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The Little Engine That Could (1991 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Little Engine That Could
VHS cover
Directed byDave Edwards
Screenplay byRay Rhamey
Based onThe Little Engine That Could
by Watty Piper
Produced by
Starring
Edited byTerry Brown
Music by
    • Ben Heneghan
    • Ian Lawson
Production
company
Distributed byMCA/Universal Home Video[1]
Release date
  • November 22, 1991 (1991-11-22) (United States)
Running time
30 minutes[2]
Countries
  • United States
  • United Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The Little Engine That Could is a 1991 animated adventure film directed by Dave Edwards[3] and co-produced by Edwards and Mike Young, animated at Kalato Animation in Wales and co-financed by Universal Pictures through their MCA/Universal Home Video arm and S4C, Wales' dedicated Welsh-language channel. It was released on VHS on November 22, 1991: 1993 new Name! by MCA/Universal Home Video. The film features the voice talents of Kath Soucie and Frank Welker.[4] It is based on the 1930 book of the same name, by Watty Piper (specifically based on the 1976 illustrations by Ruth Sanderson).[5] The film was also syndicated in the US on broadcast television as an Easter special in March/April 1993.[6]

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Transcription

Plot

Eric, a young boy, is excited about his birthday after reading a book and believes that a birthday train will come for him, much to his teenage sister Jill's disbelief. Opposite from their town on the other side of a mountain, the engines at a roundhouse wake up and are assigned jobs by Tower. Farnsworth and Pete each pull a passenger train and a freight train over the mountain to the town; Jebediah is assigned the milk train; and Georgia is assigned the birthday train, which is being loaded by Rollo the clown. Tillie, a switcher engine, wishes to pull a train of her own but is denied permission by the Tower due to her small size.

Georgia breaks down shortly after departing the station and is taken back to the roundhouse. With the birthday train stranded, Rollo and the others attempt to flag down a substitute engine; Farnsworth, Pete, and Jebediah each pass by and decline their request. Tillie sneaks out from the roundhouse after Tower falls asleep and offers her help. Tillie, repeating "I think I can", pulls the birthday train up the mountain and endures ridicule from various animals. Tillie narrowly crosses a collapsing bridge but loses the last train car.

Tillie reaches the summit but is knocked out after an avalanche buries her and the train. When she regains consciousness from her heart-shaped firebox, Tillie pulls the train out of the snow using her cowcatcher as a snowplow. The train descends the mountain and reaches the town in celebration, to Eric's delight and Jill's amazement: Tillie expresses pride for finishing the journey and uses her whistle to summon the town's children to enjoy the birthday train's festivities.

Voice cast

Broadcasting history

Despite being released as a direct-to-video film, The Little Engine That Could had been broadcast on 56 independent television stations as an Easter special for two weeks two years later.[7]

In the United States, it has never been released on DVD and was only available on VHS and Laserdisc format.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ AllMovie
  2. ^ Animation Anecdotes #387|Cartoon Research
  3. ^ Trailer courtesy of Video Detective
  4. ^ "The Little Engine That Could (1991)". Behind The Voice Actors.
  5. ^ The little engine that could. 1997. ISBN 9780760703748.
  6. ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. p. 289. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  7. ^ The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons by Jeff Lenburg - Internet Archive (pg.339)
  8. ^ LaserDisc Database

External links

This page was last edited on 23 June 2024, at 19:27
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