The Great Land of Small

The Great Land of Small (French: C'est pas parce qu'on est petit qu'on peut pas être grand!) is a 1986 Canadian fantasy children's film. It was written by David Sigmund and directed by Vojtěch Jasný. The film starred Michael J. Anderson in one of his first roles. The film is the 5th in the Tales for All (Contes Pour Tous) series of children's movies created by Les Productions la Fête.

The Great Land of Small
French language poster
C'est pas parce qu'on est petit qu'on peut pas être grand!
Directed byVojtěch Jasný
Produced byRock Demers
Written byDavid Sigmund
StarringMichael J. Anderson
Michael Blouin

Ken Roberts
Rodrigue Tremblay
Music byNormand Dubé
Guy Trépanier
CinematographyMichel Brault
Edited byHélène Girard
Production
company
Distributed byNew World Pictures
Release date
  • 1986 (1986)
Running time
93 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish
French

Plot

Two children, Jenny and David, meet a leprechaun-like creature called Fritz in the woods; however, his gold dust is being stolen by a wicked hunter. Only Mimmick the Indian knows that the creature is in our world. As the hunter becomes mad with power, he attempts to capture Fritz and the children. With Mimmick's help, they escape to the Land of Small, a mystical, magical land.

Cast

Reception

The reviewer at the Canuxploitation website, which is devoted to Canadian B-movies, thought that The Great Land of Small was "a real oddity", labelling it "a half-baked fantasy". Although praising the inclusion of Cirque du Soleil, he thought of The Great Land of Small as one of Demers' least successful films. They thought that the film could be rated "W" for "What the Hell?", thereby reflecting the idea that it was "[w]eird" but "not trippy enough to be interesting". Arguing that the beginning of the film was "tediously padded", they thought that the subplot based around Mimmick and Flannigan was unnecessary, and that the actual Great Land of Small while envisioned as a place like the Land of Oz or The Neverending Story's Fantasia was "a distinct disappointment" due to its "embarrassingly low-budget production design, and cheap editing tricks".[1]

References

  1. "The Great Land of Small". Canuxploitation. Archived from the original on 9 August 2013. Retrieved 9 August 2013.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)


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