Legend of the Forest

Legend of the Forest
森の伝説
(Mori no densetsu)
GenreAnimated film, experimental film
Anime film
Legend of the Forest – Part 1
Directed byOsamu Tezuka
Takashi Ui
Music byPyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
StudioTezuka Productions
Licensed byTezuka Productions
Released1988
Runtime29 minutes
Anime film
Legend of the Forest – Part 2
Directed byMakoto Tezuka
Produced bySumio Udagawa
Music byPyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
StudioTezuka Productions
Licensed byTezuka Productions
Released2014
Runtime11 minutes[1]

Legend of the Forest (森の伝説, Mori no densetsu) is a 1987 Japanese animated film by Osamu Tezuka and his studio, Tezuka Productions.

Initially planned in four movements, the film was presented incompletely in 1988, on the occasion of the Asahi Prize ceremony, in the form of a first part comprising the first and fourth movements. The two central segments remained unfinished after Tezuka's death in 1989. Makoto Tezuka, the director's son and part-manager of Tezuka Productions, produced the second movement in 2014 under the title The Legend of the Forest – Part 2.

The anime's first movement depicts the struggle between a flying squirrel and a hunter lumberjack. The second, directed by Makoto Tezuka, depicts the love story of two dragonflies as they follow the course of a river through the forest. The third movement, which was never realized, was intended to feature falling raindrops. The fourth and final movement features forest spirits trying to save their environment from the ravages caused by foresters.

The film is entirely silent, and each segment is designed to be synchronized with the music of the various movements of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 4. Inspired by the world of Walt Disney, the film is also a tribute to the history of animated cinema, and an artistic pamphlet with an ecological position.

  1. ^ "手塚治虫、未完の「森の伝説」第二楽章完成". eiga.com (in Japanese). July 29, 2014. Retrieved February 22, 2015.

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