans Christian Andersen's "The Little Match Girl" until a few weeks ago, when I watched Jean Renoir's silent short-subject adaptation, for which he unusually cast his 28-year-old wife in the lead role. Many subsequent versions of the story have followed, the latest being this impressive 7-minute snippet from Disney, which tells the story wordlessly against a classical music soundtrack. Notably, 'The Little Matchgirl (2006)' was the studio's final 2D-animated film, the last remnant of a dying art, its seems, in popular American animation. Directed by Roger Allers {whose only previous directorial credit was 'The Lion King (1994)'}, this short was nominated for an Academy Award in 2007, but lost to Torill Kove's 'The Danish Poet (2006),' which I unfortunately have yet to see. From a studio whose non-Pixar track-record has been a little shaky in recent years, this little treat suggests a glimmer of hope at the end of the tunnel, and that Disney still retains more than enough creativity to produce quality works of art.

In pre-revolutionary Russia, a young girl stands shivering in the winter cold, trying unsuccessfully to sell matches to passersby. As though she didn't exist, one person after another strides past without even acknowledging her silent pleads; one man scavenges enough kindness to help her down from a pole, but waves away the offer of a match. As night falls, the young girl huddles beneath a snowstorm, trying miserably to warm herself by the flame of a matchstick. As she slowly and tiredly succumbs to exposure, the girl descends into sparks of fairytale, envisioning the warm home of her deceased grandmother, with a roaring fire and a dinner table bulging with food. 'The Little Match Girl' was initially produced for a 'Fantasia'-style compilation film, and so the music – Aleksandr Borodin's "String Quartet #2 In D Major: 3rd Movement: Notturno (Andante)" – plays a major role. However, the music doesn't "interact" with the story and images as did the segments in 'Fantasia (1940),' and so there's an impersonality of tone that the film struggles to shake off.
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10/10
Absolutely beautiful
Rectangular_businessman24 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This is one of the most beautiful and heartbreaking shorts that I've seen in my life. It captures perfectly well all the beauty and sadness from the original tale written by Hans Christian Andersen, having a gorgeous animation and excellent music.

One would think that being done by Disney, the heartbreaking elements from the original story would be toned down. Instead of that, this wonderful little animation remains entirely faithful to the source material and that's why it so incredible.

Without any single spoken word, "The Little Matchgirl" is able to express much more emotion than many dramatic live-action films. As an adaptation, it was simply flawless. As an independent work, it is just sublime.

10/10 (I would give this eleven stars if I could)
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10/10
One of my favorites
Horst_In_Translation9 October 2013
Warning: Spoilers
It took Roger Allers over 10 years after "The Lion King" to come up with his next animated masterpiece. "The Little Matchgirl", however, was very much worth the wait and delivers emotion from start to finish in its short seven minutes running time. You all know the Hans Christian Andersen story of course. It's as relevant as ever, so pointless to say a lot more about it other than in its center is a little girl who tries to sell matches to make some money in order have a warm Christmas. Will she succeed? In her very own way, she does. I won't go any further into detail as you should experience the heart(break) put in this one as well.

