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Rolli hirmuisia kertomuksia

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Director
  
Olli Soinio

Duration
  

Language
  
Finnish

6.6/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Comedy, Family, Fantasy

Country
  
Finland

Rolli hirmuisia kertomuksia movie poster
Release date
  
1991 (1991)

Writer
  
Olli Soinio, Allan Tuppurainen

Initial release
  
November 1, 1991 (Finland)

Sequel
  
Rollo and the Spirit of the Woods

Music director
  
Allu Tuppurainen, Antti Hytti

Cast
  
Allu Tuppurainen
(Rölli),
Sari Mällinen
(Maahiskeiju),
Rolf Labbart
(Ylipappi),
Jussi Lampi
(Isorölli),
Risto Kaskilahti
(Seesteinen),
Harri Hyttinen
(Lerkkanen)

Similar movies
  
Rolli - Amazing Tales and Rollo and the Spirit of the Woods are part of the same movie series

Rolli – hirmuisia kertomuksia (Rolli - Amazing Tales, English title from the Nordisk Film DVD release) is a 1991 childrens fantasy-comedy film. It stars Allu Tuppurainen, Sari Mallinen, Jussi Lampi, Rolf Labbart, Risto Kaskilahti and Harri Hyttinen. The film was nominated for and won 3 Jussi Awards in 1992 including for Best Costume Design and Best Make-Up. Sari Mallinen also won Best Supporting Actress for her portrayal of Maahiskeiju.

Contents

It is the first feature length film based on Rolli created by musician and actor Allu Tuppurainen, which first appeared as a childrens show on YLE TV2. The film and TV show do not share similarities except for Rollis attire and the film being set in the Rolli Forest. Suuri Rolli, a character featured in the Rolli audio-plays, appears portrayed by actor Jussi Lampi.

The songs for the film were composed by Allu Tuppurainen, as in the TV series.

Plot

Rolli – hirmuisia kertomuksia movie scenes Ripa Hits the Skids

The film begins with Rolli going to look for some firewood. As he is about to chop an old tree, the tree begins to speak to him begging to instead collect the dead branches from the ground, promising that hell repay the favour if he ever has the chance. All the while, Rolli is stalked by Big Rolli. He encounters a Forest Fairy (Maahiskeiju) and tries to scare her, but gets captured by Big Rolli instead. The Forest Fairy uses a log which the Big Rolli dragged with him to hit him on his foot to release Rolli. The two escape from Big Rolli and become friends.

Meanwhile, the owner of a toy company, Seesteinen (Risto Kaskilahti), and his butler Lerkkanen come to Rolli Forest to inspect it for the building of a new toy-factory. Rolli and the Forest Fairy try to scare them off by pretending to be a giant, but theyre plan fails and the humans give chance. They, however, run into Big Rolli and flee the forest in their jeep. However, the High Priest of the Kingdom of Evil (Rolf Labbart), has plans for the two humans. He causes the car to veer off the road and both Seesteinen and Lerkkanen are taken by the Priests lackeys, The Trashers, to their secret lair where theyre brought before the Great Trash, a monstrous creature with the vague resemblance of a human head, which the Trashers worship. They are converted into Trashers and begin to plot the destruction of the Rolli Forest.

Seesteinen, pretending to be a good fairy god spirit, convinces Rolli that the sudden amounts of trash that have appeared all over the forest, confusing the residents and turning them on one another, are a good thing. He also leaves him a bottle of whisky telling it is a magic potion. Rolli becomes violently drunk and chases the Forest Fairy away. Disappointed at her own inability to stop the pollution in the forest she decides to leave but is captured by the Trashers.

Rolli regains his composure and realises that the other inhabitants of the forest are being fooled with an elaborate shopping mall like structure, where they dance to peppy music before being sucked down into the Trashers lair and converted. Rolli tries to sneak in but is caught. At the lair he is reunited with Forest Fairy. At the same time Big Rolli stumbles upon the fake shopping mall and is also sucked down, but the Trashers are easily over-powered by him. He constantly grooms himself with a piece of a broom he got when the Forest Fairy hit him over the head with it earlier in the film. Brooms and brushes are the Trashers and the Great Trashs only weakness and thus the Trashers try to get it. The agitated Big Rolli throws the brush at the Trashers and it bounces off their helmets into the mouth of the Great Trash. He begins to deflate and this causes the cave to collapse. The Trashers flee in horror and seem to regain their prior personalities.

Rolli and the Forest Fairy escape also, arriving at the very same tree that Rolli spared earlier in the film. The High Priest ambushes them and reveals his face which has begun to deteriorate due to his defeat. In a final effort he tries to kill Rolli and the Forest Fairy but the tree begins to scream, bewildering him. As his cape is stuck in a nook the tree falls on him killing him.

Name changes

Though the film doesnt have an official English release, the official DVD includes English subtitles with the following name changes.

  • hirmuisia kertomuksia - Amazing Tales - The films title originally translates as terrible/terrifying stories and is officially spelled without capital letters.
  • Rolli - Rolli - The official name used for Rolli in the English language releases of the later films.
  • Suuri Rolli - Big Rolli - A larger and dumber troll who is initially an antagonist and later a comic-relief character. He also reappears in the two later films. In his live action performances he is played by actor Jussi Lampi.
  • Maahiskeiju - The Forest Fairy - While original name also contains the word Fairy (Keiju) the Maahis part comes from the word Maahinen (Brownie) and would be difficult to include in to the characters name.
  • Yrjo Lerkkanen - George Larky - The name of the butler is changed to a more pronouncable form for English speakers. The name George is most often localized in Finnish media as Yrjo.
  • Reino Seesteinen - Raymond Serene - The surname retains the original meaning of the Finnish name.
  • Roskanheittajat - Trashers - The original name of roskanheittajat (literally "trash throwers") means litterbugs. In the television show they are referred to but intentionally never shown, obviously indicating that they are just people who litter.
  • Soundtrack

    The soundtrack was released the same year. Allan Tuppurainen was the voice for the Trashers during the song Roskanheittajien messu and his voice was also used for the Great Trash, albeit heavily altered to make him sound more menacing. The soundtrack features commentary with sound-effects by Rolli in a similar fashion to other Rolli audio tapes and CDs released around the time.

    Timo Tervo performed Edullisesti itse kullekin which plays during the mall-dance sequence in the film. The songs were recorded at ML-studio and the soundtrack is distributed through VL-Musiikki OY.

    Tracklisting

    1. Olipa kerran
    2. Mielikuvitusta vaan?
    3. Rollin tavaralaulu
    4. Maahiskeijun lahtolaulu
    5. Ystavani menettanyt oon
    6. Edullisesti itse kullekin
    7. Roskanheittajien messu
    8. Suuren roskan tuho
    9. Me ollaan hanen lapsiaan

    Similar Movies

    Rolli - Amazing Tales and Rollo and the Spirit of the Woods are part of the same movie series. Allu Tuppurainen appears in Rolli - Amazing Tales and composed the music for Rolli ja kultainen avain. Ambush (1999). Tale of a Forest (2012). Fire-Eater (1998).

    Other movies

    Ten years later Rolli would return in another live action movie, Rolli ja Metsanhenki, which is however unrelated to first film aside Tuppurainen and Jussi Lampi reprising their roles. A third movie, a feature-length animation, Rollin sydan (Quest for a Heart) was released in 2007 in which Tuppurainen voiced the animated Rolli.

    References

    Rolli – hirmuisia kertomuksia Wikipedia
    Rolli – hirmuisia kertomuksia IMDb Rolli – hirmuisia kertomuksia themoviedb.org