Red Riding Hood Rotten Tomatoes
Deadtime Stories | |
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Directed by | Jeffrey Delman |
Produced by | William Paul |
Written by | Jeffrey Delman J. Edward Kiernan Charles F. Shelton |
Story by | Jeffrey Delman |
Starring |
|
Music by | Larry Juris |
Cinematography | Daniel B. Canton |
Edited by | William Szarka |
Scary Stuff Productions[1] | |
Distributed by |
|
| |
83 minutes | |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $2.7 million[2] |
- Red Riding Hood Review Rotten Tomatoes
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Based on 7 reviews collected on Rotten Tomatoes, Batman: Under the Red Hood has an approval rating of 100% with an average rating of a 7.3/10. It was the highest rated direct-to-video Batman film until the release of The Dark Knight Returns. The film grossed $11,655,521 in domestic home video sales.
Deadtime Stories (also known internationally as Freaky Fairy-Tales and The Griebels from Deadtime Stories) is a 1986 American horror comedyanthology film co-written and directed by Jeffery Delman in his directorial debut. In the film, a babysitting uncle tells his nephew three stories. The first story involves a slave used by two witches, who are attempting to resurrect their sister. The second story is based on 'Little Red Riding Hood', where a teenage girl mistakenly picks up a werewolf's medicine to her grandmother. The third story, based on 'Goldilocks', tells about three escaped mental patients who share their hideaway with a murderess.
Production was filmed in New York City in 1984, originally titled as Freaky Fairy Tales. After screening at the 1986 Cannes Film Festival, it was released on November 26, 1986, where it grossed $2.7 million at the box office.
- 4Release
Plot[edit]
An impatient uncle attempts to calm his rambunctious nephew by telling him three horror stories. The first story tells about a fisherman's son who is sold as a slave to two witches that are trying to resurrect their sister. The second story is about a teenage girl who picks up the medication for her grandmother, which is mixed up with medicine intended for a werewolf. In the third story, three mental patients escape and share their country house hideaway with a murderess.
- Rotten Tomatoes score: 7%. Summary: In the romantic comedy 'The Big Wedding,' an expansive family of in-laws gathers over the course of a wedding weekend to oversee the nuptials of Missy (Seyfried.
- Red Riding Hood is a 2011 American romance horror film directed by Catherine Hardwicke, produced by Leonardo DiCaprio and starring Amanda Seyfried as the title role, from a screenplay by David Leslie Johnson. The film is very loosely based on the folk tale Little Red Riding Hood collected.
- Weinsteins Are 'Hoodwinked' by CGI Red Riding Hood Comedy. By Scott Weinberg May 18. Movies with 99% Tomatometer Scores on Rotten Tomatoes – All Charlize Theron Movies Ranked – The 100% Club: Movies With a 100% Tomatometer Score on Rotten Tomatoes – The Best Movies of 2019 (So Far) – Best New Films of the Year.
Cast[edit]
- Scott Valentine as Peter
- Nicole Picard as Rachel
- Matt Mitler as Willie
- Cathryn de Prume as Goldi Lox
- Melissa Leo as Judith 'MaMa' Baer
- Kathy Fleig as Miranda
- Phyllis Craig as Hanagohl
- Michael Mesmer as Uncle Mike
- Brian DePersia as Little Brian
- Kevin Hannon as Beresford 'Papa' Baer
- Timothy Rule as Wilmont 'Baby' Baer
- Anne Redfern as Florinda
- Casper Roos as Vicar
- Barbara Seldon as Seductress
- Leigh Kilton as Seductress
- Lesley Sank as Reviving Magoga
- Lisa Cain as Living Magoga
- Jeffrey Delman as Strangling Man
- Michael Berlinger as Greg
- Fran Lopate as Grandma
- John Bachelder as Drugstore Clerk
- Caroline Carrigan as Nurse
- Oded Carmi as Groundskeeper / Postman
- Heather L. Baley as Girl in Store
- Thea as Dog
- Bob Trimboli as Lt. Jack B. Nimble
- Harvey Pierce as Capt. Jack B. Quick
- Rondell Sheridan as Looney Bin Guard
- Beth Felty as Reporter
- Patrick McCord as Anchor
- Michele Mars as Waitress
- Ron Bush as Bank Guard
- Bryant Tausek as Man At Car
- Suzanna Vaucher as Weather Girl
- Leif Wennestrom as Dead Body
- Jim Nocell as Dead Body
- Evan L. Delman as Police Sergeant
Production[edit]
Principal photography was shot as Freaky Fairy Tales in New York City in 1984, and finished post-production in 1985.[1] The title was initially changed to Deadtime, but was settled as Deadtime Stories.[1]
