

The Grimm brothers Wilhelm and Jacob, known for their literary works in the nineteenth century, have their lives dramatized. Wilhelm fights to write something entertaining amongst the sea of dry, non-fiction books they write and he sets about collecting oral-tradition fairy tales to put into print. Their life story is countered with reenactments of three of their stories including "The Dancing Princess," "The Cobbler and the Elves" and "The Singing Bone."
Production
Cinerama curved-screen spectacle that screams 'we spent EVERY penny'
Costume
The Dancing Princess sequence is pure Technicolor eye candy
Practical Effects
Pre-CGI puppetry and effects that aged weirdly but charmingly

Director
George Pal
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
George Pal's 'Puppetoons' stop-motion experience shaped the elf sequences, while Henry Levin handled the dramatic Grimm brothers storyline—making this two distinct films stitched together.
This was Cinerama's first narrative feature after travelogues, and it bombed so hard it nearly killed the format—audiences wanted explosions, not dancing princesses on curved screens.
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