AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,8/10
2,8 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAn adaption of the classic tale of a girl's dreams turned reality when her new toy turns out to be a young man placed under a curse.An adaption of the classic tale of a girl's dreams turned reality when her new toy turns out to be a young man placed under a curse.An adaption of the classic tale of a girl's dreams turned reality when her new toy turns out to be a young man placed under a curse.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 1 indicação no total
Kiefer Sutherland
- Nutcracker Prince
- (narração)
Megan Follows
- Clara
- (narração)
Peter O'Toole
- Pantaloon
- (narração)
Mike MacDonald
- Mouseking
- (narração)
Phyllis Diller
- Mousequeen
- (narração)
Peter Boretski
- Uncle Drosselmeier
- (narração)
Len Carlson
- King
- (narração)
- …
Marvin Goldhar
- Mr. Schaeffer
- (narração)
- …
Lynne Gorman
- Trudy
- (narração)
Keith Hampshire
- Mouse
- (narração)
- …
Elizabeth Hanna
- Marie
- (narração)
- (as Liz Hanna)
- …
George Merner
- Dr. Stahlbaum
- (narração)
Stephanie Morgenstern
- Louise
- (narração)
Christopher Owens
- Erik
- (narração)
Susan Roman
- Mouse
- (narração)
- …
Theresa Sears
- Queen
- (narração)
- …
Diane Stapley
- Mrs. Ingrid Stahlbaum
- (narração)
Mona Waserman
- Princess Perlipat
- (narração)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
It's probably the most faithful adaptation ever made, but it's also sloppy, unfocused, inconsistent.
The Nutcracker Prince follows Clara during Christmas where she receives the gift of a nutcracker from her godfather, Uncle Drosselmeier. After her Uncle regales her with a story of how the nutcracker came to be, Clara finds herself involved in the confrontation between the nutcracker prince and the vengeful rat king.
Released in 1990 to poor reviews and box office failure, The Nutcracker Prince was an attempt by Canadian TV animation studio Lacewood Productions to make a feature length theatrical film. While the animation can look nice (at times), the movie never maintains a consistent tone and struggles with pacing and story structure. But despite the movie's many faults, it is probably the most faithful and complete telling of The Nutcracker and the Mouse King that served as the source material for the endearing ballet.
The movie makes a decent enough impression with some decent character designs who are competently animated, but as the movie goes on the movie's usage of flat blurry backgrounds and barren environments become very obvious. The movie has numerous scenes that are eerily empty, even when that shouldn't be the case. To make up for this, the movie haphazardly integrates the Nutcracker suite as part of the soundtrack, and while it can sometimes work, often times it feels like a way to add life to the scene to make up for a lack of life in the animation. The movie also takes an abrupt style change around the 15 minute mark when it tells the Nutcracker's backstory, and in an attempt to soften the darker moments from the source material the animation style mimics a simplistic more geometric style one associates with something like Jay Ward's Fractured Fairy Tales which completely takes us out of the story and just calls attention to itself. The sequence goes on for a while dealing with characters who have no bearing on the rest of the movie and no real purpose, and the actual plot of the movie doesn't start until around 48 minutes into this 68 minute movie (not including 5 minutes of credits).
The Nutcracker Prince just doesn't work. It doesn't have plot, characters, or stakes strong enough to carry itself to feature length, and its technical aspects seem more suited for television than a cinema (save for some individual moments here and there). I do give the movie credit for avoiding contemporaneous dialogue and trying to approach the Nutcracker from a different direction, but the movie just doesn't come together.
Released in 1990 to poor reviews and box office failure, The Nutcracker Prince was an attempt by Canadian TV animation studio Lacewood Productions to make a feature length theatrical film. While the animation can look nice (at times), the movie never maintains a consistent tone and struggles with pacing and story structure. But despite the movie's many faults, it is probably the most faithful and complete telling of The Nutcracker and the Mouse King that served as the source material for the endearing ballet.
