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6,3/10
1638
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA strange wind blows into Whoville, making all the inhabitants stay indoors. They know the wind means the Grinch will be in a foul mood and out to do harm. However, young Eukariah decides to... Leggi tuttoA strange wind blows into Whoville, making all the inhabitants stay indoors. They know the wind means the Grinch will be in a foul mood and out to do harm. However, young Eukariah decides to confront the Grinch.A strange wind blows into Whoville, making all the inhabitants stay indoors. They know the wind means the Grinch will be in a foul mood and out to do harm. However, young Eukariah decides to confront the Grinch.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Vincitore di 1 Primetime Emmy
- 1 vittoria in totale
Hans Conried
- The Grinch
- (voce)
- …
Gary Shapiro
- Euchariah
- (voce)
Irene Tedrow
- Mariah
- (voce)
Henry Gibson
- Max
- (voce (canto))
Recensioni in evidenza
A strange wind blows into Whoville, making all the inhabitants stay indoors. They know the wind means the Grinch will be in a foul mood and out to do harm. However, young Eukariah decides to confront the Grinch.
Written by Dr. Seuss but not really up to his usual high standards. The creativeness and imagination are there in terms of strange animals, names for things, narration and general wordplay but the plot is so-so.
Entertaining enough but a bit disappointing too. Certainly not in the same league as How The Grinch Stole Christmas.
Written by Dr. Seuss but not really up to his usual high standards. The creativeness and imagination are there in terms of strange animals, names for things, narration and general wordplay but the plot is so-so.
Entertaining enough but a bit disappointing too. Certainly not in the same league as How The Grinch Stole Christmas.
Parts of this special is really good and other parts are way too odd. It seems they could have created a better story than this one for the Halloween season but it's not a total snore either. The parts that are good are good - very visually stimulating!!
Hans Conried did The Grinch's voice in this one... he's OK but does not have the menacing voice that Boris Karloff gave in his performance in "How the Grinch Stole Christmas". I realize Karloff was Karloff and his voice is very hard to replace but I'm sure they could have found a voice more befitting of the Grinch in this Halloween Special than Conried's (his voice sound too nice).
6/10
Hans Conried did The Grinch's voice in this one... he's OK but does not have the menacing voice that Boris Karloff gave in his performance in "How the Grinch Stole Christmas". I realize Karloff was Karloff and his voice is very hard to replace but I'm sure they could have found a voice more befitting of the Grinch in this Halloween Special than Conried's (his voice sound too nice).
6/10
I never heard of this movie, and when I discovered there was an Emmy- winning Grinch sequel written by Dr. Suess, I had to see it. Unfortunately, it's not very good. I realize I'm going against the tide here, but I suspect all these glowing reviews are by those who first saw the movie as a kid, and thus have an opinion based on a child's mind. From an adult perspective, it's really not very good.
The most surprising thing is how poor the writing is compared to classic Dr. Suess books. I had to check the credits to make sure this was really written by Dr. Suess, because the meters and rhymes are much less elegant than one would expect; it actually sounds like someone trying to copy Suess and failing. I can only suspect that he simply wasn't putting the same effort into perfecting the rhymes of the show as he did in his books.
While the original Grinch story had a wonderful fable-like quality, this is pretty much just standards kid fare, with an overly busy plot and poor songs. But apparently if you're a kid there's a good chance you'll love it.
The most surprising thing is how poor the writing is compared to classic Dr. Suess books. I had to check the credits to make sure this was really written by Dr. Suess, because the meters and rhymes are much less elegant than one would expect; it actually sounds like someone trying to copy Suess and failing. I can only suspect that he simply wasn't putting the same effort into perfecting the rhymes of the show as he did in his books.
While the original Grinch story had a wonderful fable-like quality, this is pretty much just standards kid fare, with an overly busy plot and poor songs. But apparently if you're a kid there's a good chance you'll love it.
Halloween is Grinch Night (aka Grinch Night) revisits the titular Grinch on a different holiday, this time Halloween. The return of the sour sweet wind leads to several disturbances in the wildlife surrounding Whoville which causes a chain reaction of annoyances that spurs the Grinch to embark towards Whoville with his paraphernalia wagon to inflict his grinchly mischief, and only young who Euchariah can stop him.
Although allegedly a prequel to How the Grinch Stole Christmas, in truth the short has very little connective tissue to the previous short. Chuck Jones does not return to direct Grinch Night with the reins instead being handled to Rocky and Bullwinkle veteran director Gerard Baldwin and executive produced by Looney Tunes alum Friz Freleng and Dr. Seuss himself being the sole connective element on both shorts returning to his role as producer and writer respectively. Boris Karloff does not reprise his role as the titular Grinch having passed on 8 years prior, and the role is succeeded by veteran voice actor/character actor Hans Conried best known for voicing Captain Hook in Disney's Peter Pan and playing the villain in another Seuss project, Dr. T in the, in my opinion, overlooked film The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T.
The short certainly maintains the same visual style as its predecessor with its coloring, designs and animation being well produced and bearing the signature Seuss style with ease. Unfortunately Grinch Night suffers heavily when compared to its Christmas based counterpart, but even if that weren't the case this would still be an above average but unexceptional holiday short.
