Antoschka (Trickfilm)


Antoschka (Russian Антошка) is a Soviet music drawing film from 1969 with a length of 2:26 minutes. Through its widespread use today, it is part of the cultural heritage of Russia and is also known to children of the 21st century. The film was shot in the central Soviet animation studio Soyuzmultfilm after a scenario by the children's book author Eduard Uspenski, directed by Leonid Nosyriev. He is under his whole length with a song by the composer Vladimir Shainsky under the lyrics of Jurintin. Edit the sourcetext

When the other children want to pick up the red-haired and freckled tokens Antoschka for the potato collecting, this rejects. For this, he later finds an empty bowl at dinner, and he falls from the chair. Dissemination Edit sourcetext

The film Antoschka was created for the first series of the Soviet-Russian cinema-animation series The merry carousel (1969 to 2001). The episode consisted of four short films, which also featured for the first time the hare and wolf figures of the film, known in the Soviet Union. The director Leonid Nosyriev used the figure of Antoschka in two further episodes of The Merry Carrousel (No. 2, 1970, and No. 3, 1972). For all four major actors in the film, director, scenographer, composer, and poet, the film was the beginning of a steep career in Soviet animation.

The song from the film got more prominence when the famous Russian singer boy Seryosha Paramonov (1961-1998) appeared with him in the early 1970s. The exterior of the Antoschka was also a model for the female Russian clown Antoschka of the same name. Weblinks Edit sourcetext

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