Dot and the Kangaroo (film)

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Dot and the Kangaroo
Dot and the Kangaroo cover.jpg
DVD Cover
Directed byYoram Gross
Written byYoram Gross
John Palmer
Based onDot and the Kangaroo by Ethel C. Pedley
Produced byYoram Gross
StarringLola Brooks
Joan Bruce
Barbara Frawley
Peter Gwynne
Ron Haddrick
Ross Higgins
Richard Meikle
Spike Milligan
June Salter
Edited byRod Hay
Klaus Jaritz
Music byBob Young
John Palmer
Marion Von Alderstein
Production
company
Distributed byHoyts
Release date
15 December 1977 (1977-12-15)
Running time
71 minutes
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
BudgetA$250,000

Dot and the Kangaroo is a 1977 Australian musical film which combines animation and live-action. It is based on the 1899 children's literature book Dot and the Kangaroo by Ethel Pedley.

Plot[]

When 5-year-old Dot finds herself lost in the Australian bush, a red kangaroo who has lost her joey promises to help Dot find her way home. In the process, the kangaroo introduces Dot to a number of other animals, teaching her a greater appreciation for nature.

Cast[]

Production[]

Yoram and Sandra Gross wanted to make an Australian animated feature for the world market. They read a series of books before deciding on Dot and the Kangaroo. Two thirds of the budget was provided by the Australian Film Commission.[1]

The movie backdrop was filmed on location in and around Jenolan Caves and the Warragamba Dam Catchment Area of the Blue Mountains in New South Wales, Australia. Although the film uses many of the same elements as other animated children's musicals involving animals, such as many of the Disney animated features from the United States, the film is essentially Australian in its use of icons and accents. It also references Indigenous Australian culture in some scenes which depict animation of cave paintings and aboriginal dancing.[2]

Soundtrack[]

The movie featured an original soundtrack including several lyrical melodies composed by Bob Young with lyrics John Palmer, and Marion Von Alderstein, while Bob Young provided additional lyrics, and they were recorded by Maurie Wilmore. A soundtrack album was released in 1982 combined with the soundtrack of Around the World with Dot. The music from Dot and the Kangaroo appears on the B-Side.

Around The World With Dot / Dot And The Kangaroo
Soundtrack album by
Bob Young
Released1982
LabelEMI
Track listing
No.TitleArtistLength
1."The Platypus" (Young, Palmer)Spike Milligan, June Salter2:07
2."Ride In The Pouch Of A Red Kangaroo" (Young, Palmer)Barbara Frawley, Ross Higgins1:54
3."Willie Wagtail" (Young, Palmer)Ross Higgins1:47
4."The Bunyip’s Gonna Get You" (Young, Palmer)George Assang3:11
5."What Fun You Have When You’re A Frog" (Young, Von Alderstein) 2:04
6."All We Ever Do All Day Is Quack" (Young, Palmer)Nola Lester, Ross Higgins1:54
7."Ballet Sequence" (Young) 2:05
8."One Day When I Was Walking" (Young, Palmer)Barbara Frawley0:50
9."Lullaby (Sleep Little One Sleep)" (Young, Palmer)Sue Walker2:01
10."Dot’s Theme" (Young) 2:10

Reception[]

The film was a success, being screened around the world and returning its cost within three years.[3] It allowed Yoram Gross to enlarge his production company and market his family films in the United States. Additionally, the film's use of animation set against photographic backgrounds established the style for many of his later films.

Release[]

In the 1980s, the first seven films were released on VHS in the United States, the first one by Magnetic Video, the next two by CBS/Fox Video and the next four by Family Home Entertainment. A DVD version of the film was released on 30 October 2001 by Hen's Tooth Video. In Australia there is a complete series DVD set of all the Dot films. They also were released on DVD on Digiview Entertainment. One of them is the first film which was released in 2005 by DigiView Productions and re-released in 2006 by . It was then released by TUTM Home Entertainment in November 1, 2009,[citation needed] as the DigiView copies went out-of-print since the DigiView’s closure. The first film was also treated as a public domain film in the United States, though it remains copyrighted.

The various films were shown on the Disney Channel in the late 1980s through the 1990s in the United States, and on the Family Channel in Canada.

Sequels[]

The Yoram Gross Studios followed up the first film with another eight movies between 1981 and 1994. The theme behind all of the films in the Dot series is the negative impact of humanity on animal life in nature. The sequels are as follows:

  1. Around the World with Dot (1981)
  2. Dot and the Bunny (1983)
  3. Dot and the Koala (1985)
  4. Dot and Keeto (1986)
  5. Dot and the Whale (1986)
  6. (1987)
  7. Dot Goes to Hollywood (1987)
  8. Dot in Space (1994; Australian release only)

Footnotes[]

  1. ^ Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, Australian Film 1900-1977: A Guide to Feature Film Production, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998, 320
  2. ^ Rick Thompson, The Oxford Companion to Australian Film, 1999, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-553797-1
  3. ^ Antoinette Starkiewicz, "Yoram Gross", Cinema Papers, August 1984 p338

External links[]

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