The Red Balloon and White Mane remain timeless and wonderful children’s classics. Unseen for years, these award-winning short films have been recently restored so as to present them in the best possible picture quality. The two films were both directed by the award-winning Albert Lamorisse, a man who the New York Times has described as “...a remarkable artist: one of the cinema’s best poets and a fearless explorer of the scary and exhilarating outbacks of the imagination.”
THE RED BALLOON The award-winning and critically acclaimed fantasy short film directed by Albert Lamorisse follows the relationship between a little boy and a red balloon with a mind of its own that he befriends on the Parisian streets. Widely recognised as one of the most important films in children’s cinema, this 1956 classic is the only dialogue-free film to win an Oscar for Best Screenplay.
WHITE MANE The 1953 French classic and winner of the Palme D’Or at Cannes tells the tale of a boy who tames a wild stallion called White Mane. Filmed in the marshes of the Camargue in south-west France, White Mane is a beautiful journey into the wilderness that remains a groundbreaking work of children’s cinema to this day.
Special Features (SD):
[] Mon Père était un Ballon Rouge - documentary on Albert Lamorisse [] L’enfant Qui Ne Souriait Pas - documentary on the main actor of Crin Blanc
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