Animals United (1969) Poster

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8/10
ironic, political piece of erich kästner
Lurchi7 March 2002
konferenz der tiere is a very 60´s-style movie. made after a book by erich kästner it is very avantgarde for the time and combines funny animals with a political underline. if you like animation movies, that do not look like the japanese tv-kind,watch it.
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10/10
excellent movie for kids
tim-winkler4430 July 2015
This movie is gorgeous, it's not like any of this modern cgi movies, this is deep and reflects the authors surrounding when writing it in the WWII. But the movie is not just based on the book it's take his place in the late 60s so you better not expect a war movie, furthermore it's universal and shows war-machinery very precisely without losing the story. Because it's as viewed as a kid just animals who wants peace against the human kind. So if you just look at the film what it is: A kids movie, it's nearly perfect and if your kids gets bored you see how society turns bad. When I grow up I watch this movie again an fully understands the meanings, but I just watch it because it was enjoyable in the first place. A movie which grows with you.
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4/10
Very bizarre despite its solid message Warning: Spoilers
"Die Konferenz der Tiere" is a West German animated movie from 1969, so this one will have its 50th anniversary soon. these 90 minutes are possibly the most known work by director Curt Linda and he is also one of the writers who adapted Erich Kästner's book for the screen here. Kästner himself, unlike with some of his older children's films, was not involved. The animals group together in here to fight the humans after matters become unacceptable for them. The result is a big parallel to the "Rattenfänger von Hameln". All in all, I felt the film had a couple okay moments, but still, in terms of story-telling, it came pretty short. I myself was okay with the animation without liking it too much really. It's accurate for a 1960s movie, but all the animated films from that era came a bit short being the aftermath of the brilliant Golden Age of Animation. Still there is much worse stuff from the 1960s in terms of non live action films. Overall, I still have to say that I did not enjoy the watch as much as I hoped I would. There is a modern animated film from the year 2010 that adapts the same material and I thought that one was superior. I do not recommend the 1960s version.
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4/10
A sheer fireworks of colors
ingo_schwarze14 February 2010
While Kaestner's book, written in 1949 right after World War II, focuses on the political content, the film is most striking for its images: very brightly colored, mostly in agitated movement, spanning vast ranges of styles not to be expected in an animated movie: landscapes in the style of romanticism, traditional silhouette, some iconography bordering surrealism, lots of people and machinery reminiscent of George Grosz, a bit of Pop Art, but, above all, the aesthetics of the Hippie generation: Light, gay, psychedelic colors, flowers and small peaceful birds all over the place. Given that the film was turned in the same year that saw Woodstock, and the fact that the content is a pacifist parable, turning to hippie style is perhaps not to be wondered at. The sheer fireworks of colors makes the movie worth viewing...

Deplorably, though, the film team was so keen on playing with colors and pictures that several other aspects required to make a good movie have been neglected. Even though they had a good basic plot to work on, it is rendered in a rather sketchy way. There are long stretches of cheap slapstick comedy that could have been left out without any loss. The characters remain unconvincing, inexpressive and schematic and do not evolve during the plot - least of all the children, even though it's the children all this is supposedly about. This is particularly surprising and disappointing since the movie is based on a work of Erich Kaestner, a writer most famous for his vivid and affectionate depictions of children's characters.

Young children will, no doubt, enjoy the colors, the pictures, and the slapstick. Still, this is not just a movie for children. Children of about six years or a bit more will miss many of the political sub-tones, and in fact, when i was watching the film, quite a few times children in the auditorium loudly complained to their parents: "What is this, what is happening now?" My impression is that the film-makers rather played on their own imagination, their own tastes, and their own connotations, in the world of grown-ups - up to and including, just to name one example, an allusion to Nikita Khrushchev hammering the U.N. conference table with his shoe, an event that happened ten years earlier and would hardly be known to young children, even near the end of the Sixties.

I don't know whether Kaestner liked the way the film-makers played with his book, obviously rather for their own amusement than for pleasing others, or even pleasing children. But he might have, for he once said: "Only those who grow up but still remain children are human."
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