Bibi Blocksberg (film) explained

Bibi Blocksberg is a German children's film from 2002 directed by Hermine Huntgeburth. Like Bibi Blocksberg and the Secret of the Blue Owls, it is based on the characters from the children's radio play series Bibi Blocksberg. Elfie Donnelly wrote the script.

Plot

The 12-year-old young witch Bibi Blocksberg is to be awarded the Witch's Ball by the Witch Council because of her special achievements in saving two children from death in flames, which you actually only get at the age of 15. Of course, Bibi and her mother Barbara Blocksberg are extremely proud. Her father Bernhard Blocksberg, on the other hand, is rather critical of the whole thing because he is looked at askance at work because he has two witches in his family.

Nevertheless, the two witches don't let their joy at the award ceremony be spoiled. But the evil witch Rabia is jealous of Bibi's success. In her opinion, a witch who grows up in the purely human, i.e. non-witch society, should not receive the honor of being awarded the witch's ball. She deliberately drops Bibi's ball and has to give her own witch's ball to Bibi instead. However, Rabia's witch ball contains the formula for a stolen magic potion that promises eternal youth, and without the formula Rabia cannot prepare the magic potion.

Rabia then swears revenge on the Blocksberg family and tries to regain the crystal ball by any means she can.

Reviews

"Eventful and turbulent film adaptation of the successful children's book and radio play classic that provides solid entertainment for its target group. Nevertheless, the familiar program is played out with too much routine, and the film, above all, fails to breathe life into the positive characters." – Lexicon of international film[1]

Special features

The film Bibi Blocksberg was the most successful German-language film in 2002.

The sequel Bibi Blocksberg and the Secret of the Blue Owls followed in 2004.

The aerial shots at the beginning and end of the film show the old town of Nördlingen. The exterior shots in the fictional "Neustadt", however, were filmed in Freising.

The video release was certified 11× Platinum for sales of 550,000 units.[2]

The 2nd prize at the Chicago International Children's Film Festival 2003 for Live-Action Feature Film went to Bibi Blocksberg.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bibi Blocksberg . 2024-01-27 . www.filmdienst.de . de.
  2. Web site: Datenbank: BVMI . 2024-01-27 . www.musikindustrie.de.
  3. Web site: 2021-01-07 . CICFF Past Festivals FACETS . 2024-01-27 . en-US.