IMDb RATING
6.9/10
1.8K
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Tales of the Night weaves together six exotic fables each unfolding in a unique locale, from Tibet, to medieval Europe, to the Land of the Dead. From the imagination of internationally renow... Read allTales of the Night weaves together six exotic fables each unfolding in a unique locale, from Tibet, to medieval Europe, to the Land of the Dead. From the imagination of internationally renowned animator Michel Ocelot.Tales of the Night weaves together six exotic fables each unfolding in a unique locale, from Tibet, to medieval Europe, to the Land of the Dead. From the imagination of internationally renowned animator Michel Ocelot.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Julien Béramis
- Boy
- (voice)
Marine Griset
- Girl
- (voice)
Yves Barsacq
- Théo
- (voice)
Sabine Pakora
- Cultivatrice
- (voice)
- …
Christophe Rossignon
- Bishop
- (voice)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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To any one reading "I wonder what kids will think of this. Because they might be the main target audience for this." and wondering the same. I can say that in the showing I saw there were a lot of kids and many French kids. No one was talking, everyone in the room was taken in and concentrating - no one left for the toilet - the only time there was any movement or sound was when the kids (and adults) were laughing with joy - especially at the "tom-tom magie". Each story contained morels and some potentiality tough subject matter for children, but in a well balanced way. I saw a subtitled version - that was not 3D. A beautiful story for beautiful people of any age.
This is perfect for whoever wants to learn French. It's enunciated clearly and slowly, just like DuoLingo stories. The animation is silhouette style, like shadow play, but carefully done. The stories remind me of 1001 tales of Arabian nights, which were the entertainment of my childhood nights, so maybe I was seduced by the nostalgia, but I liked the show.
There is something that I disliked. The stories start from a point where three characters create worlds and stories using a computer and robot tailors and then they act out their fantasies. But I had no idea who these people were. It feels like you are dropped in the middle of something that you should have been aware of, but you're not. A fun premise to be sure, especially since it can entice a child to build their own stories or at least participate in something like that.
Also, I watched this on Netflix and for the life of me I don't understand why they would show it as a movie and not as a series. It is clearly composed of six independent stories, which would have been helpful to know before I started watching it.
Therefore my conclusion is that it is good to watch with your child, especially if you want to teach them the language, and I hope this review helps you to know that it's a collection of six separate stories and one doesn't have to spend an hour and a half to get to the end.
There is something that I disliked. The stories start from a point where three characters create worlds and stories using a computer and robot tailors and then they act out their fantasies. But I had no idea who these people were. It feels like you are dropped in the middle of something that you should have been aware of, but you're not. A fun premise to be sure, especially since it can entice a child to build their own stories or at least participate in something like that.
Also, I watched this on Netflix and for the life of me I don't understand why they would show it as a movie and not as a series. It is clearly composed of six independent stories, which would have been helpful to know before I started watching it.
Therefore my conclusion is that it is good to watch with your child, especially if you want to teach them the language, and I hope this review helps you to know that it's a collection of six separate stories and one doesn't have to spend an hour and a half to get to the end.
If someone were to ask if I recommended Tales of the Night, the answer would be yes. It is a very simple film and doesn't break new ground from a thematic perspective. That doesn't matter because so much of the movie is beautifully done. The animation makes for a visual treat, not just the shadowy silhouettes for the character designs and the drama being conveyed but also the backgrounds with the gloriously vivid colours. The music doesn't overbear what's happening in the six featured stories, as well as being sensitive, lushly orchestrated and lyrical it allows the stories to speak for themselves. And speak for themselves they do, the moralising, positive messaging and lessons do not preach and are ones that anybody young and old can relate fully to as well as being important values. There is an Aesop's Fables feel at times especially in The Werewolf, not that that it is an issue, far from it. And the stories do have great atmosphere while never trying to be too complicated, The Boy Who Never Lied and Boy Tam-Tam are somewhat graphic yet magical. Personal favourite has to go to The Doe Girl and the Architect's Son, which contains the best animation of the film and is quite poignant. The characters don't break new ground either but they have a real charm to them and carry their stories very well. In fact, if there was anything that wasn't quite right it was the old-theatre-and-re-enacting links, not a bad idea but at times clumsily handled. Other than that, Tales of the Night is a very good film indeed. 9/10 Bethany Cox
I picked this out for myself to watch, thinking it would be too "artsy" for my four year old, but she was immediately captivated and plunked down on my lap to watch the whole thing. I was quite surprised at this since she is usually a fan of the Disney princess-genre, ha ha. It is a visually striking art film, and some of the stories have a couple of scary moments or themes for a little one, but we appreciated the simple stories that were told in a unique style of animation. The shadow-box-puppet style with only eyes highlighted on the characters actually fit the fairy-tale type tales very suitably, with a moral to the story, or a twist at the end, so don't expect Shakespeare level - it really is intended for children. We will likely watch this again and again.
Tales of the Night is a 2011 French computer silhouette animation feature film directed by Michel Ocelot. I didn't see it in its 3D theatrical release... so no comment on that. A girl, a boy and an old cinema technician create stories using a machine. They then perform each story. The six stories are all clunky dialog clunky world culture tales.
I likes some of the stories more than others. But for better or worst, they have the feeling of unsophisticated old fairy tales. The gimmick of the old cinema machine to lead into each story just isn't worth the time. And I have to say it diminishes the stories if they just make it up. It'd be better if they made it as some kind of cultural discovery like the Grimm brothers. The style of animation also don't give the facial expressions needed for emotional depths. But it gets some cool points and fits the simplistic stories.
I likes some of the stories more than others. But for better or worst, they have the feeling of unsophisticated old fairy tales. The gimmick of the old cinema machine to lead into each story just isn't worth the time. And I have to say it diminishes the stories if they just make it up. It'd be better if they made it as some kind of cultural discovery like the Grimm brothers. The style of animation also don't give the facial expressions needed for emotional depths. But it gets some cool points and fits the simplistic stories.
Did you know
- TriviaThis film is made up of varied short stories using Michel Ocelot's "silhouette animation" techniques.
- ConnectionsEdited from Dragons and Princess: L'Élue de la Ville d'or (2010)
- How long is Tales of the Night?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $10,975
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $7,154
- Sep 30, 2012
- Gross worldwide
- $1,762,194
- Runtime
- 1h 24m(84 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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