The Key (1961 film)
Encyclopedia
The Key is a 1961 Soviet animated film directed by Lev Atamanov. It was produced at the Soyuzmultfilm
Soyuzmultfilm
Soyuzmultfilm is a Russian animation studio based in Moscow. Over the years it has gained international attention and respect, garnering numerous awards both at home and abroad. Noted for a great variety of style, it is regarded as the most influential animation studio of the former Soviet Union...

 studio in Moscow.

Plot

The film is a cautionary tale about the need to develop good work habits, personal responsibility and conscience in life.

Three fairies visit the parents of a newborn boy and give them a red ball of string which they say will give him a happy life. They also speed up his growth and tell the parents that he will grow by "hours, not days". The boy's grandfather comes to visit and tries to give the boy working tools for later in life, but the gifts are refused by the parents and fairies, who tell him that the boy is already promised happiness and will have no need to work. They magically turn the grandfather into a sheet of paper and send him off to his apartment. The grandfather, not liking the idea of his grandson having ready-made happiness, breaks out of his magical cage and decides to seek help.

He visits a friend of his; a scientist who works in a large laboratory with a collection of amazing inventions such as human-like robots, including one which can compose poetry. He asks the scientist's robots what will become of a person who is born into ready-made happiness. Most of them tell him that he will become disagreeable, lazy and arrogant, but the poetry-composing robot tells him that it would be terrible to take happiness away from a child. Unsure of what to do, the grandfather decides to visit the Land of Happiness and see for himself what it is like.

The scientist synthesizes a copy of the magical red ball by using a few fragments that were left on the grandfather's hand after he held it while he was visiting his grandchild. The grandfather uses the scientist's teleportation machine to teleport to the gates of the Land of Happiness, and uses his red ball to gain entrance. The many fairies who are in charge of this land lead him on a tour. The ground is sticky with candy and the rivers run milk. School consists of the "summer holidays", "fall holidays", "winter holidays" and "spring holidays". At old age, the entire day consists of sitting on rocking chairs.

Disgusted by what he sees, the grandfather runs away, pursued by the fairies who want him to come back. He manages to escape and runs back into the lab. After telling the scientist what he saw, and that he doesn't want his grandchild to live in such a place, they decide to put a special lock on the gates of happiness. They send one of the scientist's small robots to trick the gatekeeper into letting him put it on. The gatekeeper tries to open the lock but is unsuccessful.

Meanwhile, the grandchild, who grew up spoiled because of always getting his way, decides to leave his parents. He takes the ball of happiness and arrives at the gates, whereupon the gatekeeper tells him that he cannot enter. However, she tells him that if he goes to the "Kingdom of Quick Feats and Easy Victories" around the corner, and passes the tests, he will receive a golden key which will open any lock including, presumably, this one. The boy goes to the kingdom, where he's met at the gates by a four-headed dragon. While the four heads of the dragon try to reach consensus on whether or not to let him in, the boy sneaks in and fulfills all of the ridiculously easy tests, whereupon he is hailed a hero and given the golden key.

When he comes back to the gate, he finds that the key doesn't work and begins to cry. The small robot who put on the lock tells him that the lock can only be opened by a key which he makes with his own hands, so the boy goes to his grandfather to learn how to make a key.

His grandfather teaches him how to properly use tools, and the boy slowly learns. Finally, he creates his own key and leaves his grandfather, though reluctantly. Meanwhile, the scientist's poetry-composing robot decides to run away and show off his talent to the world. Instead, he ends up drunk, and after coming back to the laboratory hits and maims the small robot which put the lock on the door to happiness. The scientist takes the robot to the grandfather's apartment and asks him to fix her, but the grandfather's eyes are not good enough. Just then, the grandchild comes back and says that he wants to stay with the grandfather. He's able to fix the little robot.

They conclude that happiness is "when a person knows much, has many skills, and gives it all away to others". Upon realizing this, the child throws the red ball out the window.

