Heidi's Song | |
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Directed by | Robert Taylor |
Written by | Joseph Barbera Robert Taylor Jameson Brewer |
Based on | Heidi by Johanna Spyri |
Produced by | Joseph Barbera William Hanna |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Jerry Mills |
Edited by | Greg V. Watson |
Music by | Hoyt S. Curtin |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures (North America) PSO International (International) |
Release date |
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Running time | 94 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $9 million [1] |
Box office | $5,124,391 [2] |
Heidi's Song is a 1982 American animated musical film produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions and based on the 1881 novel Heidi by Johanna Spyri. [3] The film was directed by Robert Taylor from a screenplay by Taylor, Joseph Barbera and Jameson Brewer, and stars Margery Gray as the title character, alongside the voices of Lorne Greene and Sammy Davis Jr. [4] It is one of only four films Hanna-Barbera ever made that did not feature their trademark characters (along with Charlotte's Web , C.H.O.M.P.S. , and Once Upon a Forest ).
The film was released on November 19, 1982 by Paramount Pictures. [5] Its box office receipts were disappointing, attributed by Joseph Barbera to incompetent distribution; the film was released the same week as two other animated features. [6]
An orphaned girl named Heidi is sent to live with her paternal grandfather by her maternal Aunt Dete, who has been looking after Heidi since she was a baby. Heidi's grandfather initially dislikes having Heidi around because she interferes in his routine. But when her grandfather hurts his leg, Heidi helps nurse him back to health, and during this time the two bond together. Heidi meets the local goatherd, a boy named Peter, and often goes with him and the village's goats on their daily grazing trips higher up the Swiss Alps.
One day, however, Heidi's Aunt Dete arrives to take Heidi away again, saying that a wealthy family in Frankfurt, Germany, wants Heidi to come live with them. Heidi's grandfather reluctantly lets her go. Heidi arrives at the house in Frankfurt, where she learns she's supposed to become the companion of a wealthy but invalid girl named Klara. Klara's Governess and guardian Fräulein Rottenmeier disapproves of Heidi's simple country ways, but Klara likes Heidi and insists that she stays. Heidi brings joy into Klara's life, especially when she gives Klara a basket of kittens as a present. When Rottenmeier discovers the kittens, Heidi is locked in the rat-infested basement.
Peter and the country animals come to Heidi's rescue. Together with Klara, the three travel to the Wunderhorn without telling Rottenmeier. At this time, Klara's father returns to Frankfurt after being away on business, and is angered that his daughter has disappeared. He immediately leaves for the Wunderhorn, and this time Rottenmeier and the butler Sebastian take the opportunity to flee.
The three children travel up the mountain, but Klara stops halfway so that Heidi can run on ahead without pushing her wheelchair. Heidi runs ahead and is joyfully reunited with her grandfather. Back halfway down the mountain, Klara's kitten Snowball is attacked by a hawk. Klara crawls out of her wheelchair and uses a stick to fight off the hawk. Klara then discovers that she is able to stand. Klara's father arrives and together they celebrate Klara's mobility and Heidi's return.
Hoyt Curtin scored the film, while Sammy Cahn and Burton Lane wrote the songs.
Original songs performed in the film include:
No. | Title | Performer(s) | Length |
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1. | "Good at Making Friends" | Lorne Greene & Margery Gray | |
2. | "A Christmas-y Day" | Sandie Hall | |
3. | "An Armful of Sunshine" | Lorne Greene | |
4. | "Heidi" | Lorne Greene | |
5. | "She's a Nothing" | Joan Gerber & Fritz Feld | |
6. | "An Armful of Sunshine (Reprise)" | Michael Bell | |
7. | "Imagine" | Pamelyn Ferdin & Chorus | |
8. | "An Un-kind Word" | Margery Gray | |
9. | "That's What Friends Are For" | Roger DeWitt | |
10. | "Ode to a Rat" | Sammy Davis Jr. | |
11. | "That's What Friends Are For (Reprise)" | Chorus |
Movie historian Leonard Maltin gave the picture just 1.5 out of a possible 4 stars, declaring it "...Little better than most Saturday morning fare -- due to awkward continuity, lifeless animation, and an excess of cute animals." [7]
The film was first released on VHS in 1985 by Worldvision Home Video. GoodTimes Home Video (under their Kids Klassics label) re-released the film on VHS in 1988. Turner Home Entertainment gave the film one final VHS re-release in 1998. Warner Home Video released the film to DVD-R for the first time on July 31, 2012 through Warner Archive. [8]
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