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The Hobbit (1985 film)

The Hobbit (Russian: Хо́ббит, tr. Khóbbit, full name The Fabulous Journey of Mr. Bilbo Baggins, The Hobbit, Across the Wild Land, Through the Dark Forest, Beyond the Misty Mountains. There and Back AgainRussian: Ска́зочное путеше́ствие ми́стера Би́льбо Бе́ггинса, Хо́ббита, че́рез ди́кий край, чёрный лес, за тума́нные го́ры. Туда́ и обра́тно, tr. Skázochnoye puteshéstviye místera Bíl’bo Bégginsa, Khóbbita, chérez díky kray, chyorny les, za tumánnye góry. Tudá i obrátno) is a 1985 Soviet low-budget children’s film, being a loose adaption of J. R. R. Tolkien’s 1937 book The Hobbit by Vladimir Latyshev.

The film featured Zinovy Gerdt as “the professor” (a narrator stand-in for Tolkien), Mikhail Danilov as Bilbo BagginsAnatoly Ravikovich as Thorin Oakenshield and Igor Dmitriev as GollumSmaug and the Mirkwood spiders were portrayed by puppets. Missing in this version are the trolls, ElrondBeorn and the wood-elves. The goblins are human-like with little makeup, and were portrayed by dancers from the Leningrad State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre, as are the inhabitants of Lake Town.

The film was shot in 1984 as a teleplay and produced in the framework of the children’s TV series Tale after Tale (Russian: Сказка за сказкой) aired at the Leningrad TV Channel in the 1980s and the 1990s. It has also appeared on DVD, although both the TV and the DVD version contain some material that the other one doesn’t. No subtitles were included, but fan made subtitles have since appeared.

The Hobbit
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