Dot and the Kangaroo | |
Director: | Yoram Gross |
Producer: | Yoram Gross |
Based On: | Dot and the Kangaroo by Ethel C. Pedley |
Studio: | Yoram Gross Films |
Runtime: | 75 minutes |
Country: | Australia |
Language: | English |
Budget: | A$250,000 |
Dot and the Kangaroo is a 1977 Australian live-action/animated musical drama film which combines animation and live-action. It is based on the 1899 children's literature book Dot and the Kangaroo by Ethel Pedley.
New South Wales, 1884: when a redheaded five-year-old girl named Dot finds herself lost in the Australian bush, a female red kangaroo who has lost her joey promises to help the girl find her way home. In the process, the kangaroo introduces Dot to a number of other local animals, teaching her a greater appreciation for nature.
Yoram and Sandra Gross wanted to make an Australian animated feature for the world market. They read a series of books before deciding on Dot and the Kangaroo. Two-thirds of the budget was provided by the Australian Film Commission.[1]
The film's backdrop was filmed on location in and around Jenolan Caves and the Warragamba Dam Catchment Area of the Blue Mountains in New South Wales, Australia. Although the film uses many of the same elements as other animated children's musicals involving animals, such as many of the Disney animated films from the U.S., the film is essentially Australian in its use of icons and accents. It also references Indigenous Australian culture in some scenes which depict animation of cave paintings and aboriginal dancing.[2]
The film featured an original soundtrack including several lyrical melodies composed by Bob Young with lyrics John Palmer, and Marion Von Alderstein, while Bob Young provided additional lyrics, and they were recorded by Maurie Wilmore. A soundtrack album was released in 1982 combined with the soundtrack of Around the World with Dot. The music from Dot and the Kangaroo appears on the B-side.
Around The World With Dot / Dot and the Kangaroo | |
Type: | soundtrack |
Artist: | Bob Young |
Label: | EMI |
The film was a success, being screened around the world and returning its cost within three years.[3] It allowed Yoram Gross to enlarge his production company and market his family films in the U.S. Additionally, the film's use of animation set against photographic backgrounds established the style for many of his later films.
In the 1980s, the first eight films were released on VHS in the U.S., the first one by Magnetic Video, the next two by CBS/Fox Video and the next five by Family Home Entertainment. A DVD version of the film was released on 30 October 2001 by Hen's Tooth Video. In Australia there is a complete series DVD set of all the Dot films. They were also released on DVD on Digiview Entertainment. One of them is the first film which was released in 2005 by Digiview Productions and re-released in 2006 by Digiview Entertainment. It was then released by TUTM Home Entertainment on 1 November 2009, as the Digiview copies went out-of-print since Digiview's closure. The copyright for the film in the U.S. is unclear despite being released after the enactment of the Copyright Act of 1976.
The various films were shown on the Disney Channel in the late 1980s through the 1990s in the US, and on the Canadian Family Channel.
Animation company Yoram Gross Studios followed up the first film with another eight films between 1981 and 1994. The theme behind all of the films in the Dot series is the negative impact of humanity on animal life in nature. The sequels are as follows: