Nutcracker Fantasy is weird but once you realize that this is essentially a Japanese take on the now famous ballet boy is it fun. This rarely seen JapaneseAmerican coproduction eschews sugar plum fairies and candy canes as well as Christmas trees in favor of a dark dreamy and need I say it trippy tone. Its almost strange to believe that this film was made by Sanrio the folks responsible for the more lighthearted Hello Kitty franchise. Some Hello Kitty figures can be seen at one point of the movie The plot very loosely based on both the fabled E.T.A. Hoffman story and to a lesser extent Tchaikovskys now famous ballet snippets of the composers famous score can be heard on the soundtrack goes something like this: Clara voiced by Melissa Gilbert a pretty doll face of a girl receives a mysterious nutcracker from her eccentric Uncle Drosselmeyer Christopher Lee. Before long our young heroine finds herself on a STRANGE consider the emphasis on the word strange very closely feverinduced adventure which defies explanation. The focal point of the film is Clara helping sad King Goodwin of the Dolls Dick Van Patten free his daughter from the sleeping spell of a wicked twoheaded rodent Queen Morphia Jo Anne Worley. In the battle against Morphia and her army of mice Goodwins courageous guardskeeper Franz Roddy McDowall is transformed into Claras nutcracker doll. The last act of the film involves Clara struggling to find a way to break Franzs curse while dealing with Morphias vengeful royal brat Gar. What makes Nutcracker Fantasy interesting are its puppet animation visuals. Around the time this movie was made 1979 it was common to see stopmotion animated specials on television most of which came from RankinBass Rudolphs Shiny New Year comes to mind. The stopmotion process is complex: fragile puppets ranging from 6.3 to 11 inches high are shot on a miniature set one frame at a time with animators adjusting each puppet slightly before the next shot. Director Takeo Nakamura and his team of 150 members total spent four years working on this movie and their efforts are fully realized with the imaginative and sometimes strange results we see on screen. There are no computerenhanced special effects in this movie any flashy visuals are produced optically and/or through double or triple exposures. While it looks as cuddly and innocuous as a RankinBass production young viewers may be surprised to discover that the majority of the movie is photographed in shadowy darkness. There are some sequences too that border on the scary side most of which involve Queen Morphia and her murky underworld kingdom. The most notably scary sequence takes place at the beginning of the movie when a meanlooking rag man stalks the night streets of Minden town searching for wideawake children to transform into mice. This sequence feels irrelevant to the actual story although it does serve as a good warning for children who stay up late. At two different points of the movie liveaction ballet segments are interspersed with the puppetmotion action this makes for a jarring shift of visuals but in the context of this movie which basically sets in a dream world where nothing is supposed to make sense it somehow works in its favor. Just as uncanny is the soundtrack that accompanies the picture. As mentioned previously select movements and dances from Tchaikovskys immortal score can be heard but the majority of the music mostly consists of Tchaikovskyinspired compositions as well as some rather trippy 70s technorock synthesizers. There are even two pop songs out of the four in this movie sung by Marty Gwinn and Steve Bishop which seem strangely offbeat with the fairytalelike quality of the storyone of them sounds like it could be a Beatles number Whether this was done for commercial reasons or to add another depth of bizarreness to the movie is unknown but these abrupt shifts in musical styles could annoy purists expecting to hear an undistorted performance of the ballet score. Not that the music itself isnt beautiful. Its mostly easy on the ears and has some amusingly interesting remixes of ballet pieces. One takes place during a quirky dance sequence involving pintsized sprites and colorful figurines dancing in a cloudfilled kingdom to a lively hybrid of the March Reed Flute Dance and Sugar Plum Fairy dances. Its strange but fun. Since the puppets in this movie were synched to the prerecorded Japanese dialogue there are some obvious missteps in the American dub sync wise some lines are either mistimed or dont match. But the English voice cast is certainly talented and deliver credible line readings Christopher Lee is especially brillianthe has multiple roles in the film and even sings two songshandsomely too there is even a cameo by Eva Gabor as a kindly but eccentric gypsy fortune teller dubbed the Queen of Time. Michelle Lee presumably a grownup Clara narrates the story from time to time. It should be known however that the movie was strangely cut down from its 95 minute running time from its Japanese release to 82 resulting in some lost footage including considerably longer footage of the dance sequences which is unfortunate because this movie deserves to be seen uncut. Nutcracker Fantasy was theatrically released in America for a limited time in 1979 but ever since it has become one of those difficult to find anymore movies. Young children might find the pace offputting and maybe a little too eerie yet older kids and animation buffs should find this movie to be of interest. While its technical values arent on par with some of todays more sophisticated stopmotion features Tim Burtons The Nightmare Before Christmas and Coraline come to mind it still maintains a unique look and a strangely captivating heart for its audience. The movie itself may not be for everyone but as an animated rarity Nutcracker Fantasy might be worth checking out.
80 /100
6 out of 9 users liked this review