Lapitch the Little Shoemaker (1997)
October 23, 1997Release Date
Lapitch the Little Shoemaker (1997)
October 23, 1997Release Date
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Cast & Crew.
Ivan Gudeljević
Šegrt Hlapić (voice)
Maja Rozman
Gita (voice)
Tarik Filipović
Amadeus / Vlasnik vrtuljka (voice)
Pero Juričić
Bundaš / Vlasnik cirkusa (voice)
Relja Bašić
Crni štakor (voice)
Vladimir Kovačić
Majstor Mrkonja (voice)
Hrvoje Zalar
Grga (voice)
Ljiljana Gener
Jana (voice)
Zorko Sirotić
Marko (voice)
Ivana Bakarić
Markova majka (voice)
Božidarka Frajt
Grgina majka (voice)
Emil Glad
Medo (voice)
Ivica Vidović
Markov otac (voice)
Mate Ergović
Gostioničar (voice)
Mladen Crnobrnja
Ptica Štef (voice)
Slavko Brankov
Jazavac (voice)
Details.
Release DateOctober 23, 1997
Original NameČudnovate zgode šegrta Hlapića
StatusReleased
Running Time1h 23m
Budget$8,000
Genres
Last updated:
Wiki.
Lapitch the Little Shoemaker (Croatian: Čudnovate zgode šegrta Hlapića) is a 1997 animated feature that was originally released by Croatia Film. Produced on vintage cel equipment during the early 1990s, this was the third feature from Croatia Film's animation unit and director Milan Blažeković, after The Elm-Chanted Forest (1986) and The Magician's Hat (1990).It is based on The Brave Adventures of Lapitch, a 1913 novel by Croatian author Ivana Brlić-Mažuranić. In this adaptation, all of the characters are animals, and the title character is a mouse, rather than the human character of the original work. As with the book, the film is about a shoemaker's apprentice who leaves the confines of his ill-tempered master, and sets off on an adventure. During his journey, he befriends a circus performer named Gita, and fights against the evil Dirty Rat.
Lapitch remains Croatia's most successful production in terms of viewership, and became that country's official selection for the 1997 Academy Awards (in the Best Foreign Language Film category). Its popularity led to the production of a 26-episode television series, also called Lapitch the Little Shoemaker, at the end of the 1990s.In February 2000, it first appeared in North America as the initial entry in Sony Wonder's short-lived "Movie Matinee" video series. The Disney Channel also premiered it on U.S. cable television later that same month.