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IMDbPro

O Flautista Mágico

Título original: The Pied Piper of Hamelin
  • Filme para televisão
  • 1957
  • Unrated
  • 1 h 29 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,7/10
609
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Jim Backus, Claude Rains, Van Johnson, and Lori Nelson in O Flautista Mágico (1957)
Contos de fadasFamíliaFantasiaMusical

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaOverwhelmed by rats, a medieval town hires a magical piper who can rid the town of the pest in exchange for gold but the crooked mayor has no intention of honoring the deal.Overwhelmed by rats, a medieval town hires a magical piper who can rid the town of the pest in exchange for gold but the crooked mayor has no intention of honoring the deal.Overwhelmed by rats, a medieval town hires a magical piper who can rid the town of the pest in exchange for gold but the crooked mayor has no intention of honoring the deal.

  • Direção
    • Bretaigne Windust
  • Roteiristas
    • Irving Taylor
    • Hal Stanley
    • Robert Browning
  • Artistas
    • Van Johnson
    • Claude Rains
    • Lori Nelson
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,7/10
    609
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Bretaigne Windust
    • Roteiristas
      • Irving Taylor
      • Hal Stanley
      • Robert Browning
    • Artistas
      • Van Johnson
      • Claude Rains
      • Lori Nelson
    • 32Avaliações de usuários
    • 2Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos4

    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal31

    Editar
    Van Johnson
    Van Johnson
    • Pied Piper…
    Claude Rains
    Claude Rains
    • Mayor of Hamelin
    Lori Nelson
    Lori Nelson
    • Mara
    Jim Backus
    Jim Backus
    • King's Emissary
    Kay Starr
    • John's Mother
    Alan Aaronson
      Stanley Adams
      Stanley Adams
      • Second Counselor
      • (não creditado)
      Kathie Anderson
        Oliver Blake
        Oliver Blake
        • Leading Citizen
        • (não creditado)
        Tex Brodus
        • Townsman
        • (não creditado)
        Les Clark
          Brian Corcoran
            Cyril Delevanti
            Cyril Delevanti
              James Elsegood
                James Gonzalez
                James Gonzalez
                • Citizen
                • (não creditado)
                Alex Goudovitch
                  Fred Hansen
                    Jess Kirkpatrick
                    Jess Kirkpatrick
                      • Direção
                        • Bretaigne Windust
                      • Roteiristas
                        • Irving Taylor
                        • Hal Stanley
                        • Robert Browning
                      • Elenco e equipe completos
                      • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

                      Avaliações de usuários32

                      5,7609
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                      10

                      Avaliações em destaque

                      AustinKatAnne

                      A Childhood Memory for Me, Too

                      The DVD of this movie appeared in a bin for $1 at a one of the chain stores, and as soon as I saw the photo of Van Johnson in that incredible hat, I had to buy it.

                      My mom had a big crush on Van Johnson so any appearance of his was a must see event - when it was first shown we kids were all gathered around the black & white TV. (Although the show was made in color, we didn't see it that way until later reruns. No one I knew had color television before the mid-sixties.)Certain scenes didn't look too familiar, but others produced a slight chill, reminding me of how spooky those knights on the clock seemed to a kid. (Maybe that's why the medieval clock at Frankenmuth, Michigan was disturbing to me as an adult tourist??) The colors on this particular DVD were bright but not really garish. As a 9 year-old, I was given a copy of the Robert Browning poem with Kate Greenaway illustrations. The original story was a lot simpler, and darker, with no Hollywood ending.

                      The behavior of the town's government is startlingly relevant for today's world, as the politicians sing about 'Prestige', unfurl long documents full of legal phrases in an attempt to cheat the Piper, show their willingness to accept credit for someone else's work, and refuse to help the neighboring town which has been swept away in a flood. The other town's children are scattered and hungry, but the Mayor and council send a sympathy note on fine vellum instead of food or help.

                      I don't know if a child of today would sit through the songs, but for the sum of one dollar, you can play it for a child you know and observe their reaction!
                      10Saturnicus

                      One of the best musicals of all time.

                      Do not believe bad reviews of this movie! I have loved it for as long as I remember. The symphonic music that the last review stupidly criticized is lovely pieces by genius composer Edvard Grieg. I still get chills when Van Johnson sings a song boasting of his accomplishments, with the Grieg piece Anitra's dance as the melody. Plus Claude Rains sings! This movie has great songs, great sets, great costumes, and is fun for everybody. I would recommend this movie to anyone who likes the story of the pied piper, or those who like musicals. It is a gorgeous movie. It has a perfect cast. I rate this a 10.

