VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,2/10
831
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaPinocchio and his friends, a glow worm and a marionette, search for a magic music box. However, so is the evil Scalawag and the Emperor of the Night.Pinocchio and his friends, a glow worm and a marionette, search for a magic music box. However, so is the evil Scalawag and the Emperor of the Night.Pinocchio and his friends, a glow worm and a marionette, search for a magic music box. However, so is the evil Scalawag and the Emperor of the Night.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Edward Asner
- Scalawag
- (voce)
Tom Bosley
- Geppetto
- (voce)
Lana Beeson
- Twinkle
- (voce)
Linda Gary
- Bee-Atrice
- (voce)
Don Knotts
- Gee Willikers
- (voce)
Frank Welker
- Igor
- (voce)
- …
William Windom
- Puppetino
- (voce)
Scott Grimes
- Pinocchio
- (voce)
Pat Musick
- Children
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Erika Scheimer
- Water Bug
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- …
Lou Scheimer
- Water Bug
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- …
Kath Soucie
- Children
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
In the second half of the 80's, Filmation announced, uh... ambitious plans to expand into theatrical animation with a "New Classics Collection," a series of movies based on existing fairy tales and stories, several of which-coincidentally-were already popularized by Disney adaptations. These movies weren't just adaptations, they were full on sequels inviting the audience to come see their favorites again. Many of these films never happened due to Disney lawsuits and Filmation being sold to L'Oreal (yes, that L'Oreal) and stripped for parts. Pinocchio and the Emperor of the Night was one of the only two movies to see the light of day.
Serving as a sort of pseudo-sequel, this movie begins a year after the blue fairy turns Pinocchio into a real boy, with him presumably having learned his lesson along the way. She gives him a conscience in the form of Gee Willikers the glowbug (whose advice he mostly ignores). When Geppetto needs to deliver a jewel box to the mayor, Pinocchio volunteers to do it himself. He is immediately swindled by the raccoon and monkey con artist duo Scalawag and Igor, trading the box for a fake ruby. Mortified by his own gullibility, Pinocchio runs away that night and ends up in a creepy carnival where he meets a puppet girl named Twinkle. The ringmaster Puppetino turns Pinocchio back into a lifeless puppet, but the fairy is able to save him. Her powers are fading because of the influence of Puppetino's master, the Emperor of the Night, but she is able to restores Pinocchio. Twinkle isn't so lucky, with Pinocchio vowing to find a way to free her too. Pinocchio decides to get the jewel box back to prove his responsibility, a journey that eventually takes him into the twisted realm of the Emperor himself.
I've seen this hailed as one of the worst things to come out of Filmation, and, honestly... I don't quite agree. Sure, it's shameless in its "inspiration" from the Disney version of Pinocchio's story, filing off the serial numbers enough to be legally distinct, but it's the movie's attempts to swing wildly away from the familiar that makes it most interesting. Some of the set pieces are remixed and reorganized, with the Emperor's ship being a combination of Monstro and Pleasure Island. I ended up enjoying the presence of Scalawag and Igor more than Honest John and Gideon, as their change of heart halfway through the movie allowed them to be more involved in the plot right through to the end. And there are a few trippy and downright nightmarish sequences in the movie. The scene where Pinocchio is turned back into a puppet mentally scarred a lot of kids. You don't really get that kind of darkness these days. The biggest departure is the Emperor of the Night, a Satan-esque villain voiced by James Earl Jones. It may seem random at first, but a puppet child going up against a demonic entity that steals souls by tricking kids into signing contracts feeds into the theme of freedom.
