Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Series / TheSingingRingingTree

Go To

1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/p3504756_d_v7_aa.jpg]]
2
3''The Singing Ringing Tree'' (German: ''Das singende, klingende Bäumchen'') was a children's film made by UsefulNotes/{{East German|y}} studio DEFA in 1957 and shown in the form of a television series by the BBC. It was a story in the style of Creator/TheBrothersGrimm, directed by Francesco Stefani.
4
5The film was purchased by Creator/TheBBC and cut into three parts to create a mini-series which was first broadcast 19 November 1964 to 3 December 1964 as part of ''Tales from Europe'', with an English-language [[VoiceoverTranslation voice-over track]] (not dubbed, however, the original soundtrack was simply faded up and down). It was repeated many times through to 1980.
6
7One reviewer (Roger Thomas at amazon.com) has summed it up thus:
8
9-->"Imagine a FairyTale conceived by [[Music/RichardWagner Wagner]] and directed by Creator/FritzLang, with nods in the direction of ''Film/TheCabinetOfDrCaligari'' and GermanExpressionism, and you'd be close."
10
11[[https://youtu.be/9PCG7QKbOps Here's]] the Glorious Technicolour opening, to give you a flavor of what it's like.
12----
13
14!! The singing ringing tropes:
15
16* BeautyEqualsGoodness: The Princess is temporarily cursed with ugliness to reflect her inner nature and regains her beauty when she learns to become a better person.
17* BreakTheHaughty: The Princess' basic character arc.
18* DealWithTheDevil: The evil Dwarf will give the Prince the Singing Ringing Tree but if the Prince then fails to win the Princess, the Dwarf will own his soul. The Prince recklessly states that if he fails "you can turn me into a bear" and the Dwarf takes him at his word.
19* JerkassHasAPoint: The Prince's first attempt to court the Princess is to give her a large golden box filled with pearls. She disdainfully tips them all over the floor and complains that any rich man can give her a box of pearls and she expects more effort from a suitor. There was no need to be so rude about it but the idea that someone who hopes to win your heart needs to make more effort than just a financial one (especially when you're already rich yourself) is hard to argue with.
20* McGuffin: The titular tree.
21* NamelessNarrative: No-one is named, there's just The Prince; The Princess; The King and The Dwarf.
22* PunishedWithUgly: What the Princess is temporarily cursed with. She gets better, following her redemption.
23* UnkemptBeauty: The princess after her transformation probably doesn't look any worse, at least to modern viewers. (Whether this is due to limited production values or was intended as a stealth [[AnAesop Aesop]] is unclear.)
24* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: The King ''presumably'' recovers from grief when his daughter returns home safely but his fate isn't made clear. The giant fish is also left stranded when the Dwarf drains the lake and although the lake refills after his defeat the fish isn't seen again.

Top