Creators

English Russian
Director-producer Lev Atamanov Лев Атаманов
Scenario Mikhail Volpin Михаил Вольпин
Art Directors Leonid Shvartsman
Leonid Shvartsman
Leonid Shvartsman is a Russian animator and artist.He spent most of his creative career at the Soyuzmultfilm Studio, in Moscow, where he served as art director on Cheburashka, 38 Parrots, The Golden Antelope, The Scarlet Flower, The Snow Queen and many other cartoons.-External links:*...


Aleksandr Vinokurov
Леонид Шварцман
Александр Винокуров
Artists Dmitriy Anpilov
Valentin Karavayev
Дмитрий Анпилов
Валентин Караваев
Animators Fyodor Khitruk
Fyodor Khitruk
Fyodor Savelyevich Khitruk is one of the most influential animators and animation directors in Russian animation.-Biography:Khitruk was born in Tver, Russian Empire and came to Moscow to study graphic design at the OGIS College for Applied Arts. He graduated in 1936 and started to work with...


Renata Merenkova
L. Popov
Tatyana Taranovich
Yelizaveta Komova
Anatoliy Petrov
Yelena Khludova
Galina Zolotovskaya
Konstantin Chikin
Mariya Motruk
H. Karavayeva
Viktor Shevkov
Lidiya Reztsova
Marina Voskanyants
Aleksandr Davydov
Galina Barinova
I. Beryozin
Kirill Malyantovich
Igor Podgorskiy
Фёдор Хитрук
Рената Миренкова
Л. Попов
Татьяна Таранович
Елизавета Комова
Анатолий Петров
Елена Хлудова
Галина Золотовская
Константин Чикин
Мария Мотрук
Г. Караваева
Виктор Шевков
Лидия Резцова
Марина Восканьянц
Александр Давыдов
Галина Баринова
И. Берёзин
Кирилл Малянтович
Игорь Подгорский
Camera Operator Mikhail Druyan Михаил Друян
Executive Producer Fyodor Ivanov Фёдор Иванов
Composer Lev Solin Лев Солин
Sound Operator Hikolai Prilutskiy Николай Прилуцкий
Script Editor Raisa Frichinskaya Раиса Фричинская
Puppets & Decorations Dmitriy Anpilov
Pyotr Korobayev
Дмитрий Анпилов
Пётр Коробаев
Voice Actors Anna Komoleva
Georgiy Vitsin (father)
V. Tumanova
L. Glushchenko
Rina Zelyonaya (fairy Giatsinta)
Tatyana Peltser (fairy Tyulpina)
Georgiy Tusuzov (Zmey Gorynych's head)
Gennagiy Dudnik
Sergey Martinson
Sergey Martinson
Sergey Alexandrovich Martinson was a Russian eccentric comic actor, the master of pantomime, buffoonery and grotesque. He became People's Artist of the RSFSR in 1964....


Vera Orlova
Vera Markovna Orlova
Vera Markovna Orlova was a Soviet Russian actress.She graduated from the Moscow theatrical school in 1942 and started to work at the Mayakovsky Theater in Moscow. In 1974, she transferred to the Lenkom Theater...

 (mother)
Vladimir Gribkov
Yelena Ponsova (fairy guardian)
Vladimir Lepko (Zmey Gorynych's Head)
Larisa Pashkova
Анна Комолова
Георгий Вицин (отец)
В. Туманова
Л. Глущенко
Рина Зелёная (фея Гиацинта)
Татьяна Пельтцер (фея Тюльпина)
Георгий Тусузов (голова Змея Горыныча)
Геннадий Дудник
Сергей Мартинсон
Вера Орлова (мама)
Владимир Грибков
Елена Понсова (Фея-сторожиха)
Владимир Лепко (Голова Змея Горыныча)
Лариса Пашкова

External links

  • The film at Animator.ru
    Animator.ru
    Animator.ru is a Russian website chronicling the films, people and studios of the animation industry in Russia, the former Soviet Union and the CIS. It also includes a forum, a news block, a photo-gallery and an animators labour exchange...

    (English and Russian)
  • The film at myltik.ru
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