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» » Koshkin dom (1958)

Short summary

There was a Cat. And she had a big house with expensive furniture. Often, her poor kittens nephews came to the doorstep of this house, asking her for food and lodging for the night, but she chased them away through her servant, the janitor cat Vasiliy. Once the neighbors came to visit her: the Rooster, the Chicken, the Goat, the Nanny-Goat and the Pig. The Cat welcomed the guests and showed them her home. While the guests were having fun, the kittens came to ask for shelter again, but the Cat kicked them out again. When the guests returned home, a log fell out of the stove and a fire started in the house.

The animated film is based on the tale by Samuil Marshak.

1958 - X International Film Festival for Children and Youth in Venice: First Silver George Award for films for children under 7 years old.

The animated film was repeatedly released on DVD in collections of cartoons: "The Cat and the Company" (distributor "Close-up"), "Cat House" (distributor "Close-up").

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Oparae
    "Koshkin House" was indeed produced in the former soviet union but it has a lesson for everyone. A well to do cat lives with her man servant in a beautiful house. She has the neighbors over for a night of entertainment and impresses the hell out of them - negatively! Meanwhile two orphan kittens keep coming to the house asking for help but are chased away repeatedly. After her "friends" leave the festivities the house burns, making the cat and her servant homeless. The two of them go to their so-called "friends" residences asking for shelter and are rebuffed by all of them. On the verge of freezing to death the cat and her servant come across a little shack and ask for shelter... Are they in for the surprise of their lives! No spoiler here.
  • comment
    • Author: Cheber
    "Koshkin dom" or "The Cat's House" is a 29-minute animated short film from the Soviet Union. The people who made this one were director Leonid Amalrik and writers Nikolay Erdman and Samuil Marshak. While the latter is mostly known for his live action work, the other two have made themselves a solid name in terms of Soviet animation. I don't think this one here contributes a whole lot to their bodies of work. It is a prime example of quantity of quality. They included so many animals in here, such as goats, pigs, chicken, cats and others of course too, but they failed to properly elaborate on most of these and the result is a very mediocre short film that is nowhere near the best the Soviet Union had to offer in terms of animation. The quality of the visual side is fine for an almost 60-year-old film, but it clearly comes short in terms of story-telling and the music wasn't really good either. This one dragged, even at under half an hour, on quite a few occasions. I give it a thumbs-down. Not recommended.
  • Credited cast:
    Anastasiya Georgievskaya Anastasiya Georgievskaya - The Nanny-Goat (voice)
    Viktoriya Ivanova Viktoriya Ivanova - The First Kitten (voice)
    Sergey Martinson Sergey Martinson - Cock (voice) (as Sergei Martinson)
    Vera Orlova Vera Orlova - The Cat (voice)
    Leonid Pirogov Leonid Pirogov - Cat Vasiliy (voice)
    Elena Ponsova Elena Ponsova - The Hen (voice)
    Irina Pototskaya Irina Pototskaya - The Second Kitten (voice)
    Grigoriy Shpigel Grigoriy Shpigel - The Pig (voice)
    Boris Tolmazov Boris Tolmazov - Narrator (voice)
    Georgiy Vitsin Georgiy Vitsin - The Goat / The Raven (voice)
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