                      Geoffrey K.
                      7SimonJack

                      A decent early TV musical of an old fairy tale poem

                      "The Pied Piper of Hamlin" was one of the earliest musicals made for TV. It was a big success for NBC when broadcast over the Thanksgiving weekend in 1957. It became a TV holiday favorite after that for several years. No doubt, the film was much more highly regarded in its day than in modern times. Yet, it remains a good production, an interesting version of a famous tale and a fair musical.

                      This film is unusual in a number of ways. First, it's a film based on an ancient legend that became most famous with an 1842 poem of the same title, by Robert Browning. Second, its screenplay uses dialog of rhyme along the lines of that written by Browning in his poem. Third, it has a cast with some prominent actors of the day, most of whom had not made a musical before or who were little known for singing. For these reasons alone, this film has some historical significance.

                      The film would probably be better known and highly regarded in the 21st century if there had been prominent singing actors in the lead roles. And, the musical score, while fairly good, could have been much better. As it is, most of the songs are in a general range of the speaking voice set to music. They do have melody - more than the spoken range set to music that was Rex Harrison's singing in "My Fair Lady."

                      Still, it's back to the unusual that adds some value to the film. Van Johnson has the double lead of playing the Pied Piper and Truson. Johnson got his stage start with musicals, and has a good voice. This is his only film in which he has a solidly singling role. And he carries half of the film himself. Claude Rains is superb in the role of the Mayor of Hamelin, and shows that he could at least belt out a tune in harmony. This is the only musical of any sort that Rains ever made. One can only imagine that it was the idea of the type of production and the character he could play that appealed to Rains. This very gifted actor received four Academy Award nominations but never won an Oscar.

                      Jim Backus is the King's Emissary, and this is the only role I can think of in which his part resembled singing. Lori Nelson as Mara, and Kay Starr as John's Mother, carry the female portions of song. Stanley Adams and Doodles Weaver add some comedy to the story in their silly antics as counselors to the mayor.

                      With its color and colorful presentation, I think this film would still be of interest to children in modern times. And, the moral of the story should still ring true to we older children as to the young audience.

                      Here are some favorite lines from the film. For more dialog, see the Quotes section under this IMDb Web page of the film.

                      Pied Piper, "A man can strive for riches, a natural desire; but he mustn't overlook a greater goal. Or what will he profit by something he'll acquire, if in finding what he gains he lose his soul?"

                      Pied Piper, "A man who's unwise only sees things with his eyes."

                      Mayor of Hamelin, "Stop squealing and squeaking as though you were rats. Remember that you're bureaucrats."
                      Bobs-9

                      Abuse of authority and rats, twin scourges of Hamelin!

                      I had never heard of this movie, and got a chance to see it for the very first time in a cheapie DVD edition. I marvel at the tremendous amount of obscure old films out there. An entire lifetime wouldn't be enough to know them all. While this one is problematic, on the whole I'm pleased to have discovered it, as I love finding these little-known byways of films past.

                      I agree that while this was originally conceived as a children's film, it would bore to death most kids today, having been desensitized by the blazingly fast pace of today's video and film styles. This is best appreciated as a bit of 1950s kitsch, and as such I find it an interesting museum piece. I was a bit puzzled by the lack of depth in much of the cinematography. It just didn't seem particularly cinematic, but looking it up at the IMDb and finding it to be a made-for-TV project sort of explained that to me. The look was dictated by the budget, and perhaps an idea that this shallow staging was best suited to the small screen circa 1957, which was very small indeed. As it was recorded on film rather than videotape, its origins as a TV production were not quite immediately apparent, but it's certainly an odd mixture of cinematic and television style.

                      What's been said below is true, i.e. garish primary colors, a clumsy sometimes-rhyming and sometimes-not script, saccharine sentimentalizing and simplistic moralizing. Some of the rhymes sound to be lifted from, or at least inspired by, the poem by Robert Browning originally published in 1887, "The Pied Piper of Hamelin: A Child's Story." Also, no doubt mandated by the demands of TV executives and/or sponsors, a happy ending is tacked on at the end which is quite unlike that of the original story. Regarding the odd name of Hamelin's unfortunate rival city, it seems to me that it was meant to be pronounced Hamel-OUT, as a simple (very simple) play on words (Hamel-IN and Hamel-OUT. In and out, get it? Har har!). Well, I guess they thought kids of the time would find that amusing.

                      It is an interesting idea to set a musical to tunes by Edvard Grieg, who produced an abundant supply of melodies. My guess is that this was inspired by the musical "Kismet" having used melodies by Alexander Borodin so effectively. Besides "Peer Gynt," there are tunes from Grieg's "Norwegian Dances" and his Piano Concerto. While the lyrics are hardly masterpieces, I did find it amusing to hear one of the Norwegian Dances adorned with the lyric "flim, flam, floom."

