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The Mouse and His Child

  • 1977
  • G
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
572
YOUR RATING
Sally Kellerman, Cloris Leachman, Peter Ustinov, and Andy Devine in The Mouse and His Child (1977)
AdventureAnimationDramaFamily

Adaptation of Russell Hoban's novel about two mechanical toy mice, and their quest to become "self-winding".Adaptation of Russell Hoban's novel about two mechanical toy mice, and their quest to become "self-winding".Adaptation of Russell Hoban's novel about two mechanical toy mice, and their quest to become "self-winding".

  • Directors
    • Charles Swenson
    • Fred Wolf
  • Writers
    • Carol Monpere
    • Russell Hoban
  • Stars
    • Peter Ustinov
    • Cloris Leachman
    • Sally Kellerman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    572
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Charles Swenson
      • Fred Wolf
    • Writers
      • Carol Monpere
      • Russell Hoban
    • Stars
      • Peter Ustinov
      • Cloris Leachman
      • Sally Kellerman
    • 28User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos5

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    Top cast36

    Edit
    Peter Ustinov
    Peter Ustinov
    • Manny the Rat
    • (voice)
    Cloris Leachman
    Cloris Leachman
    • Euterpe
    • (voice)
    Sally Kellerman
    Sally Kellerman
    • The Seal
    • (voice)
    Andy Devine
    Andy Devine
    • The Frog
    • (voice)
    Alan Barzman
    • The Mouse
    • (voice)
    Marcy Swenson
    • The Mouse Child
    • (voice)
    John Carradine
    John Carradine
    • The Tramp
    • (voice)
    Neville Brand
    Neville Brand
    • Iggy
    • (voice)
    Regis Cordic
    Regis Cordic
    • The Clock
    • (voice)
    Joan Gerber
    • The Elephant
    • (voice)
    Bob Holt
    Bob Holt
    • Muskrat
    • (voice)
    Mel Leven
    • Ralphie
    • (voice)
    Maitzi Morgan
    • Teller
    • (voice)
    • …
    Frank Nelson
    Frank Nelson
    • Crow #1
    • (voice)
    Cliff Norton
    Cliff Norton
    • Crow #2
    • (voice)
    Cliff Osmond
    Cliff Osmond
    • C. Serpentina
    • (voice)
    Iris Rainer
    • Paper People
    • (voice)
    • …
    Robert Ridgely
    Robert Ridgely
    • Jack in the Box
    • (voice)
    • (as Bob Ridgely)
    • Directors
      • Charles Swenson
      • Fred Wolf
    • Writers
      • Carol Monpere
      • Russell Hoban
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    6.8572
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    Featured reviews

    syllavus

    Amazingly Moving

    This was one of the first movies I ever saw. I must have been a

    toddler, barely able to form words when I first saw it. Up until this

    past week, the last time I had seen this movie I was probably five

    years old, but in spite of my young age I never forgot it.

    Most of the comments I have seen made by others mention things

    like, "this movie probably isn't suited for young children", however I

    adored this movie as a very young child, and can honestly say that

    I think this movie had a profound effect on who I am today.

    Some things embed themselves in your memory in a lasting way

    that others do not, this movie was one of those things. A simple

    cartoon, but so much more. The memory of this movie has always

    been with me, and it has always affected me more than many

    memories I have of things that I actually experienced. I thought that

    I would never see it again and it would remain a memory until I

    managed to pick up a copy on ebay last week. When the movie

    started after I pressed play on my VCR, it was like stepping back

    into time and reconnecting with myself at age four.

    I remembered every visual, every spoken word, my memory just

    needed to be jogged. This film is amazingly poignant, deeply

    thoughtful, and insightful. I feel lucky that I saw it at such a young

    age and grew up with its message in my heart.

    The movie opens up with a homeless man scrounging through

    garbage cans, even though I was only a toddler when I first saw

    this movie, I remember immediately feeling compassion for this

    character, and for other characters throughout. The thing about this

    movie that makes it great is not its ability to entertain, but its ability

    to make you feel.

    A toy wind-up mouse and his child awaken to consciousness in a

    toy shop after hours. "Papa, where are we? What are we?" asks

    the child mouse. "I don't know son," is all the father can offer. They

    learn that they are toys, and must do what they are intended to do:

    be wound up and walk in a circle. The child mouse is distraught;

    he doesn't want to go out into the world, he wants to stay in the toy

    shop and have a family with the other toys. They fall off of the shelf

    and are broken and later taken out with the trash.

    In one of the movie's more poignant moments, the mouse child

    says, "Papa, is THIS the world?" while they are helplessly caught

    in a pile of trash. "I hope not," answers the father.