What hurts the movie are all the things that are inherited as a Filmation production. It was made on a budget and in a short amount of time, leaving several parts undercooked. Animation quality can vary wildly from scene to scene, going from fluid and expressive to infamous stilted characters and flapping jaws. The scene where Pinocchio first meets Scalawag and Igor is bustling with animated energy; when he meets them again after the circus, they're suddenly stiff, rife with zoom ins and static characters akin to He-man's worst moments. It's like two different studios animated this movie, and the disparity can even happen in the same scene. The writing also isn't quite all there. Twinkle is less of a character and more of an objective for Pinocchio. Scalawag and Igor have a nebulous connection to Puppetino and the Emperor that's never elaborated on. And there's a ten minute detour halfway into the movie with Gee Willikers going to Bugzburg, a subplot that feels pointless and disparate, until you realize that Filmation was working on a Bugzburg spinoff series that never came to fruition. That script real estate would have better served to flesh out the main characters (and I think Scalawag and Igor make for better spinoff material anyway).
Despite those drawbacks, I'm a little more forgiving of this weird little movie. In some ways, it's like a glimpse into an alternate future where Filmation got to live on.
Serving as a sort of pseudo-sequel, this movie begins a year after the blue fairy turns Pinocchio into a real boy, with him presumably having learned his lesson along the way. She gives him a conscience in the form of Gee Willikers the glowbug (whose advice he mostly ignores). When Geppetto needs to deliver a jewel box to the mayor, Pinocchio volunteers to do it himself. He is immediately swindled by the raccoon and monkey con artist duo Scalawag and Igor, trading the box for a fake ruby. Mortified by his own gullibility, Pinocchio runs away that night and ends up in a creepy carnival where he meets a puppet girl named Twinkle. The ringmaster Puppetino turns Pinocchio back into a lifeless puppet, but the fairy is able to save him. Her powers are fading because of the influence of Puppetino's master, the Emperor of the Night, but she is able to restores Pinocchio. Twinkle isn't so lucky, with Pinocchio vowing to find a way to free her too. Pinocchio decides to get the jewel box back to prove his responsibility, a journey that eventually takes him into the twisted realm of the Emperor himself.
I've seen this hailed as one of the worst things to come out of Filmation, and, honestly... I don't quite agree. Sure, it's shameless in its "inspiration" from the Disney version of Pinocchio's story, filing off the serial numbers enough to be legally distinct, but it's the movie's attempts to swing wildly away from the familiar that makes it most interesting. Some of the set pieces are remixed and reorganized, with the Emperor's ship being a combination of Monstro and Pleasure Island. I ended up enjoying the presence of Scalawag and Igor more than Honest John and Gideon, as their change of heart halfway through the movie allowed them to be more involved in the plot right through to the end. And there are a few trippy and downright nightmarish sequences in the movie. The scene where Pinocchio is turned back into a puppet mentally scarred a lot of kids. You don't really get that kind of darkness these days. The biggest departure is the Emperor of the Night, a Satan-esque villain voiced by James Earl Jones. It may seem random at first, but a puppet child going up against a demonic entity that steals souls by tricking kids into signing contracts feeds into the theme of freedom.
What hurts the movie are all the things that are inherited as a Filmation production. It was made on a budget and in a short amount of time, leaving several parts undercooked. Animation quality can vary wildly from scene to scene, going from fluid and expressive to infamous stilted characters and flapping jaws. The scene where Pinocchio first meets Scalawag and Igor is bustling with animated energy; when he meets them again after the circus, they're suddenly stiff, rife with zoom ins and static characters akin to He-man's worst moments. It's like two different studios animated this movie, and the disparity can even happen in the same scene. The writing also isn't quite all there. Twinkle is less of a character and more of an objective for Pinocchio. Scalawag and Igor have a nebulous connection to Puppetino and the Emperor that's never elaborated on. And there's a ten minute detour halfway into the movie with Gee Willikers going to Bugzburg, a subplot that feels pointless and disparate, until you realize that Filmation was working on a Bugzburg spinoff series that never came to fruition. That script real estate would have better served to flesh out the main characters (and I think Scalawag and Igor make for better spinoff material anyway).
Despite those drawbacks, I'm a little more forgiving of this weird little movie. In some ways, it's like a glimpse into an alternate future where Filmation got to live on.
