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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hermann_vogel_the_wolf_and_the_seven_young_kids_1.jpg]]
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3"The Wolf and the Seven Young Kids" [[note]] sometimes known as "The Wolf And The Seven Young Goats", "The Wolf And The Seven Kids", "The Wolf And The Seven Little Goats", and "Wolf and the Seven Goats" as it's known in Japan. [[/note]] ("Der Wolf und die sieben jungen Geißlein") is a well-known {{fairy tale}} written down by the Creator/BrothersGrimm. The story has a few parallels with "Literature/LittleRedRidingHood" and "Literature/TheThreeLittlePigs". Indeed, given the differences between Creator/CharlesPerrault's ''Little Red Riding Hood'' and Creator/TheBrothersGrimm's, folklorists suspect it was an influence.
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5A mother goat leaves her seven little kids home alone before she goes out to get some food. She warns them not to open the door for anyone, especially not TheBigBadWolf. Soon enough, after she leaves, the wolf tries to get in. He pretends to be their mother, but is betrayed by his gruff voice. The wolf leaves and returns a little later, this time using a sweet, light voice to impersonate their mother (in some versions having eaten chalk to make his voice higher[[note]]Chalk was thought to be a remedy for colds and hoarseness. There might also have been an association of [[LightIsGood white chalk = soft and light voice]]. In reality however, eating chalk has absolutely no effect on your voice, it will never even get into contact with your vocal chords. DontTryThisAtHome[[/note]]). At first the seven little kids think it really is their mother, but then they ask her to stick her paw in front of the window (in some accounts they see it under a crack in the door) and notice his big, black feet. They refuse to open the door and the wolf leaves again, this time going to the bakery (in some versions, the miller) to whiten his paw in flour. He returns and fools the little kids because they see his white paw and think it's their mother. The wolf jumps into the house and gobbles up six of the seven kids – the youngest one is able to hide inside a large standing clock before he leaves. After his big meal, the wolf finds he is very, ''very'' tired, and so the first thing he decides to do is lie down against a tree and enjoy a good long nap.
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7When the mother goat returns, she discovers her house is a mess and finds her youngest kid inside the clock. He tells her what happened and they decide to go look for the wolf. They soon find him, still fast asleep, and the mother goat tells her youngest child to get a pair of scissors, a needle and some thread, with which they cut open the wolf's belly. The six goat children jump out, alive and well. Then the goats fill up the wolf's belly with rocks and the mother sews it back up again. The goats hide and the wolf finally wakes up, feeling thirsty. He goes to the well (in some versions, the river), but falls in and drowns under the weight of the rocks. And the goat family lived happily ever after.
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9While not gaining as much film or animated adaptations as ''Little Red Riding Hood'' and other stories by The Brothers Grimm. The story has been adapted into animations in the past, mostly in Japan where that fairy tale is very popular. The story was loosely adapted into animation with the 1957 [[EasternEuropeanAnimation Russian animated short]], while receiving two live-action adaptations (the 1957 film from Germany [[AdaptationExpansion which expands on the story]], and a musical from 1976 called ''Mama''/''Rock'n'Roll Wolf'').
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11The 2018 Japanese StopMotion animated short ''Anime/MyLittleGoat'' by Tomoki Misato is [[{{Grimmification}} a darker and more realistic take]] on the tale which takes place after the events of the story.
12----
13!! This fairy tale provides examples of:
14* AdaptedOut: In some animated adaptations of the story. The unnamed human characters simply named "The Shopkeeper" and "The Baker" are usually not present, with the exception of the 1978 anime adaptation by Toei, where both characters make an appearance.
15* AnAesop: Don't let strangers in!
16** Also, don't mess with [[MamaBear mothers]].
17* AndIMustScream: Narrowly averted for the young goats, who are all swallowed whole and nearly are doomed to suffocate and digest in the wolf’s stomach. They spend a prolonged amount of time in the wolf’s stomach, completely unable to anything but squirm around.
18* AnimalTalk: The wolf can talk to the goats and pretend that he is their mother.
19* ArtisticLicenseBiology: ''Six'' goats SwallowedWhole? Their mother, who is somehow able to perform surgery ''without anesthetics'' [[note]] To be fair, the original story was written in 1812, anesthesia wouldn't get used for surgery or operations until the 1840s. [[/note]] (though to be fair the wolf already ''was'' taking a nap at the time, some versions try to justify this by saying that the wolf was really, ''really'' tired)? Huge rocks being placed into the wolf's belly? The wolf ''still'' being able to move after swallowing huge stones? (At least there was one Creator/RichardScarry adaptation from 1994 that had the kids stuffed into a ''bag.)''
20* AssholeVictim: The wolf is portrayed as malicious and wicked, delighting in eating the kids after tricking them. Thanks to this, nobody really feels sorry for him once he dies.
21* BalloonBelly: In most versions, the wolf often has a huge stomach after eating the six kids.
22* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: In the English dub of the ''My Favorite Fairy Tales'' adaptation of the story, the youngest goat, Billy, slips while sledding down a hill and is laughed at by his siblings. Embarrassed, he wishes for something to happen to them as payback for laughing at him. Later that day, they all end up eaten by the wolf and would’ve died had his mother not taken her revenge.
23* TheBigBadWolf: This time he tries to eat a bunch of baby goats.
24* {{Bowdlerise}}: Some versions (such as ''WesternAnimation/SimsalaGrimm'' and the 1994 version by Richard Scarry) have the wolf [[BagOfKidnapping tie the kids up in a sack]] rather than gobbling on them right there, and he falls asleep because he gets tired from carrying the heavy bag. The 1957 Soviet animated short featured the wolf kidnapping the six goat children and preparing to put them into a boiling pot.
25* CompressedAdaptation: Most animated and book adaptations of the tale usually focus on the Wolf, the Goat children and Mother Goat. As a result, the only human characters of the story, such as The Baker and The Shopkeeper, are rarely seen. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GswJyEh7jgA The exception is the 1978 anime adaptation]], and the 1957 live-action film which features both characters.
26* DarkIsEvil: The wolf has black fur.
27* DisappearedDad: The father is never mentioned in the story. It seems mother goat is either a widow, a TrulySingleParent, or divorced.
28* DramaticIrony: The wolf never figures out that the kids escaped from his stomach before he dies by drowning. In the ''My Favorite Fairy Tales'' English dub, he even wonders why he bothered eating them as they didn’t even taste that good to him.
29* EatenAlive: When the mother goat finds the sleeping wolf, his stomach is jostling around, as the six children he just ate are still very much alive inside.
30* FanservicePack: While most adaptions prefer to portray the goat mother as a middle aged woman, some adaptations like to portray her as [[https://66.media.tumblr.com/f1722baf11fb532819f40216fd59613c/tumblr_p2a26sALje1wba83ho1_400.png young]] and [[https://i.imgur.com/a2k9W68.png beautiful]]. Most notably the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VsEuON-8-Pg Toei animation from 1986]] and [[https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/81XgjPZOgGL.jpg Shogo Hirata's illustrations from a 1985 book adaptation]] (The Mother Goat's design would later get reused for the 1986 anime). Even the 1976 musical ''Mama''/''Rock'n'Roll Wolf'' gave The Mother Goat a notably prettier and younger appearance.
31* GettingEatenIsHarmless: Six of the kids are eaten by TheBigBadWolf, but when the seventh kid and their mother cuts the wolf's belly open, the kids all emerge unharmed.
32* HeavySleeper: After eating the kids, the wolf decides to take a nap outside- and he somehow sleeps through his own stomach being cut open and sewed back up. Sure he ate six whole kids so him quickly getting tired and quickly finding a spot to nap is understandable, but come on!
33* HideYourChildren: Only one manages to hide.
34* JustEatHim: The wolf actually does this and immediately devours six of the young goats. Fortunately for them, an above trope is in play.
35* LionsAndTigersAndHumansOhMy: In several versions of the fable, whenever the wolf goes off to get the flour to whiten his paw (and in some versions, chalk or another substance with which to sweeten his voice), he'll barge into a store/bakery or a mill, which are usually owned and run by humans. The only comment that's passed by the humans is that the wolf is barging into their work and strong-arming them into giving him what he wants, never once raising an eyebrow over the fact that it's a wolf doing so. Some adaptations understandably change the humans to other animals.
36* LiveActionAdaptation:
37** A live-action [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mmz5kXFCipA&t=2816s German adaptation]] of the story was created in 1957.
38** A [[TheMusical 1976 musical adaptation]] of the story called ''Mama''/''Rock'n'Roll Wolf'' was created, with [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=shU4Vce_jJQ human actors]] [[WorldOfFunnyAnimals dressed up as animals]]. The film loosely follows the story, with a few differences. The mother goat (named Rada) decides to leave her children at home to attend the village festival instead of going to get food. One notable difference is that the goat kids are reduced to five instead of seven and the clock that one of the goat kids hides in is absent. Another major difference from the story is that the wolf's motives are different. Instead of the wolf (named Titi Suru) wanting to eat the goat children, he decides to capture them for ransom to get a bag full of gold. The wolf has his own henchmen, such as a donkey, another wolf who's his cousin, and a lynx, who all help capture the goat kids. It is later revealed that the reason he decided to kidnap her children is [[FreudianExcuse because he wanted a family of his own.]] [[HeelFaceTurn He and his henchmen have a change of heart]] [[SparedByTheAdaptation by the end of the film]]. The film was a [[InternationalCoProduction co-production between Romania, the Soviet Union, and France,]] and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4Typ2fVffI later gained an English dub.]]