This is a definite contender for my favorite short film of the 21st century so far. The animation is excellent. The girl looks as convincing as the snowy environment she's in and all the people she meets until the hearty lady who finally leads her to salvation. The ending (and also everything before including the freezing, the little girl's longing for happiness and beloved ones) never fails to make my eyes wet. It's a wonderful piece of art and one of the main reasons why I love animation that much. Everybody should see it and the Academy has rarely been more wrong in refusing Allers and the film their well-deserved Oscar, but that shouldn't keep you from watching "The Little Matchgirl"
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5/10
Very beautiful and artistic, but NOT for children.
sra-lopez1228 October 2015
Although this short was beautiful and magical it was also definitely not for children. I found it in an hour and a half long collaboration of shorts on Netflix. They recommended that my two year old son watch it based on what he'd watched in the past. A lot of those are not appropriate for children under twelve years old, I'd say. I am aware that it was based on the classic, therefore not actually Disney writing, but still, not okay for a two year old. Maybe Netflix is at fault for suggesting something inappropriate. But, it's a solid reminder that not all things Disney umbrella are okay for kids to watch.
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special
Kirpianuscus9 March 2018
It is special for many reasons. first - for the delicate beauty of animation. second - for Russia as location of the story by Hans Christian Andersen. not the last- for the rehabilitation of classic Disney mark. because it is an old fashion film. not only as form but in its spirit. a film about the well known girl with matches. great not only for its impecable, moving art. but for the status for the inner child to be, too, in his so familiar universe.
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8/10
Why in Russia?
xpk-121 October 2007
As a native of H.C. Andersens homeland Denmark it seems odd to me why the movie doesn't take place here. Why pre-revolutionary Russia? The story doesn't say anything about time or place. maybe it's just my national pride and the story could just as well have any other setting. beside that i really liked the animation and Disney have well managed to capture the feeling of the story. It is nice to see some 2D animation with all that 3D computer graphic junk that floods the movie theaters nowadays. The biggest plus in this movie is the watercolored backgrounds. all in all a great short animation, and I hope to see more of this kind, perhaps even full length animated movies.
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10/10
Gorgeous retelling - surprisingly from Disney! Get your Tissues!
Fd-Up-Squirrel8 October 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Originally created as part of Disney's "Fantasia 2000" it was more than likely booted because the film already contained another work by Hans Christian Anderson, but it may be safe to assume that it may have also had a lot to do with the fact that this piece does contain the original ending (which, oddly enough, "The Steadfast Tin Soldier" which ended up in Fantasia 2000, has a very different ending).

With Disney's decision to change the ending to "The Little Mermaid" it does come as a surprise that they managed to keep "The Little Match Girl" in tact, and it's rumored that there was some bit of fighting to keep the ending.

The piece takes place in Russia, and follows a little girl with no shoes running through the streets of St. Petersburg trying to sell matches. She's cold, and appears to have no family, and despite that her feet are merely covered by rags, everyone is either too worried about themselves, or just sickened by the idea of dealing with this little urchin. As it grows darker and colder, and as the snow starts falling harder and wind starts picking up, she seeks refuge in an alley and starts lighting her matches to stay warm, and with each match, imagines herself in warm place, with familiar faces.

It's a completely sad and emotional piece,a nd will surely bring a tear to your eye. It's both strange and lucky that it's available on the 2006 Platinum Edition of "The Little Mermaid". At only 7 minutes, it's a completely powerful and beautiful piece- beautifully animated (the animation ranks up there with Beauty and the Beast, Mulan, and Pocahontas) and beautifully scored! This is a must see (but keep that Klennex box close)
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8/10
Touching and beautiful
planktonrules27 February 2008
Warning: Spoilers
THE LITTLE MATCHGIRL is a short film made by Disney. It was originally intended as part of a new Fantasia-style film but the project was canceled--leaving the studio with a completed short film based on the Hans Christian Andersen story. Although I think the original story was set in Denmark (since Andersen lived there), this one is set in Russia and is very faithful to the original story otherwise. A poor and hungry little girl sells matches on the street and ultimately dies due to exposure and malnutrition since it's the middle of winter. While Disney did "clean up" the story just a bit (making the child look reasonably well-fed and clean), the story doesn't pull punches and has the original depressing ending. All the action is set to lovely music and the quality of the animation is as good as you can get with Disney. It's a lovely little film though its gritty subject matter make it tough watching.

