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Puss in Boots (1969 film) : ウィキペディア英語版
The Wonderful World of Puss 'n Boots


is a 1969 American-Japanese traditional animation action-comedy musical feature film, the 15th cinema feature produced by Tōei Animation (then Tōei Dōga) and the second to be directed by Kimio Yabuki. The screenplay and lyrics, written by Hisashi Inōe and Morihisa Yamamoto,〔〔The creators of the popular children's puppet television series ''Hyokkori Hyōtanjima'' and its title song, also scored by Seiichirō Uno, this being the fourth and last time, following ''Jack and the Witch'', the animated ''Hyokkori Hyōtanjima'' feature and the previous year’s ''Andersen Monogatari'', also directed by Kimio Yabuki, that all three would contribute to a Tōei Animation production (Yamamoto but not Inōe handled both screenplay and lyrics for 1971’s Uno-scored ''Ali Baba to Yonjū-ppiki no Tōzoku''; only Uno would stay on for the latter two ''Puss 'n Boots'').〕 is based on the European literary fairy tale of the same name by Charles Perrault, expanded with elements of Alexandre Dumas-esque swashbuckling adventure and funny animal slapstick, with many other anthropomorphic animals (''kemono'' in Japanese) in addition to the title character. The Tōei version of the character himself is named Pero, after Perrault.
The film was released straight to television in the United States by AIP-TV.
The film is particularly notable for giving Tōei Animation its mascot and logo and for its roll call of top key animators of the time: Yasuo Ōtsuka, Reiko Okuyama, Sadao Kikuchi, Yōichi Kotabe, Akemi Ōta, Hayao Miyazaki and Akira Daikuhara, supervised by animation director Yasuji Mori〔 and given a relatively free rein and adequate support to create virtuosic and distinctive sequences, making it a key example of the Japanese model of division of labour in animation by which animators are assigned by scene rather than character. Most famous of these sequences is a chase across castle parapets animated in alternating cuts by Ōtsuka and Miyazaki〔http://www.pelleas.net/aniTOP/index.php?title=toei_doga_pt_2&c=1〕 which would serve as the model for similar sequences in such later films as Miyazaki's feature-directing début ''The Castle of Cagliostro'' and ''The Cat Returns''.〔http://ghiblicon.blogspot.com/2006/06/puss-in-boots-now-on-dvd_03.html〕 Miyazaki is also the manga artist of a promotional comic book adaptation of the film originally serialised in the Sunday ''Chūnichi Shimbun'' during 1969, in which it is credited to Tōei Dōga as a whole, and republished in 1984 in book about the making of the film.〔http://www.nausicaa.net/miyazaki/manga/neko.html〕 The film was re-released 9 years later in the 1978 Summer Toei Manga Matsuri on July 22 of that year.
Since becoming Toei Animation's mascot, Pero's face can be seen on the company logo at the beginning or ending to some of Toei's other animated features, both from Japan and some of their outsourced work for other companies.
==Characters==

*Pero
*Pierre
*Princess Rose (Corinne Orr (English dub version))
*Assassin
*Little Mouse
*Boss Mouse
*Daniel
*Raymond
*Assassin Boss
*Lucifer
*King

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「The Wonderful World of Puss 'n Boots」の詳細全文を読む



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