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The Fairytaler Springfyrene (2004–2005) Online

The Fairytaler Springfyrene (2004–2005) Online
Original Title :
Springfyrene
Genre :
TV Episode / Animation / Family / Fantasy
Year :
2004–2005
Directror :
Jørgen Lerdam
Cast :
Peter Belli,Nicolas Bro,Ditte Gråbøl
Writer :
Gareth Williams,Gareth Williams
Type :
TV Episode
Time :
28min
Rating :
6.5/10
The Fairytaler Springfyrene (2004–2005) Online

Episode credited cast:
Peter Belli Peter Belli - Various Voices (voice)
Nicolas Bro Nicolas Bro - Additional Voices (voice)
Ditte Gråbøl Ditte Gråbøl - Various Voices (voice)
Henrik Koefoed Henrik Koefoed - Hans Christian Andersen / Narrator (voice)
Thure Lindhardt Thure Lindhardt - Various Voices (voice)
Mette Marckmann Mette Marckmann - Additional Voices (voice)
Thomas Mørk Thomas Mørk - Additional Voices (voice)
Søren Spanning Søren Spanning - Additional Voices (voice)
Stine Stengade Stine Stengade - Additional Voices (voice)
Torben Zeller Torben Zeller - Various Voices (voice)


User reviews

Lilegha

Lilegha

As said many times, have always had a lifelong love of animation, old and new. Disney, Studio Ghibli, Hanna Barbera, Tom and Jerry, Hanna Barbera, Looney Tunes and also the works of Tex Avery and Fleischer. With a broader knowledge of animation styles, directors, studios and how it was all done actually love it even more now.

It's not just animation held in very high regard by me. Have also had an undying lifelong love of Hans Christian Andersen's classic stories, they're beautifully written and full of magic, emotion and memorable characters. His timeless appeal is more than justified and there is a reason why his name is so commonly associated with fairy tales, along with the darker stories of the Grimm Brothers. Would see any adaptation of his work, animation or live-action, and there have been numerous times where his work has lent well to animation.

To me this Danish animated series 'The Fairytaler' is one of the best examples and should be more widely known. For good animation, characters that have lost none of what made them so great in the first place and wonderful storytelling that has its own spin yet treats the stories with respect. This is obvious once again in 'The Jumper', another episode based on a less well known Andersen story that should be known more.

Not quite one of my favourite episodes of 'The Fairytaler', in the way 'The Ugly Duckling', 'The Little Mermaid' and 'The Snow Queen' are, those three resonate with me more on an emotional level and are more relatable, but is still wonderful. 'The Fairytaler' is a rarity of a series that doesn't have a bad episode in it.

In terms of animation, 'The Jumper' is simple but doesn't go overboard with this. It is still beautifully coloured and meticulously detailed with characters that are remarkably life-like and a lot of smoothness and crispness. The music is whimsical at times, haunting in others and poignant in others, matching with the images more than appropriately. The intro is magical and impossible to forget and loved how Andersen himself is briefly written in.

Here, 'The Jumper' is told with elegant style, emotion and entertaining wit, the energy never wavering while never being rushed. The dialogue is never too complicated and not too simple. Yet the spirit and essence of 'The Jumper' are captured well, with no effort to dumb down or make it too saccharine. The storytelling charms, entertains and moves and nothing is juvenile or complicated.

'The Jumper' has a lot of elements that traditionalists will happily recognise. Nothing will traumatise younger viewers and adults should feel nostalgic, traditionalists will find a lot to admire still and making it accessible to present day viewers is handled with intelligence and no awkwardness at all.

Characters are all round endearing, without being too cutesy, especially the dog. The voice acting is dynamic and well suited for the characters. Any narration never falls into the trap of telling/explaining too much, there really to introduce the story.

All in all, fabulous. 10/10 Bethany Cox