I first saw this movie as child and remember how long it is. Also, that the fairy tales told in the movie did not align with the original versions written by the Brothers Grimm. I also didn’t realize that the first version I’d ever seen was cut off on the edges because it was the second film in Cinerama.
Even though the movie feels long, I’ll keep this blog short. Also, I apologize to the many talents in this film, but I am not going to list all of them! Charles Beaumont (a staple of the Twilight Zone) was one of the screen writers and Henry Levin and George Pal both directed. Pal probably did the stop motion bits. Laurence Harvey plays Wilhelm, who is presented as the more fanciful of the two brothers, even though he has a wife (Claire Bloom) and two historically inaccurate children to support. He and brother Jacob (Karlheinz Bohm) have been commissioned by a Prussian Duke (Oscar Homolka) to write his family history. However, Wilhelm cannot keep away from collecting folktales to write down from what locals women will share with him. The most notable of these is the witch-like Anna Ritcher played by Martita Hunt. A bookshop owner Stossel (Walter Slezak) keeps telling them that no one will buy books of fairy tales while trying to set up beautiful Greta (Barbara Eden) with Jacob. I should add that almost everything I just described did not happen in reality, but who knows. I wasn’t there.
Wilhelm keeps putting their livelihood in jeopardy by chasing stories. By the way, the man has a traveling writing desk and no one seemed to tell the actor that was what it was. He keeps writing awkwardly on his knee. The movie adapts three tales (each one with a musical sequence). Wilhelm’s obsession costs them their job with the Duke, his brother’s faith in him, and his health. Oh The Drama.
Spoiler Alert: Jacob decides that Wilhelm is more important to him than getting sued by the Duke, marrying Barbara Eden, or having a personal library. Meanwhile, Wilhelm has fever dreams about fairy tale characters busting into his sick room and demanding his help in making sure they don’t fade away. The pair get back to work, mixing their work on grammar and history with collecting stories for children. They receive a prize for their non-fiction work, however the children of Berlin show their own gratitude as a frightening mob demanding a fairy tale.