The movie makes a decent enough impression with some decent character designs who are competently animated, but as the movie goes on the movie's usage of flat blurry backgrounds and barren environments become very obvious. The movie has numerous scenes that are eerily empty, even when that shouldn't be the case. To make up for this, the movie haphazardly integrates the Nutcracker suite as part of the soundtrack, and while it can sometimes work, often times it feels like a way to add life to the scene to make up for a lack of life in the animation. The movie also takes an abrupt style change around the 15 minute mark when it tells the Nutcracker's backstory, and in an attempt to soften the darker moments from the source material the animation style mimics a simplistic more geometric style one associates with something like Jay Ward's Fractured Fairy Tales which completely takes us out of the story and just calls attention to itself. The sequence goes on for a while dealing with characters who have no bearing on the rest of the movie and no real purpose, and the actual plot of the movie doesn't start until around 48 minutes into this 68 minute movie (not including 5 minutes of credits).
The Nutcracker Prince just doesn't work. It doesn't have plot, characters, or stakes strong enough to carry itself to feature length, and its technical aspects seem more suited for television than a cinema (save for some individual moments here and there). I do give the movie credit for avoiding contemporaneous dialogue and trying to approach the Nutcracker from a different direction, but the movie just doesn't come together.
10LT-10
Wow, this is great. I can't believe that so many official movie critics disliked this film. It is amazing, will work for everyone as a family movie. It doesn't have the bordom involved with watching the same ballet every year, that would turn kids off to this classic story. The movie deserves more recondition, more praise, anything to help get the word out of how good it is.
I saw this movie a very long time ago and I loved it. I remember I had taped it off HBO or something like that, and I watched it all the time. Just yesterday I went to see the actual ballet, and it wasn't half as good as this enchanting little movie. I was very dissapointed with the ballet, it wasn't bad, it just did'nt follow of what I remember from this movie, a lot of things were different. But since I haven't read the book, maybe the ballet was more on track than this movie. But anyway the movie was much more entertaining than the actual ballet. Even though I am not trying to compare the movie to the ballet, because they are tottaly different things.
I wouldn't say it's absolutely perfect but it tells the nutcracker story well and the animation is really beautiful. I remember I legit thought it was a Disney movie by the animation.
It's a nice wholesome film and I'd recommend watching it on a cozy Christmas, especially if you have kids.
It's a nice wholesome film and I'd recommend watching it on a cozy Christmas, especially if you have kids.
When I was a kid, this was one of my childhood favourites, I loved it. Watching it again, I still do, it is a really sweet and charming film, that is perfect for Christmas time.
I have read critical reviews, though not on IMDb, that said that the animation was shoddy, and I wholeheartedly disagree. Sure I have seen better animation, but I do think people need to remember when it was made(1990), and that it is lower in budget to other animated gems like Beauty and the Beast. The colours weren't too bad and the backgrounds were nice to look at.
One of the main things I like about The Nutcracker Prince is the story. The timeless story by ETA Hoffmann is a truly wonderful one, and out of all the adaptations of the story I've seen, including countless productions of the ballet, short cartoons, and the Barbie movie(which I admit I really like, despite the fact I am 17), The Nutcracker Prince is actually the most faithful to the story, having the story of Princess Pirlipat and all that. Yes, there are one or two gruesome scenes, but the story version I have has a very malevolent description of the Mouse King, so that is forgiven. Plus this Mouse King was one I enjoyed watching, funny and scary at the same time, and a character who got so much abuse from his mother.
My favourite aspect of the movie was the music by Tchaikovsky, the sparkling motifs from his beautiful ballet score are bound to stay with you forever. What I liked about it was how they used it in the film, it was very clever, and very appropriate. Tchaikovsky is one of my favourite composers, and a very important one in the development of ballet, but he brought staggering contributions also to symphony, concerto and opera. I am so thankful that they didn't miss out the music entirely, otherwise this gem of a film wouldn't have such an effect on me. Just for the record, this was actually the film, that introduced me to Tchaikovsky's music, and that is the reason why it is so special to me.
