February 27th, 2010 by Al
Joanna asked: I need to choose a story to animate for my final project and I know I want to use one of Brothers’ Grimm fairy tales. With few exceptions, like Simpsons or Futoram, animation is still largely considered to be for children and I want to address older audience. So I am looking for an interesting, but dark and “not for kids” story.
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February 27th, 2010 by Al
dreamoppet asked: I knew fairy tales written by Denmark writer Andersen very well when I was a child, and I liked that very much. And I did believe that would be something truth in somewhere in our planet.
I read some other tales too, like one thousand and one night, the stories based on Arabian life. That’s amazing too!
When I was a child, I believed everything from the tales and hoped I would have a chance living together with those who are in the story.
How’s that for you?
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February 27th, 2010 by Al
stefanico28 asked: Does anyone know of any good websites to find out why the number 3 is a reoccuring theme in fairy tales?
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February 27th, 2010 by Al
scwhirlz asked: I was told that there was a book something like The Red Book or such that had the original fairy tales in them such as Cinderella and how she sentences who wicked stepmother and sisters to be killed and such. Does anyone know of such a book and who published it?
fairy tales
February 25th, 2010 by Al
Anonymous asked: I love classic fairy tales but am getting bored with reading the same limited text over and over again. I would like the retelling to be substatially long and detailed, unlike the originals, so around 300 pages is what I’m shooting for. It would be even better if they provide some new insight into the story/tell it from a different angle with humor. I want the basic plot to stay the same, unlike in “Confessions of a Wicked Stepsister”. For an audience of young adults. Thank you!
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