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Release[edit]
Deadtime Stories was screened at the 1986 Cannes Film Festival. After being acquired, the film was released on November 26, 1986 in the Southeastern United States, and premiered in Los Angeles on February 20, 1987.[1] It earned $708,112 on its opening weekend in 255 theaters, and grossed $2.7 million during its theatrical course.[2]
Home video[edit]
It was originally released on VHS in 1987 by Continental Video and Magnum Entertainment in the United States, and by Entertainment in Video in the United Kingdom where it was titled as Freaky Fairy-Tales.[3][4][5]Mill Creek Entertainment released the film on DVD on September 13, 2015 as part of their ‘Chilling Classics: 50 Movie Pack’, but was discontinued after it was mistaken to be in the public domain.[6] The film was released again on DVD by Image Entertainment under license from Cinevision International, which ran 12 minutes shorter.[7]Scream Factory, a substinary of Shout! Factory, released Deadtime Stories on Blu-Ray and DVD as a combo pack on February 28, 2017.[8]
References[edit]
- ^ abcdefg'Deadtime Stories (1986)'. American Film Institute Catalog. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
- ^ abc'Deadtime Stories (1986)'. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
- ^'Deadtime Stories'. VHSCollector. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
- ^'Deadtime Stories'. VHSCollector. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
- ^'Freaky Fairy-Tales'. VHSCollector. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
- ^'Chilling Classics: 50 Movie Pack'. DVDEmpire.com. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
- ^'Deadtime Stories'. DVDEmpire.com. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
- ^'Deadtime Stories'. Scream Factory. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
External links[edit]
- Deadtime Stories on IMDb
- Dead Time Stories at AllMovie
- Deadtime Stories at Rotten Tomatoes
Revolting Rhymes | |
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Based on | Revolting Rhymes by Roald Dahl |
Directed by | Jakob Schuh Jan Lachauer |
Starring | |
Theme music composer | Ben Locket |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of episodes | 2 |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Martin Pope Michael Rose |
Running time | 56 minutes |
Production company(s) | |
Distributor | BBC |
Release | |
Original network | BBC One |
Picture format | |
Audio format | Stereo |
Original release | 26 December – 27 December 2016 |
Revolting Rhymes is a 2016 British-German computer animated TV film based on the book of the same name written by Roald Dahl and illustrated by Quentin Blake.
Retelling and intertwining five of the six poems from the book, the two-part film was produced by Magic Light Pictures and is narrated by Dominic West. The films were created in Berlin (Magic Light Pictures Berlin) and Cape Town (Triggerfish Animation Studios).[1] It aired on PBS in the United States.
The first part was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film at the 90th Academy Awards.[2]
- 1Plot
- 3Reception
Plot[edit]
Part 1[edit]
An elderly woman named Miss Hunt is sitting by herself in a booth at an empty restaurant when a wolf in a trenchcoat enters and requests sitting with her. Miss Hunt allows the wolf and learns he is waiting for an old friend, revealing that she is waiting to babysit the children in the house across the street. Upon noticing Miss Hunt's book of fairy tales, the wolf expresses disdain for Red Riding Hood and states that Snow White is actually a blonde. He then reveals that he once had two nephews, Rolf and Rex, and begins to tell the story of what happened to them.
Some years earlier, a young Red Riding Hood was selling flowers on the street and sold a sprig of mistletoe to a young princess named Snow White, who dropped it into the grave of her recently deceased mother. Red soon joins Snow White by dropping her own remaining flowers in the grave and comforting Snow, the two quickly become friends. Snow's father, the king, soon finds a new queen, the nasty Miss Maclahose. She brings with her to the castle a magic mirror that always gives an accurate answer to any question asked of it, mirror constantly telling Maclahose that she is the fairest in the land until Snow grows up and the mirror declares her the fairest. Outraged, Maclahose orders the Huntsman to kill Snow and bring back her heart.