The voice cast was terrific, especially Kiefer Sutherland as the Nutcracker Prince, and Megan Follows is lovely beyond words as Clara. Also worth of note is Peter O'Toole as Pantoloon, I thought he was excellent, almost certainly one of the best voice actors involved in the movie. Everyone else was very good too, particularly Peter Beretski in a perfect performance as Drosselmeir and they were further advantaged by a very good script, that is surprisingly faithful to Hoffmann's story.
Overall, a beautiful gem. 10/10 Bethany Cox.
I have read critical reviews, though not on IMDb, that said that the animation was shoddy, and I wholeheartedly disagree. Sure I have seen better animation, but I do think people need to remember when it was made(1990), and that it is lower in budget to other animated gems like Beauty and the Beast. The colours weren't too bad and the backgrounds were nice to look at.
One of the main things I like about The Nutcracker Prince is the story. The timeless story by ETA Hoffmann is a truly wonderful one, and out of all the adaptations of the story I've seen, including countless productions of the ballet, short cartoons, and the Barbie movie(which I admit I really like, despite the fact I am 17), The Nutcracker Prince is actually the most faithful to the story, having the story of Princess Pirlipat and all that. Yes, there are one or two gruesome scenes, but the story version I have has a very malevolent description of the Mouse King, so that is forgiven. Plus this Mouse King was one I enjoyed watching, funny and scary at the same time, and a character who got so much abuse from his mother.
My favourite aspect of the movie was the music by Tchaikovsky, the sparkling motifs from his beautiful ballet score are bound to stay with you forever. What I liked about it was how they used it in the film, it was very clever, and very appropriate. Tchaikovsky is one of my favourite composers, and a very important one in the development of ballet, but he brought staggering contributions also to symphony, concerto and opera. I am so thankful that they didn't miss out the music entirely, otherwise this gem of a film wouldn't have such an effect on me. Just for the record, this was actually the film, that introduced me to Tchaikovsky's music, and that is the reason why it is so special to me.
The voice cast was terrific, especially Kiefer Sutherland as the Nutcracker Prince, and Megan Follows is lovely beyond words as Clara. Also worth of note is Peter O'Toole as Pantoloon, I thought he was excellent, almost certainly one of the best voice actors involved in the movie. Everyone else was very good too, particularly Peter Beretski in a perfect performance as Drosselmeir and they were further advantaged by a very good script, that is surprisingly faithful to Hoffmann's story.
Overall, a beautiful gem. 10/10 Bethany Cox.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesDespite the fact that Clara and her brother call Drosselmeier "uncle", he is actually not related to them. Hans, the Nutcracker, is his nephew.
- Erros de gravaçãoDuring the battle between the Nutcracker and the Mouse King, Clara takes off her slipper and throws it at the Mouse King, in order to stop him from killing the Nutcracker. Moments later, however, she is seen backing up and both slippers are on her feet.
- Citações
Mousequeen: The spell you broke on your head falls, you shall crack nuts, prince of the dolls.
- Cenas durante ou pós-créditosThe opening credits feature sketches of some scenes from the film, displayed as framed pictures against a brown background before the last one segues to the film's first shot as to begin the story.
- Versões alternativasThe end credits in the international Majestic Films/Allied Filmmakers prints have credits for Majestic Films International and Allied Filmmakers along with Jake Eberts as an executive producer. The American print by Warner Bros. doesn't have the credits for these three.
- Trilhas sonorasAlways Come Back To You
(Love Theme from 'The Nutcracker Prince')
Written by Kevin Gillis and Jack Lenz
Produced by Shane Keister and Ahmet Ertegun
Performed by Natasha's Brother and Rachele Cappelli
Principais escolhas
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- How long is The Nutcracker Prince?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- CA$ 8.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 1.781.694
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 908.999
- 25 de nov. de 1990
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 1.781.694
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