Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid | |
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Japanese theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Tomoharu Katsumata |
Written by | Mieko OsanaiIkuko Ōyabu |
Based on | "The Little Mermaid" by Hans Christian Andersen |
Produced by | Ken ArigaYoshio Takami |
Starring | Fumie KashiyamaMariko MiyagiTaro Shigaki |
Cinematography | Shigeyoshi IkedaYoshihiro YamadaHenning Kristiansen |
Edited by | Yutaka Chikura |
Music by | Takekuni Hirayoshi |
Animation by | Reyko Okuyama |
Production company | Toei Animation |
Distributed by | Toei Company |
Release date |
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Running time | 68 minutes |
Language | Japanese |
Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid (アンデルセン童話 にんぎょ姫, Anderusen Dōwa: Ningyo-hime, lit. 'Andersen's Fairy Tales: Princess Mermaid') is a Japanese anime film based on Hans Christian Andersen's 1837 fairy tale, released in 1975 by Toei Animation. Unlike the Disney adaptation released 14 years later, this film is closer to Andersen's story, notably in its preservation of the original and tragic ending. The two main protagonists are the youngest daughter of the royal family, Marina, and her best friend Fritz, an Atlantic dolphin calf. In Japan, this film was shown in the Toei Manga Matsuri (Toei Cartoon Festival) in 1975.
The film was later released in the United States, dubbed into English by G. G. Communications, Inc. and Prima Film, Inc., on February 4, 1978, under the title: Hans Christian Anderson's The Little Mermaid (Andersen's name would be correctly spelled in subsequent releases).
Comedy podcast RiffTrax (Michael J. Nelson, Bill Corbett and Kevin Murphy) recorded and released a riff in 2024.
Plot
Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid opens in live-action Denmark. The narrator mentions Hans Christian Andersen, who is from there, and his original story. The scene then dissolves to 2-D hand-drawn anime.
Princess Marina, who lives in the undersea kingdom with her father, grandmother and five older sisters, plays with her best friend Fritz, a dolphin, before getting caught in a storm conjured by the Sea Witch. Once home, she is scolded by her sisters for being late, reminding her that their grandmother will not give her the pearl hairpin that signifies adulthood unless she is responsible. The following day, Marina's sisters go to the surface. Marina is forbidden to go because she has not yet come of age. While exploring a sunken ship, Marina discovers a statue of a human prince. She and Fritz sneak to the surface, where she sees the same prince on a ship.
Another storm arises and throws the prince into the sea. Marina saves him and brings him to shore, leaving him there to be found. A raven-haired girl finds the prince and cares for him. Because of her rescue of a human, Marina's grandmother decides that she is ready to come of age, and Marina receives her pearl hairpin.
Determined to see the prince again and gain an immortal soul, Marina visits the Sea Witch, who gives her a potion that will make her human, although in exchange, she must give the Sea Witch her beautiful voice and will never be able to become a mermaid again. The Sea Witch warns her that if the prince marries another, she will die and dissolve into sea foam at sunrise the next morning after the wedding. After a heartfelt goodbye to her family and Fritz, Marina drinks the potion and is transformed.
She is discovered by the prince on the shore, and lives with him for a month. The two become close and the prince tells her that his parents want him to marry a foreign princess but he wants to marry the girl who saved his life. Since he cannot find her, he wishes to marry Marina. The prince's jealous cat, Jemmy, who vows to get rid of Marina, reports the conversation to the prince's parents, and the queen suspects that Marina has bewitched her son. When the foreign princess arrives, the prince's father orders Marina to be arrested for treason. The prince recognizes the foreign princess as the same raven-haired girl who had supposedly saved him. They are soon to be married.
Heartbroken, Marina summons Fritz so that she can say goodbye. But Fritz vows to find a way to save her. Marina's sisters, having given their hair to the Sea Witch in exchange for a magic dagger, give her the dagger. They tell her that if she stabs the prince through the heart and lets his blood drip onto her feet, she will become a mermaid again. With dawn only minutes away, Marina sneaks into the prince's room but cannot bring herself to kill him. She kisses him goodbye as he sleeps.
As she throws the dagger into the sea, the reflection wakes the prince. He rushes onto the deck, calling after her, but she jumps. As he calls her name, he sees that she has left behind her pearl hairpin and a scale from her tail. As the sun rises, her body turns to foam and ascends into the sky. The prince realizes that Marina was the girl who had saved his life, and he and Fritz grieve her death. Marina's spirit lives on in heaven for her self-sacrifice.
Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid fades back to live-action in Denmark, and the narrator expresses belief that the mermaid princess has become one with the sea and waves and her love and courage forever lives on. The movie ends on a still shot of the Little Mermaid statue in Copenhagen.
Main characters
- Princess Marina (マリーナ姫, Marīna Hime)
- Marina, 14 years old, is princess of the undersea kingdom and the youngest of six daughters. She is a blonde, sweet and beautiful mermaid and is known for having the most beautiful voice in the kingdom. She is curious about the human world and likes collecting items that come from the surface. She falls in love with a human prince and sacrifices her beautiful voice in order to be with him.
- Fritz (フリッツ, Furittsu)
- Fritz is a blue Atlantic dolphin calf, and Marina's best friend.
- Prince Fjord (フィヨルド王子, Fiyorudo Ōji)
- Brave and well-trained in the military arts, the Prince dislikes the idea of an arranged marriage. After surviving a shipwreck, he becomes obsessed with finding the girl who saved his life.