A creepy mysterious carnival comes to town, Pinocchio (voiced by Scott Grimes) has just celebrated his first birthday as a human has been given a special assignment from his dad Gheppeto (voiced by Tom Bosley) to return an important jewel box back to the mayor and has been granted the power of freedom from his Fairy Godmother (voiced by Rickie Lee Jones) as he must be responsible for it or else he'll end up a puppet again. He gets swindled by a scandalous Raccoon named Scalawag (voiced by Ed Asner) and his monkey assistant Igor (voiced by Frank Welker) for a worthless fake ruby, it upsets his dad so much that he decides to run away to join the carnival for he falls for the hypnotic singing of a beautiful female puppet named Twinkle (voiced by Lana Beeson) over there and is tricked by the evil Puppetino (voiced by William Windon) as he is magically changed back into a puppet. However, Pinocchio does escape as he looks for the two scumbags that swindled him for they go after the traveling carnival to get the box back and end up in the nightmarish Las Vegas-esquire hellish realm of the empire of the night ruled by the evil Emperor (Voiced by James Earl Jones).
Co-starring the voices of Jonathan Harris and Don Knotts, this is a highly underrated and hugely entertaining animated fantasy from Filmation (The studios behind "He-Man", "Fat Albert", "Star Trek Animated" and "She-Ra") for i believe this is their best movie besides "Starchaser: Legend of Orin" and "The Secret of the Sword". The film does have a few good songs such as the haunting "Love is the light inside your heart" by Rickie Lee Jones, the upbeat "Neon Carbret" and finally the most fun song of all "You're a Star".
I remembered back in 1987 when i was 5 on Christmas night when i lived in St. Louis, my mom took me to see this movie at a shopping mall theater and it sure scared the crap out of me. But now i love it for it's one of my favorite animated movies ever! the animation is just breathtaking here considering it's an improvement over any Filmation animated effort and the film really gets dark with such moments like the absolutely horrifying sequence where Pinocchio changes back into a puppet as he's surrounded by puppets for it will scare the hell out of kids considering it almost escape the "PG" rating plus the Emperor himself is quite an awesome villain here.
If you love animation and good fantasy stories then this is a must see! it's a rare forgotten 80's animated diamond in the rough.
Also recommended: "The Black Cauldron", "Rock & Rule", "Fire & Ice", "Wizards", "The Dark Crystal", "Aladdin", "Big Trouble in Little China", "The Phantom Tollbooth", "Transformers: The Movie", "The Wizard of Oz", "Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs", "The Great Mouse Detective", "Sleepy Hollow", "The Corpse Bride", "Willy Wonka and The Chocholate Factory", "Return to Oz", "Oliver & Company", "The Little Mermaid", "The Last Unicorn", "The Secret of NIMH", "Charlie and The Chocolate Factory", "Mulan", "Spirited Away", "Making Contact (a.k.a. Joey)".
Co-starring the voices of Jonathan Harris and Don Knotts, this is a highly underrated and hugely entertaining animated fantasy from Filmation (The studios behind "He-Man", "Fat Albert", "Star Trek Animated" and "She-Ra") for i believe this is their best movie besides "Starchaser: Legend of Orin" and "The Secret of the Sword". The film does have a few good songs such as the haunting "Love is the light inside your heart" by Rickie Lee Jones, the upbeat "Neon Carbret" and finally the most fun song of all "You're a Star".
I remembered back in 1987 when i was 5 on Christmas night when i lived in St. Louis, my mom took me to see this movie at a shopping mall theater and it sure scared the crap out of me. But now i love it for it's one of my favorite animated movies ever! the animation is just breathtaking here considering it's an improvement over any Filmation animated effort and the film really gets dark with such moments like the absolutely horrifying sequence where Pinocchio changes back into a puppet as he's surrounded by puppets for it will scare the hell out of kids considering it almost escape the "PG" rating plus the Emperor himself is quite an awesome villain here.
If you love animation and good fantasy stories then this is a must see! it's a rare forgotten 80's animated diamond in the rough.