The biggest issue is for the first two thirds of the special not much happens as it's very dialogue heavy and there's not much in the way of a plot or characters that drives the special forward. Most of the beginning parts of the special are the Whos in the village hunkering down awaiting the arrival of the Grinch in fear simply because he's the Grinch. There's never a detailed plan as to what the Grinch plans to do once he arrives in Whoville with his paraphernalia wagon and the stakes of the special feel lacking as a result. The Grinch despite being in a Halloween special also feels less threatening as a presence because even though his name is in the title there really isn't all that much time spent developing the Grinch.
Despite the drawbacks that come from comparison, Grinch Night does boast some positive traits. The music, sounds, and voice acting are effectively done and do well to build that Halloween atmosphere Grinch Night is going for. The third act of the special is also quite effective as once we see the inside of the Grinch's Paraphernalia wagon it leads to many elaborate, creepy, unsettling, and creative designs that bear the signature Seuss weirdness while having a threatening presence that fits in well with the rest of the short. That's probably where Grinch Night succeeds the most, its story is unfortunately lacking in much substance but it does manage to salvage itself with an effective use of atmosphere and unsettling surreal imagery in the last third that make it worth viewing at least once.
Grinch Night's biggest drawback is being in the unfortunate position of being compared to a timeless holiday classic, but even that aside it still has its own personal hurdles to overcome. The first two thirds are marred by turgid pacing and an over abundance of dialogue and a story that just isn't that strong. However the show also makes effective use of its sound design, voice acting and visuals(especially in the third act) that make Grinch Night, not unlike the Halloween candy we consume, a pleasant enough treat that helps overlook its lack of substance.
Although allegedly a prequel to How the Grinch Stole Christmas, in truth the short has very little connective tissue to the previous short. Chuck Jones does not return to direct Grinch Night with the reins instead being handled to Rocky and Bullwinkle veteran director Gerard Baldwin and executive produced by Looney Tunes alum Friz Freleng and Dr. Seuss himself being the sole connective element on both shorts returning to his role as producer and writer respectively. Boris Karloff does not reprise his role as the titular Grinch having passed on 8 years prior, and the role is succeeded by veteran voice actor/character actor Hans Conried best known for voicing Captain Hook in Disney's Peter Pan and playing the villain in another Seuss project, Dr. T in the, in my opinion, overlooked film The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T.
The short certainly maintains the same visual style as its predecessor with its coloring, designs and animation being well produced and bearing the signature Seuss style with ease. Unfortunately Grinch Night suffers heavily when compared to its Christmas based counterpart, but even if that weren't the case this would still be an above average but unexceptional holiday short.
The biggest issue is for the first two thirds of the special not much happens as it's very dialogue heavy and there's not much in the way of a plot or characters that drives the special forward. Most of the beginning parts of the special are the Whos in the village hunkering down awaiting the arrival of the Grinch in fear simply because he's the Grinch. There's never a detailed plan as to what the Grinch plans to do once he arrives in Whoville with his paraphernalia wagon and the stakes of the special feel lacking as a result. The Grinch despite being in a Halloween special also feels less threatening as a presence because even though his name is in the title there really isn't all that much time spent developing the Grinch.
Despite the drawbacks that come from comparison, Grinch Night does boast some positive traits. The music, sounds, and voice acting are effectively done and do well to build that Halloween atmosphere Grinch Night is going for. The third act of the special is also quite effective as once we see the inside of the Grinch's Paraphernalia wagon it leads to many elaborate, creepy, unsettling, and creative designs that bear the signature Seuss weirdness while having a threatening presence that fits in well with the rest of the short. That's probably where Grinch Night succeeds the most, its story is unfortunately lacking in much substance but it does manage to salvage itself with an effective use of atmosphere and unsettling surreal imagery in the last third that make it worth viewing at least once.
Grinch Night's biggest drawback is being in the unfortunate position of being compared to a timeless holiday classic, but even that aside it still has its own personal hurdles to overcome. The first two thirds are marred by turgid pacing and an over abundance of dialogue and a story that just isn't that strong. However the show also makes effective use of its sound design, voice acting and visuals(especially in the third act) that make Grinch Night, not unlike the Halloween candy we consume, a pleasant enough treat that helps overlook its lack of substance.
Halloween is Grinch Night is not going to appeal to everybody, people will find it hugely entertaining and others will find it bizarre. I do belong in the former category, but I can certainly understand the latter opinion as well. It is not as good as How the Grinch Stole Christmas, but is still very impressive. The animation is very good, it is full of colour and the Paraphanelia Wagon sequence is memorably trippy. The music is wonderful, I love the jauntiness of the incidental scoring and the songs are very catchy. Max also sings and his song I found touching as a child and still do at 20. There are more faithful Dr Seuss adaptations out there, but the rhymes that form the dialogue are witty and elegant at the same time, while the story is briskly paced and bewitchingly oddball. The characters are ones you engage with, The Grinch himself will live long in the memory, and the voice acting is superb especially the soothing then terrifying narrator/Grinch of Hans Conreid, a worthy successor to Boris Karloff. So all in all, a great and underrated special. 9/10 Bethany Cox
Lo sapevi?
- Versioni alternativeThis special was released on videotape retitled as "It's Grinch Night!", with a new title card in place of the old title in the credits (a video, not film, edit, of the grinch tapping his foot as the three words appear one at a time on the left) and commercial break bumpers of the Grinch's face removed. (The box mentions the original title in small print to avoid confusion.)
- ConnessioniFeatured in Dr. Seuss Playhouse Video (1989)
- Colonne sonoreI Wouldn't Go Out On a Night Like This
Performed by Hal Smith
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By what name was Halloween Is Grinch Night (1977) officially released in India in English?
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