- The Sea Witch (魔女, Majo)
- Unlike in other versions of the story, the Sea Witch is not evil, but she is shrewd. She has no specific interest in harming anyone, but can be very destructive in creating storms that sink ships. She is a gigantic devil ray.
- The Princess of Suomi (スオミの姫, Suomi no Hime)
- The raven-haired princess of the Kingdom of Finland. She is the girl who finds the prince on the shore after Marina brings him to land, subsequently making him think that she was the one who saved him.
- Jemmy (ジェミー, Jemī)
- Despite being the Prince's loyal cat, Jemmy tries to get rid of Marina, first by killing her and then by accusing her of manipulating the prince.
Music
- Opening theme
- "Yearning" (あこがれ, Akogare)
- Sung by Kumiko Osugi, lyrics by Tokiko Iwatani, music and arrangement by Takekuni Hirayoshi.
- Inserted song
- "The One I've Waited For" (待っていた人, Matteita Hito); "When a Mermaid Comes of Age" (Marina's Song) in the English version.
- Sung by Kumiko Osugi and People, lyrics by Tokiko Iwatani, music and arrangement by Takekuni Hirayoshi.
Voice cast
Character | Original | English |
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Marina | Fumie KashiyamaKumiko Osugi (singing voice) | Kirsten Bishopric |
Fritz the Dolphin | Mariko Miyagi | Thor Bishopric |
Prince Fjord | Taro Shigaki | Ian Finlay |
Duke the Whale | Kosei Tomita | Neil Shee |
King of the Mermen | Hidekatsu Shibata | |
Yellow Longnose Butterflyfish | Ichiro Nagai | Unknown |
Crab | Kaneta Kimotsuki | Terry Haig |
Triton's Trumpet Snail | Unknown | |
Live sharksucker | Kenichi Ogata | |
Sea Witch | Haruko Kitahama | Jane Woods |
Jemmy the Cat | Kazuko Sawada | |
Raven-haired girl/Princess of Suomi | Rihoko Yokota | |
Marina's Sisters | Kazuko Sugiyama | Jeannette Casenave |
Haruko Kitahama | Jane Woods | |
Prince's Mother | Nana Yamaguchi | |
Queen Mother of the Mermen | Miyoko Asō | Jeannette Casenave |
Additional English Voices
- Jeannette Casenave
- Terry Haig
- Neil Shee
Release titles
- Andersen dôwa ningyo hime (Japan) (alternative transliteration)
- Hans Christian Anderson's The Little Mermaid (USA) (theatrical title)
- Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid (USA) (video box title)
- The Little Mermaid (international: English title)
Home releases
The film was originally released on VHS and Betamax by Video Gems in 1978, followed by another release by Children's Video Library in 1984; both releases remove the Toei logo at the beginning of the film. The film was later re-released on VHS by Starmaker Entertainment in 1989; it was sold as a full version of the original film under the title Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid. The film was released on Region 1 (USA and Canada) DVD by UAV Corporation under the name "The Little Mermaid: Based on Hans Christian Andersen's Classic Tale." The cover art differs significantly from that of the original Starmaker release. However, multiple reviewers on Amazon.com state that the actual film on the DVD is the Toei film (albeit somewhat censored). The reviewers' images also depict scenes from the original 1975 Toei film. The film is now licensed by Discotek Media, which released the full, uncut film on Region 1 DVD, making it the first time that the full film has been available in the U.S. since the original VHS release. The DVD includes the original Japanese audio with English subtitles and the English dub, and presents the film in its original aspect ratio. The film was released on Blu-ray on March 26, 2024.
References
- Andasen dōwa ningyo hime on IMDB
- ^ Katsumata, Tomoharu, Hans Christian Andersen'S The Little Mermaid (in Japanese), Eastern Star, retrieved 2023-03-02
- "The Little Mermaid". 5 January 2024.
- "The Little Mermaid 1978 Video Gems Rare Cartoon Oop HTF Vhs". eBay. Retrieved 2024-10-21.
- UAV release on Amazon.com
- UAV release cover art
- Starmaker cover art
- Screen capture from 1975 film
- "Discotek Licenses 1997 Berserk Anime, Urusei Yatsura OVAs, Mazinkaiser, More".
External links
- Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid at IMDb
- Retrojunk article/review of the original U.S. version
Toei Animation theatrical features (1958–1979) | |
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1950s–60s |
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1970 | |
1971 | |
1972 | |
1973 | |
1974 | |
1975 | |
1976 | |
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1978 | |
1979 | |
Not including Madhouse-animated features produced by Toei Category |
Works directed by Tomoharu Katsumata | |
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Animated series |
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Animated films |
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OVAs |
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Hans Christian Andersen's "The Little Mermaid" (1837) | |
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Films |
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Television |
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Other |
- 1975 films
- 1975 anime films
- 1970s Japanese-language films
- Adventure anime and manga
- Animated films about shapeshifting
- Animated films about witchcraft
- Animated films based on The Little Mermaid
- Animated films set in Denmark
- Anime and manga based on fairy tales
- Drama anime and manga
- Fictional princesses
- Films directed by Tomoharu Katsumata
- Films set in Copenhagen
- Japanese animated fantasy films
- Toei Animation films
- Toei Company films