| Marialuisa Giovannini | ... | The Cleaning Girl | |
| Néstor Garay | ... | The Orchestra Master | |
| Maurizio Micheli | ... | The Presenter | |
| Maurizio Nichetti | ... | The Animator | |
| Mirella Falco | ... | Non-Exercising Orchestra Member | |
| Osvaldo Salvi | ... | Man in gorilla costume | |
| Jolanda Cappi | ... | Fallen Orchestra Member | |
| Franca Mantelli | ... | Dancing Orchestra Member |
Directed by | |||
| Bruno Bozzetto | |||
Writing credits(in alphabetical order) | ||
| Bruno Bozzetto | ||
| Guido Manuli | ||
| Maurizio Nichetti | ||
Produced by | |||
| Bruno Bozzetto | .... | producer | |
Cinematography by | |||
| Luciano Marzetti | |||
| Mario Masini | |||
Film Editing by | |||
| Giancarlo Rossi | |||
Costume Design by | |||
| Lia Francesca Morandini | (as Lia Morandini) | ||
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director | |||
| Maurizio Nichetti | .... | assistant director | |
Sound Department | |||
| Giancarlo Rossi | .... | sound editor | |
Camera and Electrical Department | |||
| Aldo Antonelli | .... | assistant camera | |
Animation Department | |||
| Paolo Albicocco | .... | animator | |
| Roberto Casale | .... | animator | |
| Edoardo Cavalli | .... | animator (as Edo Cavalli) | |
| Walter Cavazzuti | .... | animator | |
| Giancarlo Cereda | .... | animator | |
| Giovanni Ferrari | .... | animator | |
| Giorgio Forlani | .... | animator | |
| Giuseppe Laganà | .... | animator | |
| Guido Manuli | .... | animator | |
| Giorgio Valentini | .... | animator | |
| Bruno Bozzetto | .... | animator (uncredited) | |
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| