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» » The Pied Piper (1933)

Short summary

The people of Hamelin, overrun with rats, offer a bag of gold to anyone who can get rid of the rats. A piper offers to do the job, and successfully lures the rats into a mirage of cheese, which disappears. The citizens, disappointed that all he did was play a tune, offer only pocket change. The piper, angered, plays a new tune that has all the children of the city follow him, even the new twins the stork is preparing to deliver.

In the original story a crippled boy is left behind along with a blind boy and a deaf boy; they are the only three children who do not disappear, and they tell the adults what has happened to the others. Walt Disney clearly realized this, as this version has a boy walking on crutches who almost misses his chance to get into the paradise the Pied Piper has provided for the children.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Celak
    A Walt Disney SILLY SYMPHONY Cartoon Short.

    Hamelin Town is beset with an infestation of rats and the harried Mayor is only too glad to offer THE PIED PIPER a bag of gold to rid them of the plague. But once the rodents are removed, the Mayor reneges on his promise, leaving the Piper to take a most effective revenge...

    This cartoon offers a good interpretation of the story from the famous Robert Browning poem. Notice how some of the elements of the original have been altered by Disney: the rats no longer drown, they are simply made to vanish into thin air; and the Hamelin children are shown to be used almost as slave labor by their parents, making their removal by the Piper more like a rescue.

    The SILLY SYMPHONIES, which Walt Disney produced for a ten year period beginning in 1929, are among the most interesting of series in the field of animation. Unlike the Mickey Mouse cartoons in which action was paramount, with the Symphonies the action was made to fit the music. There was little plot in the early Symphonies, which featured lively inanimate objects and anthropomorphic plants & animals, all moving frantically to the soundtrack. Gradually, however, the Symphonies became the school where Walt's animators learned to work with color and began to experiment with plot, characterization & photographic special effects. The pages of Fable & Fairy Tale, Myth & Mother Goose were all mined to provide story lines and even Hollywood's musicals & celebrities were effectively spoofed. It was from this rich soil that Disney's feature-length animation was to spring. In 1939, with SNOW WHITE successfully behind him and PINOCCHIO & FANTASIA on the near horizon, Walt phased out the SILLY SYMPHONIES; they had run their course & served their purpose.
  • comment
    • Author: furious ox
    This is a color Silly Symphony produced by the Disney studio. There will be spoilers ahead:

    If you know the basic plot of the poem upon which this is based, then you know the bulk of the story here. But since this was done by Disney, there have been changes to make it less dark in tone in some ways and to make the Pied Piper seem more kindly than simply a disgruntled contractor getting even with someone who cheated him.

    This is essentially a mini-opera, with everything sung. The rats display more defined character than the humans typically do here and the scenes with the rats are better animated and more interesting.

    The piper is hired to rid the town of rats, which he does slightly more humanely than the original does (they vanish in a block of cheese instead of drowning) and the piper is cheated by the mayor and the townspeople. He threatens to pipe the children away and the adults mock and deride him. The children are shown as being the only ones who do any work, so being taken is more a liberation than a kidnapping. One change made corrects what I see as an injustice (though I'm biased) and thus I like the ending. The colors are a bit off, but it's technically well done.

    This short is available on the Disney Treasures More Silly Symphonies DVD set. It's worth getting.
  • comment
    • Author: Nikobar
    This Silly Symphonies cartoon begins with a graphic example of how rats are overpowering Hamelin Town, all to the tune of a spirited song about the little creatures. The mayor of the city offers a bag of gold to anyone who will help the townspeople get rid of all the rats. The Pied Piper turns up, announcing he'll reduce the overrun rat population and accept the bag of gold for reward.

    Next thing you know, the little critters are all following him down a country road far away from town and he's ready to return for his gold.

    "I've done my work as I was told and now I'll take my bag of gold."

    The Mayor refuses to carry out the bargain and the townspeople say all he did was play a tune, so the Piper declares he'll remove all the children of the town from their influence. And so, he woos them off to a childhood paradise where they can sing and play rather than be used as little more than hard-worked servants by their parents.

    Charming animation helps make it a morality tale with a happy ending.
  • comment
    • Author: Xtintisha
    With a few new twists on the classic poem, this is an interesting and charming Silly Symphony. What I loved most was the beautiful animation and the sweet, charming music that is playful, whimsical and simple. I found myself chanting along the townspeople in the chorus "Rats!Rats!We Gotta Get Rid of the Rats!" The characters aren't too bad either, the pied Piper of the title is very likable, the children are cute and the Mayor is seen as quite greedy and manipulative.

    The pacing is a little uneven here, but compared to how much I enjoyed The Pied Piper it is a minor criticism. Overall, this is very enjoyable and charming with a few new and nice twists on the poem. 9/10 Bethany Cox
  • comment
    • Author: Milleynti
    We all know the story of the evil mayor of Hamelin who promises the Pied Piper a great reward for ridding the city of rats. But, of course, he decides not to pay up and the children of the city pay the price. The problem is that there is no repentance. The townspeople are just ignored at the end. Too saccharine.
  • comment
    • Author: Anaragelv
    A Silly Symphony where a piper saves a town from rat infestation. However, he gets mad and takes revenge when the King refuses to pay him.

    Lots of singing and sappy songs, with weird-acting characters and over-imaginative scenes. Definitely one of the more whimsical cartoons from Disney.

    Grade C+
  • comment
    • Author: Beahelm
    These 7.5 minutes we have here are a Disney color cartoon from 1933, so the very early days of the Golden Age of Animation. It was directed by Wilfred Jackson, one of the company's finest. Well what can you say here. The looks of characters and landscapes are really amazing visually and this film is so far ahead of its time it isn't even funny. The music is also on a very high level and this one is evidence that Disney really is not relying on their trademark characters (Mickey, Donald) when it comes to making quality films. I am amazed and not surprised that this one really made it as a cartoon of under 10 minutes into the list of NBR's top10 films back then from that year. The story is good too and has a nice moral. Also this is really one movie where ecerybody has shades and you don't always see that in (old) animation. The rats early on, the piper and the townsfolk. Everybody is somehow bad in its own right, but you can make an argument for everybody too why they do what they do, even if it is certainly quite a challenge for the townsfolk. At the end, Disney keeps it light and charming with the kids arriving in Toyland and that boy even losing his crutches hides the fact very well that the parents all lost their children, even the innocents who maybe wanted to pay the piper for what he did with the rats. The stork scene was a nice addition and overall with this ending Disney definitely keeps it family friendly. I was tempted at times to give this one an even higher rating, it is definitely among the very best 1933 has to offer in terms of film, not just short film. I especially liked the piper's looks. So yeah, no hesitation here, I think you really wanna check this one out. Big thumbs-up.
  • comment
    • Author: Kesalard
    This early Disney Technicolor short, part of the Silly Symphonies series, tackles the old story of the Pied Piper of Hamelin. The story is the one most of us know - town is overrun by rats so the town leaders hire the Piper to lure the rats out of town. He does this but they refuse to pay him, leading the Piper to exact his revenge in a manner that has creepier undertones these days than it did when this was made. Anyway, this is a good cartoon version of the story and teaches kids valuable lessons about paying your debts and the power of wind instruments. I guess it also teaches kids if a strange man shows up playing a flute you should follow him because he'll lead you to Toyland. The animation is very good, especially the backgrounds. The color is just gorgeous. The music is lively. All of the voice work is fine. Really not much bad to say about it except that, while it's good, it's not great.
  • comment
    • Author: breakingthesystem
    Another reviewer cites this story as a morality tale with a happy ending. Well I don't know about that, I saw all those kids sealed off from the rest of the world behind that mountain entrance into an unknown place. The Piper called it Joyland, but how would we ever know?

    So there's a bit of a creepy factor in all this that most viewers won't take the time to recognize or acknowledge. On the flip side though, I can't disagree with the Pied Piper's getting his revenge on the citizens and Mayor who promised a bag of gold to get rid of the town's rodent problem, and then reneged on the deal. They had it coming to them by and large, but it seemed a heavy price to pay.

    I'm probably putting too much thought into this story, after all it was a Silly Symphony and I guess the objective was to be light hearted and silly. It worked for the most part, but maybe the Piper could have simply banished the Mayor to a life of servitude.
  • comment
    • Author: August
    That Disney did not want to keep the sinister nature of the original poem is okay with me, but they could have improved this insipid ending. I was once in a musical children's production of The Pied Piper and the ending had the townspeople repenting and the Piper returning the kids. No, that doesn't have the punch of the original story's creepy conclusion, but it works better dramatically than, "The piper steals the kids and they all live happily forever in Toy Land!" That feels like a parody of a Disney film, not an actual one! I usually don't mind the changes Disney makes in their output, but this was too much.

    Everything that happens before is great though. The character animation experiments with a more realistic human form and the music is fantastic. It's a shame the ending had to be so bad, because I would otherwise give this cartoon an 8 out of 10.
  • comment
    • Author: Kabandis
    The Pied Piper of Hamelin is a hard-edged story about honoring your commitments. This is because what exactly happened to the kids at the end was always kind of vague. For all we know, the Piper was a pedo or fed the kids to a dog food company! But since this is a cartoon for kids and comes from Disney, they weren't about to allow the story to go that way!

    The artwork was okay--not up to the standards of many of the better Silly Symphonies but still much better than the competition. The faces of the characters (especially the kids) are very simple--with little character. And, like some of the Silly Symphonies, this one has quite a bit of singing--a definite minus. But what bothered me is, as I said above, the stupid need to make this tough story happy--with the children all being taken to Toy Land AND the little kid who could barely walk being carried into this wonderful world by the nice Piper (in the original, he could not keep up and was left behind). All in all, not a bad cartoon--but it played too fast and loose with the original story to be of more interest.
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