Also recommended: "The Black Cauldron", "Rock & Rule", "Fire & Ice", "Wizards", "The Dark Crystal", "Aladdin", "Big Trouble in Little China", "The Phantom Tollbooth", "Transformers: The Movie", "The Wizard of Oz", "Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs", "The Great Mouse Detective", "Sleepy Hollow", "The Corpse Bride", "Willy Wonka and The Chocholate Factory", "Return to Oz", "Oliver & Company", "The Little Mermaid", "The Last Unicorn", "The Secret of NIMH", "Charlie and The Chocolate Factory", "Mulan", "Spirited Away", "Making Contact (a.k.a. Joey)".
I think that when all of us were kids we had one or two movies that we loved so much that we sat down and watched them dozens of times. For me one of those movies was Pinocchio and the Emperor of the Night, which is definitely a lesser known animated feature but all the same still holds up today. After ordering a copy from Amazon.com and watching it again all these years later, I was pleasantly surprised that Emperor entertained me even at my usually cynical age.
Sure, you could nitpick that the animation is inconsistent, with some scenes appearing less detailed while others are excessively so, and that certain backgrounds are obviously repeated during chase scenes ala The Flintstones (it's even more pronounced here due to the visible line in the visuals), but frankly those didn't hamper my enjoyment of the film. The animation is usually quite vibrant and expressive, and the story takes the usual Pinocchio antics in a different direction by providing an actual villain in the uber-creepy Emperor (voiced by that staple of movie villains, James Earl Jones). In fact, much of the movie is downright dark, from the opening sequence where a demented carnival seems to set itself up to Pinocchio's transformation back into a puppet. I'm not saying any of this will scare kids today, as they've probably seen much worse, but it does give a good balance to the otherwise cheerful imagery.
I can't get through this review without mentioning the handful of songs which are peppered throughout Pinocchio and the Emperor of the Night. I can't get enough of "Love Is The Light Inside Your Heart," which is just a beautiful little pop ballad that I can't get out of my head because it's so memorable. True, the Fairy Godmother may sound like she's doped up during her speaking lines, but the song is great. "Neon Cabaret" is more of a background song than "Love," but it still has a nice little jazz beat that goes well with its scene, a night club where children basically throw back green alcohol (come on ya know it was alcohol) and go nuts. Finally there's "Your A Star," which while not a phenomenal song once again fits with the visuals of the sequence. Like I said before, much of the visuals of the movie are extremely well done and give the movie a vintage '80s feel I couldn't help but like.
Now this is coming from a guy who's reviewed countless animated movie, but I think it's safe to say that young kids could still get a kick out of this movie. It's got everything the modern animated flicks have, but without the crass marketing. And the sidekicks aren't half as tiresome or irritating, with the only ones being a glow worm voiced by Don Knotts and a bee named Grumblebee. Some sections of the film may seem like filler, like the scene involving a toad and a city of insects which lasts a bit too long, but other than that I give Pinocchio and the Emperor of the Night an enthusiastic recommendation. 3/4 stars
Sure, you could nitpick that the animation is inconsistent, with some scenes appearing less detailed while others are excessively so, and that certain backgrounds are obviously repeated during chase scenes ala The Flintstones (it's even more pronounced here due to the visible line in the visuals), but frankly those didn't hamper my enjoyment of the film. The animation is usually quite vibrant and expressive, and the story takes the usual Pinocchio antics in a different direction by providing an actual villain in the uber-creepy Emperor (voiced by that staple of movie villains, James Earl Jones). In fact, much of the movie is downright dark, from the opening sequence where a demented carnival seems to set itself up to Pinocchio's transformation back into a puppet. I'm not saying any of this will scare kids today, as they've probably seen much worse, but it does give a good balance to the otherwise cheerful imagery.
I can't get through this review without mentioning the handful of songs which are peppered throughout Pinocchio and the Emperor of the Night. I can't get enough of "Love Is The Light Inside Your Heart," which is just a beautiful little pop ballad that I can't get out of my head because it's so memorable. True, the Fairy Godmother may sound like she's doped up during her speaking lines, but the song is great. "Neon Cabaret" is more of a background song than "Love," but it still has a nice little jazz beat that goes well with its scene, a night club where children basically throw back green alcohol (come on ya know it was alcohol) and go nuts. Finally there's "Your A Star," which while not a phenomenal song once again fits with the visuals of the sequence. Like I said before, much of the visuals of the movie are extremely well done and give the movie a vintage '80s feel I couldn't help but like.