39*** The musical even inspired a [[ScreenToStageAdaptation stage musical]] that borrows most of the story beats and a lot of elements from the 1976 movie, (such as the village fair, the wolf's henchmen, and the rowdiest of the goat kids, named Matei like in the movie, going off and being chased by the henchmen, a song [[SuspiciouslySimilarSong sounding more than a bit like the memorable "Mom Is Home"]] and the wolf getting a HeelFaceTurn in the end) but reduces the number of goat kids to three and inserts a ton of romantic tension between the mother goat and the wolf; in this version she starts the story thinking of him as TroubledButCute and lets herself get seduced by his [[AllGirlsWantBadBoys "bad-boy" charms]], but they break it off when he tries to get her to leave her kids. In other words, in this version the wolf's primary motivation is [[GreenEyedMonster jealousy and possessiveness]]; he decides to kidnap the kids both as revenge and because he sees them as a hindrance to his relationship with the mother goat. There is also a secondary FreudianExcuse here, with the FantasticRacism between the farm animals and the wild animals (the wolf and his gang) being played up a lot more. The donkey even gets his own subplot about joining the wolf's gang because the farm animals reject him.
40* WorldOfFunnyAnimals: While the 1976 musical adaptation ''Mama''/''Rock'n'Roll Wolf'' has human actors dressed as animals. It's set in a universe of anthropomorphic animals (such as sheep, goats, and bears) with a mix of [[CivilizedAnimal non-anthropomorphic talking animals]] (squirrels and birds) [[GhibliHills set inside a peaceful forest.]]
41* MamaBear: The mother goat cutting open the wolf to save her children and then leading them in stuffing his stomach with stones, eventually resulting in the wolf’s death when he drowns trying to get water. The English dub of the ''My Favorite Fairy Tales'' adaptation goes a step further when describing her intentions - she’s not just satisfied with having her children back, she wants to make sure ''this'' wolf never harms anyone again, and subjects him to a slow, torturous death.
42* NoNameGiven: Nobody's name is mentioned.
43* OnceUponATime: The tale begins with these words.
44* PaperThinDisguise: The wolf simply puts on a high-pitched falsetto voice and whitens his paws in flour.
45** To be fair, the kids weren't able to see him in full until it was too late.
46* PublicServiceAnnouncement: On January 28, 2021, Japanese disaster prevention awareness foundation "Everyone's disaster prevention + Sonae" (みんなの防災プロジェクト実行委員会, "Min'na no bōsai purojekuto jikkō iinkai") created a 4 minute anime adaptation of the story (starring the foundation's mascots as one of the goat children), [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0iFkMjTwJik to raise awareness on potential disasters to parents and younger children in Japan.]]
47* ReplacedWithReplica: Played with, in that the mother goat replaces the six kids in the wolf's stomach with rocks. In some versions, the wolf sings as he runs to the well:
48--> What rumbles and tumbles
49--> Inside my poor bones?
50--> I thought it was six kids,
51--> But it feels like six stones!
52* RuleOfThree: Only the third time he tries, the wolf manages to get in.
53* RuleOfSeven: The number of the goat siblings.
54* SapientEatSapient: The wolf and the kids are all portrayed as perfectly sapient beings, making it all the more unnerving that the wolf eats them, perfectly happy to kill and eat sapient children. He also doesn’t bother to kill them before eating them, instead swallowing them while while they’re still alive, and they’re forced to squirm around in his stomach afterwards, presumably until they suffocate to death and get digested.
55* ScareEmStraight: Don't let strangers in the house - or they might kill you and your siblings!
56* SwallowedWhole: The wolf, apparently, was ''much'' too hungry to waste time biting.
57* TokenHuman: The Baker and The Shopkeeper are the only notable human characters of the story.
58* TheRuntAtTheEnd: The youngest goat kid is usually portrayed as this in many adaptations of the story. He's usually referred to as the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzJkhSgh-uU&t=69s smallest of the goat children]] [[note]] the ''Manga Sekai Mukashibanashi'' adaptation from 1976 [[/note]], and sometimes [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0VWUYCUUEOw very sensitive or shy]] [[note]] such as the 1986 adaptation from ''My Favorite Fairy Tales'', and the 1988 adaptation from the series ''Sekai Meisaku Douwa'' [[/note]] depending on the adaptation, especially the anime adaptations made during the 1970s and 1980s.
59* UnexplainedRecovery: The kids somehow survive being SwallowedWhole by a wolf.
60* VillainousGlutton: The Wolf, who is delighted after eating six whole baby goats in one sitting- and in most versions of the story briefly looks for more to eat before giving up. In the English dub of the ''My Favorite Fairy Tales'' adaptation, when he’s suffering from being weighed down by the rocks in his stomach he believes are the digesting kids, he complains that he’s eaten more than six kids for appetizers.
61* YoungestChildWins: Only the youngest kid can hide properly from the wolf's eyes, and later tell the mother what happened.

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