The Pied Piper is a 1986 Czechoslovak animated film directed by Jiří Barta. Its original Czech title is Krysař, which means "The rat catcher". The story is an adaptation of the Pied Piper of Hamelin, a fairy tale originated in medieval Germany. The film was one of Czechoslovakia's most ambitious animation projects of the 1980s, notable for its unusual dark art direction, innovative animation techniques and use of a fictitious language. The art design was heavily inspired by German Expressionism and medieval art. The film was screened in the Un Certain Regard section the 1986... Cannes Film Festival. The film starts with the image of a mechanism beginning to work - as the gears move , the sun slowly rises up over a town and a new day begins. The town, Hamelin, is shown to be one which is full of corrupted, petty people, where everything is wasted and money and social rank are the first priority. The waste leads to a gigantic rat infestation at night. As the town leaders meet to decide on the best course of action, a stranger appears in the doorway - a hooded piper who with the sound of his playing can entice rats to run over a cliff to their deaths.
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| Release date: | 1985 |
| Directed by: | Jiří Barta |
| Runtime: | 53 Minutes |
| Editor: | Helena Lebdusková |
| Music by: | Michael Kocáb |
| Cinematography: | Vladimír Malík, Ivan Pit |
| Screenplay by: | Kamil Pixa |
| Adapted from: | Krysař |
| Genre: | Animation |