Meanwhile, the adult Red now runs her own flower stall and keeps her savings in a piggy bank at Porkley's Bank. Red and Snow were enjoying themselves in the forest when the Huntsman appears and kidnaps Snow, dropping his pistol which Red picked up while failing to save Snow. At the same time, Rolf has a falling out with his uncle and his search for a meal results in him eating Red's grandmother before putting on her clothes to eat Red. But Red is not disturbed, briefly confusing him before shooting him dead with the pistol – yielding herself a new wolfskin coat which she points out to the wolf while mourning Snow in the forest.
But Snow manages to convince the Huntsman to spare her life, fleeing while he buys a cow heart at a butcher shop and present it to Maclahose, who eagerly devours it. Snow ends up in the city where she becomes a cook and maid for seven former jockeys, who are compulsive and unsuccessful gamblers at horse racing. Meahwhile, Red attempts to withdraw her saving from Porkley's Bank. The pig in charge of the bank lies that the bank is broke due to a bad economy, having embezzled the investments in a construction project run by two other pigs, who plan to build houses of straw and sticks.
As the two pigs erect a billboard for their new venture, Rex appears and quickly devours them both before making his way to the banker pig. But the banker pig secures himself behind his thick teller window, while the wolf resolves to come back to blow up the bank with dynamite. The banker pig calls Red after seeing a newspaper article about her killing Rolf, with Red killing Rex as he lights the fuse. The banker pig takes Red into a hidden back room to thank her with a romantic gesture, only to be shot dead when Red finds the bank actually has plenty of money along with her broken piggy bank.
Meanwhile, Snows resolves to help the jockeys by sneaking back into her father's castle and taking the magic mirror so they use it to correctly predict the winning horse. When the mirror declares the winning horse of an upcoming race to be Mistletoe, it saddens Snow with the mirror showing her Red on a bus en route to the city. Snow meets her at the bus station and the two friends happily reunite, Red offering the money that she withdrew from the bank and kept in a pigskin travelling case she made from the banker pig. As everyone watches the race, Red gives Snow a fur coat made from Rex's skin as they and the jockeys became millionaires from their venture.
As the story ends, it is revealed that wolf has tied up and gagged Miss Hunt in a closet after putting her clothes to get his revenge on Red for killing his nephews. Snow arrives at the house across the street to meet Red, who lives there with her two children. Despite concerns that their babysitter has not come, Red's daughter persuades her mother to leave her and her brother alone until Miss Hunt arrives. Red and Snow leave together with the wolf proceeding to the house in the guise of Miss Hunt.
Part 2[edit]
Red's children instantly see through the wolf's disguise; the daughter is shocked by his appearance while her brother is entertained by the wolf's jovial air. The wolf takes the boy into the kitchen and starts cooking a pot of vegetables, menacingly yet playfully stating his intent to eat the boy. The girl deters him by announcing that it is story time; the wolf begrudgingly sets a timer and follows the children into the living room. The girl tells the wolf that he must read two stories, one for each child. The boy asks to hear Jack and the Beanstalk; but the wolf states that he cannot tell the story without also talking about Cinderella, a favorite story of Red's daughter. The wolf claims that the stories they know are toned-down versions of the same 'true' story, which he proceeds to tell.
Jack lives in a ramshackle house with his abusive mother and harbours a crush on his next door neighbour Cinderella, who is abused by her wicked stepsisters. One morning, Cinderella sneaks a jar of jam for herself. Jack attempts to warn her when the short stepsister notices the missing jar. While Cinderella dismisses him and ends up being thrown in the basement by her stepsisters, Jack is berated by his mother and told to take their old cow into town to sell it. Jack comes across a magic shop and ends up trading the cow to its owner, a magic fairy, for a bean. His mother berates him upon his return and throws the bean into a rubbish pile before beating him with her vacuum's handle.
Meanwhile, after her stepsisters leave for a disco held at the castle, Cinderella's cries for help attract the fairy and she reluctantly enters the house. Cinderella asks her for a beautiful set of clothes and a coach so that she may attend the disco and win the prince's affection. The fairy grants her wish, but warns her that she must leave the palace by midnight. Cinderella instantly catches the eye of everyone at the disco, including the prince, with whom she shares a dance as her jealous stepsisters look on. As the clock strikes midnight, Cinderella attempts to flee; but the prince tries to stop her, tearing off her dress in the process. A humiliated Cinderella runs off in her underwear, losing one of her silver shoes on the palace stairs. The prince declares that whoever the shoe fits will become his bride; but he carelessly leaves the shoe on a beer keg, allowing the short stepsister to replace it with one of her own smelly shoes.
