This should be the lesson to the two foolish pigs who were constantly singing and joking around instead of working like their brother. His dedication saved everybody in the end in this Academy Award winning 8-minute cartoon from over 80 years ago. Of course, it's done by Walt Disney and Pinto Colvig and Billy Bletcher are voice acting legends from the first half of the 20th century. This is a fairly famous short film from the old days, maybe also because the wolf is so wonderfully scary. Admittedly, I did not find his costume fake tactics too interesting, but when he started to huff and puff, my eyes were glued to the screen. And back on the pigs, their family photos at the smart pig's wall were really epic. Oh by the way, there are a handful sequels to this short film out there. Check them out if you enjoyed this original. "Three Little Pigs" is a decent watch. Not among Disney's very best, but still recommended.
Three Little Pigs
1933
Action / Animation / Comedy / Family / Musical
Three Little Pigs
1933
Action / Animation / Comedy / Family / Musical
Plot summary
The two pigs building houses of hay and sticks scoff at their brother, building the brick house. But when the wolf comes around and blows their houses down (after trickery like dressing as a foundling sheep fails), they run to their brother's house. And throughout, they sing the classic song, "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?".
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
May 10, 2021 at 12:25 PM
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Bricks save pigs
A Slightly Altered Version of the Old Fable
You know the basic story, the practical hardworking pig builds his house with bricks and mortar; one lazy buddy uses sticks and the other uses straw. Then when the time comes to keep out the Big Bad Wolf everyone heads to the brick house. It's an old fable and Disney wisely altered the original story where the wolf eats the two lazy pigs and is eaten by the remaining pig after falling into boiling water.
"The Three Little Pigs" was the 36th cartoon in Disney's "Silly Symphony" series and came just a year after "Flowers and Trees" forever changed the animation industry by introducing the first Technicolor cartoon. Technicolor was a process where three separate negatives (each a primary color) were combined to produce a color print. It took a while to perfect it for live action so it was first utilized for animation.
"The Three Little Pigs" was the most popular cartoon in history, on many theater marquees it was billed above the feature film. Disney had a two year exclusive on the use of the Technicolor process and had one animator work on giving each pig a distinct personality while another animator created the wolf. Frank Churchill wrote the "Big Bad Wolf" song, which unexpectedly became a monster hit-Disney's first published song. The wolf at the door was considered the symbol of the Depression and the song became a national rallying cry.
Disney would follow it up with three other attempts: "The Big Bad Wolf", "Three Little Wolves", and "The Practical Pig". None were nearly as successful as the original and Walt is said to have repeatedly stated: "You can't top pigs with pigs."
Then again, what do I know? I'm only a child.
Different Versions of The Three Little Pigs
I've seen the second version with the Wolf dressing as a fairy but it is in Japanese and was a gift from my in-laws (my wife is Japanese) to my daughter. It's weird in that it combines the stories of the three little pigs with Little Red Riding Hood with the practical Pig coming to Riding Hood's rescue. This version doesn't have the Jewish Peddler sequence in it. I recently rented another video version which sounds like the one most viewers are commenting on as it does not have the Red Riding Hood sequence. The animation, colour, are excellent and the Wolf is terrifying even as an adult. Something about how Disney drew predators in these early films is extremely effective even today.