Snow White must flee from her evil stepmother, the Queen. She's taken in by the lovable seven dwarfs. Will the queen be able to get rid of her rival?Snow White must flee from her evil stepmother, the Queen. She's taken in by the lovable seven dwarfs. Will the queen be able to get rid of her rival?Snow White must flee from her evil stepmother, the Queen. She's taken in by the lovable seven dwarfs. Will the queen be able to get rid of her rival?
- Servant
- (as Patrick de Santis)
- Director
- Writers
- Jacob Grimm(uncredited)
- Wilhelm Grimm(uncredited)
- Robert C. Jones
- All cast & crew
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe production design for this episode was inspired by the artwork of illustrator N.C. Wyeth.
- Quotes
The Magic Mirror: Several months later, the young queen gave birth to a daughter, and everyone in the kingdom was very happy. But happier than everyone was the beautiful young queen. For her daughter was blessed with lips a deep red, and skin white as snow, and her hair was as black as the wood in the window frame. Discussing the matter with the king, they decided to call the baby Snow White. But all did not go well. The young queen died a short while later, and everyone in the land felt a very deep sadness. After several years, the king married once again. But the new queen, while very beautiful indeed, did not have the goodness in her heart that Snow White's mother possessed. She was mean and selfish and - very, very vain.
"Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs", based on one of the most justifiably popular fairy-tales and one of the Grimm Brothers' most famous, is not just one of the high points of the third season of 'Faerie Tale Theatre' but also one of the best of the entire show. It may not quite have the timelessness of the 1937 Disney film, but it is a more faithful adaptation, which will be appreciated, while still putting its own spin on it that stops it from being too faithful. Then again, most 'Faerie Tale Theatre' adaptations were more faithful than their Disney counterparts, love Disney with all my heart but they were never known for faithfulness to source material).
It may not quite have the zip of some episodes of the show and is more deliberately paced, but this approach was not just fitting but in a way necessary. Rarely was it dull and it just had enough content to fill the just less than one hour running time, with all the basic details, structure and spirit of the story evident and not having too much filler with the dwarfs.
Visually, there are more beautiful-looking adaptations than "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs", with a couple of the costumes looking shoestring budget cheap (there are worse though, namely the cow and giant in "Jack and the Beanstalk", the makeup in "The Nightingale" and the toads in "Thumbelina") and occasionally the lighting is a little dim. The photography is nicely done though, and there is a lush picturesque-ness and eerie atmosphere to the scenery and settings.
The music score is also hauntingly beautiful and fits perfectly, one actually does not miss the magnificent songs from the Disney film at all and the music score here is actually just as memorable. The script has a nice balance of humour (namely with the dwarfs), emotion (Snow White) and darkness (the Queen, her motivations are her wonderfully kooky disguises). The storytelling is a strong reminder as to why the original story is a classic in the first place, having all its ingredients and creating a seamless atmosphere that's enchanting, frightening and entertaining.
Can't fault the casting either. Elizabeth McGovern is a luminous and understated Snow White, innocent, beautiful and bewildered but never passive or too naive. Vincent Price is pitch perfect casting as the Magic Mirror in every regard, he and Vanessa Redgrave stole the show for me. When it comes to narrating Price to me was one of the best at delivering it, no matter the material itself he always delivered it with sincerity, sometimes knowing humour and sometimes with a macabre archness, he brought all that to his performance.
Rex Smith is youthful and dashing but also refreshingly goofy as the Prince, a character who is nearly always bland elsewhere due to the Prince being barely in it in the fairy-tale itself. The dwarfs are well-defined in personality and entertaining, particularly Tony Cox. Along with Price, Vanessa Redgrave steals the show as a deliciously camp and monstrously evil queen.
In conclusion, a gem and one of the best of 'Faerie Tale Theatre'. 9/10 Bethany Cox
- TheLittleSongbird
- Jun 23, 2017
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