                      It's strange indeed to see chanteuse Kay Starr performing what sounds to me like a sultry torch song to lament the disappearance of her child. As the film was conceived as family entertainment, maybe this was thought to be something for the adults in the family, but the effect is just bizarre. I couldn't identify a Grieg melody in this song.

                      Van Johnson does a fine job in the dual roles of the Piper and Truson, the town civil libertarian and whistle-blower. More than addressing just the issue of human greed and deceit, the script seems a somewhat liberal take on the issues of free speech and the abuse of power in a democratic government. Good old Claude Rains seems to give his all in the role of the corrupt mayor of Hamelin, and though he's a bit long-in-the-tooth by then, he plays the part with relish and what seems to me total commitment. Good for him!

                      It seems to me that the main attractions of this film are its nostalgic and kitsch qualities, and if those attributes irritate you, you'd do well to avoid it, but it does have value as sort of a museum-piece curiosity, half video and half cinema, with some McCarthy-era liberalism thrown in. I'm glad to have discovered it.
                      ljaygould

                      One of my favorites growing up...

                      I saw this movie on TV when it first came on (I was about 5) and it ranked right up there with Cole Porter's ALADDIN as an immediate favorite. I remember having the record album (which had expanded versions of some of the Grieg songs, including the WEDDING DAY AT TROLDHAUGEN, a wonderful piano piece adapted for the mounting of the gold chimes that the corrupt mayor - Claude Rains - had fashioned by melting down the guilders in the town treasury!) When I was in high school I saw this film again and tracked down the Grieg selections which are not just from the Peer Gynt Suites as another commenter wrote but spanned the Piano Concerto - which became one of my favorites as a result - the above mentioned "WEDDING DAY", and many of the sections of the Peer Gynt Suites as well.

                      While today I see the tremendous limitations of this film and would not expect today's children to suspend their belief and enter this world like I did when I first saw it, it had a real effect on me and I'm glad to be able to see it again from time to time. I don't see Kay Starr's lament to the tune of Ase's Death as a "torch song" as suggested by an earlier commenter...I remember seeing this again, as a young teenager in the mid-60's and being very moved by that song, sung after the piper lured the children into the mountain. (I also remember how MAD I was once when it was shown on New York local TV and the song - and ONLY that song - was CUT).

                      Now, I see the complete lack of credibility of the ending - not only did the children come home, but the corrupt mayor was deposed in favor of the forthright school master, played in a double role by Van Johnson who also was the Piper - and then joined in the resultant gaiety by playing a tune from the Piper's flute instead of being hauled off in CHAINS like one would expect...oh well.

                      Perhaps there is one five, six or seven-year-old who will see and hear this and it will spark his curiosity and interest as it did mine. Given the jaded nature of today's youth, mixed with the decidedly dated nature of this as a movie and a musical, I'm not holding my breath. Still, it joins "THE MUSIC MAN" (the ORIGINAL with Robert Preston) and the Alastair Sim "CHRISTMAS CAROL" as one of my three childhood favorite movies.

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                      • Curiosidades
                        This was the first motion picture ever made for television.
                      • Erros de gravação
                        Hamelin ("Hameln" in German) is a town in Germany. They speak of using Guilders to pay the piper and to melt into gold bells. The Guilder was a Dutch coin and was silver.
                      • Citações

                        Mayor of Hamelin: You have an invention?

                        Pied Piper: I attract attention/ Chiefly with a secret charm/ On creatures that do people harm;/ The mole, the toad, the newt and viper./

                        [Chuckles]

                        Pied Piper: Who doesn't know of the Pied Piper?

                      • Conexões
                        Edited into Santa's Fantasy Fair (1969)
                      • Trilhas sonoras
                        In The Hall of the Mountain King
                        Music by Edvard Grieg

                        Orchestral arrangement adapted from Grieg's music for "Peer Gynt"

                        Performed onscreen by Van Johnson (dubbed by an anonymous flute soloist)

                        with offscreen orchestra conducted by Pete King

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                      Detalhes

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                      • Data de lançamento
                        • 26 de novembro de 1957 (Estados Unidos da América)
                      • País de origem
                        • Estados Unidos da América
                      • Idioma
                        • Inglês
                      • Também conhecido como
                        • O Flautista Mágico de Hamelin
                      • Locações de filme
                        • EUA
                      • Empresa de produção
                        • Hal Stanley Productions
                      • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

                      Especificações técnicas

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                      • Tempo de duração
                        1 hora 29 minutos
                      • Proporção
                        • 1.33 : 1

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                      Jim Backus, Claude Rains, Van Johnson, and Lori Nelson in O Flautista Mágico (1957)
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