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The Mitten (film)

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The Mitten
Варежка
Directed byRoman Kachanov
Written byZhanna Vitenzon
CinematographyIosif Golomb
Edited byNadezhda Treshchyova
Music byVadim Gavmalija
Release date
  • June 6, 1967 (1967-06-06)
Running time
10 minutes
CountryUSSR
LanguageRussian

The Mitten (Russian: Варежка, Varezhka) is a 1967 Soviet animated film directed by Roman Kachanov. The film received international recognition.

Plot summary

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The film centers on a girl who wants a dog. She brings home a puppy, but her mother wouldn't let the puppy stay. The girl is upset and goes outside to the playground, where all the other kids are walking their dogs. She starts playing with her mitten, pretending that the mitten is a dog. And the power of her imagination turns her mitten into a puppy, which keeps the mitten's red color and black spots on the back. The puppy starts chasing a cat, which ends up finding shelter on top of the ad board saying "Everyone who has a dog is welcome to take part in the kennel club competition!" The girl takes her puppy to the competition, and it completes the task better than other dogs, but on the way to finish one of the threads of the puppy's knitted coat gets caught by a nail on the wooden barrier, and it loses the competition. The girl takes it home and is about to feed it, when it turns back to a mitten. Mom notices the girl trying to feed a mitten and decides to get her a real puppy.

Creators

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  • Dolls and scenery made — Pavel Gusyov, Oleg Masainov, V. Petrov, M. Chesnokova, G. Gettinger, G. Lyutinsky, A. Maximov, V. Kalashnikova, V. Kuranov, S. Etlis, leadership the Roman Gurov
  • Film editor — Vera Gokke
  • Editor — Natalya Abramova
  • Director — Nathan Bitman

Awards

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Interesting facts

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  • There is no dialogue in the film.
  • Leonid Shvartsman based the character of the mother on a very close acquaintance — Tamara Vladimirovna Poletika (the first wife of his friend and animator Lev Milchin).
  • The bulldog in “The Mitten” is based on the director, Roman Kachanov.
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