The next morning, Jack discovers that the bean has sprouted into an enormous beanstalk during the night. His mother is unimpressed by this sight until Jack points out that the beanstalk's leaves are made of solid gold. Jack's mother sends him up to fetch them, but he quickly descends when he finds a menacing giant at the top who threatens to eat him upon smelling him. Jack's mother decides to ascend herself after berating Jack for not bathing enough, only to be eaten herself. Undeterred, Jack decides to bathe, and then climbs up and collects the leaves after seeing the giant unable to detect him.
In town, the prince lays out the short stepsister's shoe for different women to try on, but the shoe is too big to fit anyone. When the short stepsister tries it on, the prince is horrified to see that it fits her and attempts to get out of marrying her. However, the short stepsister reminds him of the vow he had made; and the prince chops off her head in response. When the prince removes the head of the tall stepsister, a heartbroken Cinderella expresses disgust at the prince's penchant for chopping off heads for fun. But the prince, who does not recognize her, orders her head chopped off too and chases her down with his guards to a dead end.
By this time, Red's son has fallen asleep while the wide-eyed daughter asks the wolf about Cinderella's fate. He prepares to give her a sad ending, with Cinderella being cornered and near decapitation; but seeing the girl's troubled expression convinces him to have the magic fairy appears to help Cinderella. Cinderella tells the fairy that she is no longer interested in princes and money, but simply wishes to find a decent man. The fairy turns the prince and his guards into frogs and leaves Cinderella in front of her old magic shop, which Jack bought and made into a jam shop. The two later marry and have two children, living happily ever after.
With both children now asleep, the wolf has a change of heart and decides not to exact revenge. Red returns home from her outing to find her sleeping children on the couch, along with Miss Hunt's book of fairy tales. She is then shocked to discover the wolf, who she recognizes from their earlier encounter; but the wolf simply wishes her good night and departs. Red sits at her kitchen table in disbelief, eating the stew the wolf had prepared; while the wolf exits a bus in the wilderness, sheds Miss Hunt's clothes, and returns to the woods.
Cast[edit]
- Dominic West as the Wolf, the Magic Fairy and the Giant
- Rob Brydon as the King, Rolf, the Banker Pig and the Short Sister
- Bertie Carvel as the Mirror, the Huntsman, the Senior Dwarf and the Prince
- David Walliams as Rex, the Straw and Twig Pigs, Bystander, the Tall Sister and Jack's Mother
- Tamsin Greig as Miss Hunt, Miss Maclahose and Grandma
- Rose Leslie as Red Riding Hood
- Dolly Heavey as Young Red Riding Hood
- Gemma Chan as Snow White
- Eden Muckle as Young Snow White
- Isaac Hempstead Wright as Jack
- Bel Powley as Cindy
- Dylan Issberner as Red Riding Hood's son
- Amelie Forester-Evans as Red Riding Hood's daughter
Reception[edit]
Critical reception[edit]
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 85% based on 13 reviews.[3]
Awards[edit]
Year | Presenter/Festival | Award/Category | Status |
---|---|---|---|
2018 | Academy Awards | Best Animated Short Film | Nominated[4] |
British Academy Children's Awards | Best Animation | Won |
Red Riding Hood Review Rotten Tomatoes
Home media[edit]
Revolting Rhymes was released on DVD by Entertainment One and 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment on 6 February 2017.[5]
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References[edit]
- ^Hopewell, John; Lang, Jamie (8 December 2017). ''My Life as a Zucchini,' 'Revolting Rhymes' Top European Animation Awards'. Variety. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
- ^'90th Academy Award Animated Short Film Nominees'. The Oscars 2018. Disney Enterprises, Inc. 23 January 2018. Retrieved 23 January 2018.
- ^'Revolting Rhymes (2016)'. Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 22 February 2018.
- ^'90th Academy Award Animated Short Film Nominees'. 23 January 2018. Retrieved 23 January 2018.
- ^'Revolting Rhymes'. 6 February 2017 – via Amazon.
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External links[edit]
- Revolting Rhymes on IMDb
- Revolting Rhymes on IMDb
- Revolting Rhymes at BBC Programmes
- Revolting Rhymes at The Big Cartoon DataBase