This film was nominated for an Oscar for Best Animated Short for 2007 but lost to THE DANISH POET.
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8/10
Anyone who hates Christmas surely will love . . .
pixrox13 July 2022
Warning: Spoilers
. . . the Dizzy Mega Corporation's ultra morbid rendering of THE LITTLE MATCH-GIRL. Perhaps this battle between realistic entrepreneurship and utter failing despair is the fight that allowed Dizzy to vanquish the final dregs of Christmas Spirits once and for all. While it is quite difficult to think of ANY Dizzy Yule Tide Tale that is uplifting in any sense, it's hard to imagine how MATCH GIRL could have been any more of a Debbie Downer. The title character obviously is a prophetic rendering of the coming deluge of unwanted children their birth parents realize that they're in no position to support. Though parents will fight like crazy to safeguard sons to carry on the family name, daughters will be utter nuisances, liable to repeat the mistakes their moms made in the total absence of reproductive safety nets. This will be especially true in the so-called "Red States," where women are held in low esteem and the laws will be the most Draconian. Thousands of these young females will be perishing weekly on the streets, especially at Holiday Time when no one will buy their matches or other trinkets for sale. Dizzy suggests that it's nice to think that there will be Celestial Music and Pie in the Sky for inexorably doomed gals such as THE LITTLE MATCH-GIRL.
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9/10
A Bittersweet Hand-Drawn Animated Christmas Film from the year 2006
rebeccaajclarke26 November 2022
I find this Christmas special is very beautifully bittersweet, because at the end of this story, that the little match girl and her grandmother are reunited together in spirit, that are implied that they are spirits, the music is beautifully composed by Alexander Borodin is called String Quartet No. 2 in D Major the 3rd instalment notturno Andante, it is based on the Hans Christian Andersen's Fairy Tale for the namesake, instead of it's taking place in Denmark, It's takes place in the 19th Century Russia, I feel very sorry for this little girl, because she lived in poverty and her life is very poor, This Animated short film makes my feel very sad in a wonderful way, I'm giving this a 9/10 and Merry Christmas.
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9/10
Beautiful animation to tell an old and familiar tale
llltdesq23 January 2014
Warning: Spoilers
This short was nominated for an Academy Award. There will be mild spoilers ahead:

The story of the little match girl is one of Hans Christian Andersen's most well-known tales, so the plot of this tale is hardly new. It's been animated several times, but this is one of the better ones. Columbia studio's animation department did an excellent one in the 1930s which is the best one I've seen. This is a close second.

The backgrounds and animation on this one are as good as one has come to expect from Disney. The story is told without dialog and has been set in Russia. It's faithful to Andersen's tale. It's bittersweet and the ending can be seen as sad, happy or a mixture of the two, depending on the viewer's perspective. I see it as a sad ending myself.

Very well done short which was included on the Platinum Edition of The Little Mermaid. It's well worth watching and most recommended.
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3/10
Everything but a sense of personality
Polaris_DiB20 April 2007
Warning: Spoilers
If you come into this short thinking, "Hey, that girl looks like Lilo," you aren't wrong. This short is pure Disney through and through, which has its good sides and its bad sides, but definitely gives off a very brand-name feel.

The story is a Hans Christian Anderson tale about a pauper girl who finds brief comfort in the matches she's trying to sell until the cold eventually wins and takes her life away--not before, however, she so escapes into her imagination to find comfort, warmth, and love. This is a very good story, and in fact is done very well by the animators. It also shows that even though Disney is making shorts again, they're still sentimental fluff on topics the maker's don't really know that much about.

Sure, it's sweet, but it's also impersonal. All the power this short has is really in the filmmaker's use of tropes like the cute homeless girl and the magic warm Christmas tree to tug at our heartstrings, but the film makes no attempt to really give any sense of objective to the works. It's meant to make us feel sad, not make us think or understand. It's sweet, but it lacks substance. In other words, it's typical later Disney, through and through.

I do give it a few props merely for the fact that it's not CGI. The Oscar nominated short films this year were dominantly CGI, and will probably be more so as time goes on, so it's good to see that one particular company is maintaining a different form. Unfortunately, that company is also infamous for their sugar-coated reality and sentimentality, so they've managed to keep that as well.