Now this is coming from a guy who's reviewed countless animated movie, but I think it's safe to say that young kids could still get a kick out of this movie. It's got everything the modern animated flicks have, but without the crass marketing. And the sidekicks aren't half as tiresome or irritating, with the only ones being a glow worm voiced by Don Knotts and a bee named Grumblebee. Some sections of the film may seem like filler, like the scene involving a toad and a city of insects which lasts a bit too long, but other than that I give Pinocchio and the Emperor of the Night an enthusiastic recommendation. 3/4 stars
Don't be put off by those who would label this little gem a Disney ripoff. In a time when very few animated features were being produced, Pinocchio and the Emperor of the Night is a surprisingly nice little animated film. From the opening moments, you can see that this was intended to be something special. There is some great animation, such as the ending on the Emperor of the Night's ship. There are some dark, genuinely frightening moments such as James Earl Jones as the titular Emperor and his macabre carnival, or a scene which has Pinocchio transformed back into a lifeless puppet. There are comical moments with Gee Willikers the wooden glowbug and Grumblebee. There are also bizarre, surreal scenes, notably a sequence where Pinocchio is tempted in a dream-like land by the Emperor and his minions. The song in this scene, "The Neon Cabaret", is jazzy and upbeat, and it enhances strange mood. Don Knotts, James Earl Jones, Ed Asner, and Jonathan Harris all give wonderful voice performances to their respective characters. Rickie Lee Jones as the Fairy Godmother tends to grate though.
The overall impression is that of a very ambitious production. The film moves along at a good pace and boils to a great climactic finish. Definitely worth a look!
The overall impression is that of a very ambitious production. The film moves along at a good pace and boils to a great climactic finish. Definitely worth a look!
I watched this movie when I was little (can't remember exactly how old I was), and I just recently got hold of a copy and thought I'd watch it again (brings back memories, ya know).
It's supposed to be a sequel to Disney's Pinocchio. The characters are similar to the ones in the Disney movie - all except for the Emperor of the Night (I don't know where they got him from). He seemed a little bit too much to throw into this story (and he might be a little too scary for the really young ones). I mean, what kind of demonic overlord would want anything to do with an has-been puppet? (The story tries to explain this, but doesn't do a very good job.) Anyway, the kids will probably enjoy it, so rent it for them if you get the chance (if there's nothing better to get, that is).
It's supposed to be a sequel to Disney's Pinocchio. The characters are similar to the ones in the Disney movie - all except for the Emperor of the Night (I don't know where they got him from). He seemed a little bit too much to throw into this story (and he might be a little too scary for the really young ones). I mean, what kind of demonic overlord would want anything to do with an has-been puppet? (The story tries to explain this, but doesn't do a very good job.) Anyway, the kids will probably enjoy it, so rent it for them if you get the chance (if there's nothing better to get, that is).
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe Walt Disney Company sued Filmation Associates for defamation and trademark infringement, but was ruled against on the basis that Carlo Collodi's 1883 novel "The Adventures of Pinocchio" was in public domain.
- BlooperWhen the Fairy Godmother gives Pinocchio his freedom back, she also transforms him back into a real boy. A few shots later, when she asks him why he isn't at home in bed, he is a puppet again.
- Citazioni
Lt. Grumblebee: If it's a fight you want, you've come to the right bee!
- ConnessioniFeatured in Troldspejlet: Episodio #50.7 (2014)
- Colonne sonoreLove is the Light Inside Your Heart
Words by Will Jennings
Music by Barry Mann
Performed by Rickie Lee Jones
Courtesy of Geffen Records
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- Pinocchio and the Emperor of the Night
- Aziende produttrici
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Botteghino
- Budget
- 8.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 3.261.638 USD
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 3.261.638 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 27min(87 min)
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
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