    They wind up being found by Manny the Rat, a wonderfully crafted

    villain who enslaves toys to do his bidding until they are old and of

    no use. In a particularly horrific scene, an old wind up donkey is

    unhinged into spare parts after collapsing from exhaustion. The

    mouse and his child spend the rest of the movie trying to escape

    from Manny and become "self-winding" so that they no longer have

    to depend on someone for their well-being.

    The messages in this movie are deep and profound, but the more

    general messages are not so symbolic that they are lost on a

    child. This movie does so much more than the average "children's

    movie", it does not set out to entertain, it sets out to tell a brilliant

    story with morals and it succeeds beautifully.

    In a time where cartoon villains are usually a mix of the comical,

    ugly and detestable, Manny is a breath of fresh air and far more

    "real" of a villain. A character driven by greed and power, he also

    maintains a shred of humanity, enough that when he meets his

    downfall at the movie's end, you still manage to feel compassion

    for him. This is not a movie where the child roots for the good guys

    and rejoices when the bad guy is defeated. This is a story where

    the child sees that there is good in evil and evil in good, and that

    love and compassion is the only power that truly matters.

    If only more children's movies were like The Mouse and Child and

    didn't fall prey to the "short attention span" myths. While I'll admit

    that this movie probably isn't for some children, it is miles ahead of

    any other children's movie that I've seen in terms of content. If you

    want your child to sit still for 90 minutes and have mindless prattle,

    catchy songs and potty humor sieved through their brain, then this

    movie is not for you. But if you're looking for your child to actually

    learn something about life and the world, then you have found

    what you're looking for.
    BubuBORG

    Deep, Lasting, and a forerunner

    This movie helped me along the path to liking stories with more than talking animals and large Disney Musical Productions, though there's a place for those in my viewing. This movie led me to un-childish series (mostly Japanese) with deep meanings and messages. Deep as Akira (though more comprehensible) and just as dark, this story tells about a toy "family" and a toy child's desperate wish for the family to find itself again and stay together despite cruel enemies and crueler friends. Having read the book again recently, it seems that stories Such as "Toy Story" and "A.I. Artificial Intelligence" took a little from this story's soul.
    10runderwo

    Surreal and touching story, not just for children

    I once saw this film when I was a small child. I don't know how old, and I barely remembered anything of it, but for some reason, something was causing this full-length, animated movie to stick in the back of my mind for years as I was growing up. I realized that until I fulfilled this desire to see this film again, some part of me would be at unrest. Now, a good 15 years later and a young adult with more money and quite a different mind, I was finally able to purchase a used, rental copy.

    I wasn't sure at first how I would react. Would I consider this film childish now? Made in 1977, would it show its age considerably?

    I would hate to give away too much of the film, as I firmly believe it must be seen to be understood. The story is simple; a toy mouse and his 'child' embark on a quest to become 'self-winding'. In other words, a journey from childhood to adulthood, from being a robot doing what we are told without question, to becoming an individual with the capability to carry out our own passions and desires. Along their twisted and unsure way to self-fulfillment, they meet a fortune-telling frog, a windup elephant, a muskrat, and other friends, while avoiding the antagonist, the despicable Manny the Rat.

    This probably sounds terrible about right here, but I can assure you that the film is likely nothing that you are thinking it is. This is not a Disney usical, nor does it try to be something that it isn't. It is a story about love, inspiration, and the following and actualization of one's dreams. It is a story about cruelty, defeat, and cowardice. Most of all, it is a story about human life, and the sacrifices we make in the journey to discover our purpose, our place in the world.

    This film is never cheap, never purposely cute, and never insults the viewer. The animation is not overdone, and attention is paid to detail in all the right places. The settings are wonderful and really add to the story and the situation the main characters are in. The music sets just the right mood at the right times.

    I may have enjoyed this film as a child, and I'm not sure what kept it on the back burner through the years at all, but I can definitely say as an adult now the film moved me more than it ever could have as a child. I was literally in tears after the final scene, staring at the credits in silent applause. I had finally found why I couldn't forget about this film, and that is simply because it was excellent and very touching.

    Disney may have the special effects, the storybook plots, and the musical majesty. However, when examining a film at deeper than surface level, Disney in all its camaraderie can't touch this powerful and effective film that tells a story about the human condition and how simply unfair life can be.