--PolarisDiB
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embroidery
Vincentiu12 September 2014
it is one of films who are not defined but story - well - known - but for art to translate in image a classic text. the science to present new nuances for Andersen story . and, in that case, the job is remarkable.for the grace of details, for the smart solutions, for the lovely animation, for the blue and white and gray, for the magic and for the last images. a film like an embroidery. delicate, simple, touching, honest and hard careful work. the little girl is different by the original character but the new details are beautiful homage to the author. a lovely short film.useful for the remember of childhood emotions.
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10/10
Let it burn just a little longer...
Foreverisacastironmess12323 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
It's something that everyone fears in their heart of hearts, the thought of being utterly alone and out in the cold. I love how there are no words. It doesn't need any, the feelings are the same in any language. The story and its poignant music go together absolutely perfectly. This animated short is fairly brief and it's so engrossing that the time flies by before you know it. The Little Match Girl short is so great because it captures and mirrors the exact same emotions you get from reading the story, or remember from being read the story as a small child. My mother used to read this to me when I was little and it was extraordinary to me how familiar it felt watching this, and how all those old emotions came flooding back. There's the harrowing plight of the girl trying in vain to sell her matches, the improbable, desperate hope as she strikes them and experiences her beautiful visions-a rather disturbing thought that now occurs to me with my adult sensibilities is that they could be near-death cold induced hallucinations-and of course, finally, the tragic hopeless despair of her sad lonely end. Sure, she is now free, with her beloved grandmother in a better place of warmth and love, but she had to die to do it. What's so "happy ending" about that? It certainly makes me feel little joy, it makes me feel cold in my gut, as cold as the girl probably felt, and I felt the exact same way when I was small. That is precisely how you're supposed to react. Very sad, but perhaps also grateful for just a certain something. That's why I think it's very important for little kids to be read this and all the other classic tales and fables because I believe they can instill a sense of empathy, as well as other good values. Of course it "pulls at the heart strings" that's the whole point, to make you feel the sorrow, to make you CARE. Anyone remember that? Kids should be read stories like this because they should know, in an innocent gentle way, that this world can be a very cruel place, and that not every ending is a happy one. There's not really much in the story that they left out of this. Except, in some of them I remember, it shows a few of the townspeople sadly offering far too late sympathies as they discover the girl, and then the scene changes to show the girl and her grandmother as angels in the stars... And so, for the sheer emotional impact alone, do I consider this to be, for what it is perfect. It couldn't be any more moving. If anyone really "enjoyed" if that is the right word, the deeply moving themes of this short I highly recommend you try and watch the 1988 TV drama: God Bless the Child. I guarantee you won't be disappointed. Thanks for reading! Stay warm now...
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8/10
Beautifully tragic
mitsubishizero29 September 2020
This was a beautiful short to watch courtesy of Disney. It's one of the few shorts where there's no happy ending. Then again, it's based on the tale of the same name and anyone who's read it know the ending(which I won't spoil). The animation, action and music go hand in hand well.

I don't have much else to say other than check it out if you can.
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10/10
Hans Christian Anderson a genius
dweilermg-121 June 2018
Hans Christian Anderson was truly many years ahead of his time since this story about the poor little girl peddling matches on the street being ignored by people hustling and bustling while doing their Xmas shopping offering no comfort or compassion to this needy child truly defined the result of the over-commercialization of Christmas and people losing sight of the true meaning of the season.
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10/10
Kicked my butt!
ricosuave1421 December 2010
My eyes don't tear up, not even in real life least of all movies. But this Disney animated 2D short is a beautiful metaphor. It is about everything, from the children of the street in some country, to the well-off professional dying inside from loneliness, in ours. Yes, I watch it with family during Christmas, and yes, along with the other less somber animated specials to compensate :). It has a beautiful message and the humanity of it is enormous. For a seven minute short film, it packs a punch! Roy Disney, the last of the Disney family to actually work with the company, died in 2009. Given that a lot of junk is also constantly put on DVD by the Walt Disney Co., I'm hoping more gems like "The Little Match Girl" will continue to appear.
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