Un méchant nommé Torchesac vole la flûte magique des Schtroumpfs, un instrument qui fait danser les gens comme des fous, et l'utilise pour les voler. Le roi envoie Pirlouit retrouver le vole... Tout lireUn méchant nommé Torchesac vole la flûte magique des Schtroumpfs, un instrument qui fait danser les gens comme des fous, et l'utilise pour les voler. Le roi envoie Pirlouit retrouver le voleur et récupérer la flûte.Un méchant nommé Torchesac vole la flûte magique des Schtroumpfs, un instrument qui fait danser les gens comme des fous, et l'utilise pour les voler. Le roi envoie Pirlouit retrouver le voleur et récupérer la flûte.
- Sénéchal
- (voix)
- Le buveur
- (voix)
- Le marchand
- (voix)
- (as Angélo Bardi)
- Le visiteur
- (voix)
- Johan
- (voix)
- Homnibus
- (voix)
- (as Henri Cremieux)
- Mortaille
- (voix)
- Dame Barde
- (voix)
- Le pêcheur
- (voix)
- (as Henri Labussiere)
- Torchesac
- (voix)
- (as Albert Medina)
- Pirlouit
- (voix)
- Le roi
- (voix)
- Le garde
- (voix)
- …
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"The Smurfs and the Magic Flute" is an uninteresting but innocuous animated feature film bringing the popular hit of books, tv and merchandising, the Smurfs (or "Schtroumpfs" as they were originally known in parts of Europe) to the big screen. Its success in U. S. distribution just before the last Christmas season is more a testament to effective marketing and a vacuum of new, G-rated product than to the virtues of the film itself.
Weak, episodic storyline, set in the Middle Ages, has a bandit named Oilycreep stealing the magic flute (which has the power to cause people to dance uncontrollably when it is played) from Pee Wee at the king's castle. Pee Wee, whose dubbed voice vaguely resembles that of comic Pee Wee Herman, sets out on a dull trek with his pal Johan to retrieve the magical instrument.
Hypnotized by a friendly wizard, the twosome are transported to the land of the Smurfs, tiny blue creatures who all look alike and wear white hats and pants, except for their 542-year-old leader Papa Smurf, whose hat and pants are red. The Smurfs fabricate a second magic flute for Pee Wee, who ultimately bests Oilycreep in a final reel musical battle. Film has no relationship to Mozart's opera "The Magic Flute".
Despite their billing and title come-on, the Smurfs do not appear (save for a tiny blue hand entering the frame at one point) until the second half of the film. A defensive song designed to demonstrate hw individual Smurfs act like their names only proves that the character animation here lacks the differentiation of say, Disney's Seven Dwarfs.
The film utilizes rather limited animation techniques, with pretty but strictly static backgrounds against which the characters move. Absence of much fantasy material is disappointing and the labored gags aren't funny. The Smurfs themselves have irritating resonant voices and the premise of substituting the word "Smurf" for nouns and verbs in their language is run into the ground. Michel Legrand's soundtrack score (to which additional music has been added for the U. S. release version) is subpar.
Earning money with a musical instrument is possible on the right subway platform.
Mind you, the musician in this animated movie is making money through magic.
When the king's jester Peewit (Cameron Clarke) gets a hold of a magical flute that can make people spontaneously dance when played, he attracts the attention of a merchant McCreep (Mike Reynolds), who steals the wind instrument to rob villagers.
Now, Peewit and a knight's squire named Johan must use a wizard's spell in order to convene with the mystical blue-skinned forest creatures that first forged the flute if they hope to change McCreep's tune.
Written and directed by the Smurf's creator Peyo, this 1976 hand-drawn feature from Belgium set the standard of what would go on to become the 1980s Saturday morning cartoon phenomenon; mostly because it feels like three episodes pieced together.
Incidentally, when Smurf's hear the magic flute played they turn rabid.
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- Anecdotes"La flûte à six schtroumpfs" is not the first adaptation of Peyo's "Smurfs" comics, theatrical or otherwise. In the early 1960s, T.V.A. Dupuis produced several black & white animated shorts, adapted faithfully from the comics, for Belgian television. In 1965, 5 of these shorts were collected into a theatrical compilation film titled Les aventures des Schtroumpfs (1965). While the film itself has been scarcely seen since its original release, some of the original TV shorts can be seen on display at the Belgian Comic Strip Center in Brussels.
- Citations
Peewit: I'm so sick!
Le grand Schtroumpf: Peewit, be brave. You'll soon feel better.
Brainy Smurf: Hopefully you weren't foolish enough to eat bad food. Like strawberries with onions and tuna.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Michel Legrand: Sans demi-mesure (2018)
- Bandes originalesLa Flûte à Six Schtroumpfs
("The Flute With Six Smurfs")
(The film's instrumental theme music; used in the main title sequence, in the scene where Johan and Peewit follow a Smurf to the Land of Smurfs, and the ending credits)
Music by Michel Legrand
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- The Smurfs and the Magic Flute
- Sociétés de production
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Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 11 234 220 $US
- Montant brut mondial
- 11 234 220 $US