    4 Stars. Probably one of the least acclaimed (and most deserving) animated films I have ever had the pleasure of viewing.
    7tavm

    The Mouse and His Child was a very interesting non-Disney animated feature

    After 30 years of knowing about this non-Disney animated feature, I finally decided to watch The Mouse and His Child on YouTube. The animation is both haunting and beautiful in many places. The characters are appealing when they concern the "wind-ups" and some forest animals and suitably creepy when displaying most of the rats. The story seems simple but some characters go on tangents about life that threatens to become pretentious after a while though that happens only for a few minutes. Not much of humor happens here though it was amusing hearing Frank Nelson as a crow, Andy Devine (in his last role) as a frog, and Cloris Leachman as, I think, a bird. I was pleasantly surprised to see in the end credits that of Charles Schulz Creative Associates as one of the companies involved. Oh, and one of the wonderfully weirdest scenes involved seeing the Bosco can show the dog posed with a picture of him looking the same in position ad infinitum (to illustrate infinity). On that note, I guess that's a recommendation for The Mouse and His Child.
    7kevinolzak

    Russell Hoban's 1967 novel adapted for the screen in fitting fashion

    1977's "The Extraordinary Adventures of the Mouse and His Child" was coproduced in Hollywood by the Japanese greeting card company Sanrio, lasting a full year on a budget of $1.5 million. Russell Hoban's 1967 novel proved a difficult subject for what was advertised as a children's animated feature, confirmed by its dismal box office take as a perceived BOMB (as Leonard Maltin casually dismissed it). While the animation itself leaves much to be desired, the story remained faithful to its source and many viewers from a very young age could not forget the lessons gleaned from their long ago acquaintance. We open on a tramp with a barking dog looking through the window of McMacken's Toys to see a clockwork father mouse marching while holding his son in the air, their predetermined fate to repeat this same action every time their owner winds them up through the key in the father's back. The other toys scoff at the child mouse's wish for them all to remain a family unit, only for father and son to fall off the shelf and wind up at the dumpster, where the aforementioned tramp (the distinctive tones of venerable John Carradine) repairs the damage, winds them up, and watches them walk away to an uncertain future with but two words: "be tramps!" Top billed Peter Ustinov has a field day with Manny the Rat, putting toys like them to work as slave labor for his rodent army, not expecting these two mice to escape with the help of Andy Devine's psychic Frog (the final role for the rotund actor with the gravelly voice). The only way that the mouse and his child can be free is to become 'self winding,' thus self reliant and able to cope in a world of infinite dangers, rather than discarded when no longer needed like so many more deserving toys. The climax finds Manny earning his comeuppance and Carradine's tramp surveying things with the last two words: "be happy." The central characters are actually its weakest link, they move from one incident to the next without complaint and let others handle the rough stuff. The drab, cheerless colors are poorly realized, perhaps deliberately, ably invoking a gloomy atmosphere that still managed to sear itself into many childhood memories. Despite special billing and with only four words to speak, John Carradine fans may be forgiven to find their hero ill used, but another animated part loomed on the horizon conceived in his own arthritic image, 1982's "The Secret of NIMH," while his first such feature, "Shinbone Alley," was an adult item from 1969 that also suffered a similar disappointing fate in cinemas and still remains unappreciated. Other vocal talent on hand include Cloris Leachman, Sally Kellerman, Neville Brand, and Jack Benny sidekick Frank Nelson, all very impressive for a title that has only been issued on VHS in the US.

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    Related interests

    Still frame
    Adventure
    Daveigh Chase, Rumi Hiiragi, and Mari Natsuki in Spirited Away (2001)
    Animation
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
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    Family

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Sir Peter Ustinov (Manny the Rat) and Andy Devine (The Frog) also did voice work for Disney's Robin Hood (1973), in which Ustinov voiced Prince John and King Richard, and Devine voiced Friar Tuck.
    • Goofs
      During the spring when an insane Manny shows up and uses a rock to smash the two toy mice, he isn't wearing his scarf, most likely due to the season change, and his tail was briefly missing when he cowers at the sight and aftermath of the damage he did to the toys. They both reappeared later of in his next scene when he and the other rats invade the dollhouse.
    • Quotes

      The Mouse Child: Papa, I'm afraid! I wanna go home! What's gonna happen to us?

      The Mouse: Well, something good, son, as easily as something else. Why, anything can happen.

      Manny the Rat: But it won't! Not this evening, my lads!

    • Crazy credits
      In the Japanese release, the closing credits are altered and feature pictures of characters from the film, which are shown alongside the text on multi-colored backgrounds.
    • Alternate versions
      The American release has closing credits simply displayed against a pink background. However, the Japanese release has alternative closing credits with images of characters (see Crazy Credits).
    • Connections
      Referenced in Hudson Hawk (1991)
    • Soundtracks
      Scat Rat
      Music by Roger Kellaway

      Lyrics by Gene Lees

      Sung by Roger Kellaway

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 18, 1977 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Japan
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Fred Wolf Films
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Extraordinary Adventures of the Mouse and His Child
    • Production companies
      • deFaria-Lockhart-Sanrio Productions
      • Murakami-Wolf Productions
      • Walt DeFaria Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 23m(83 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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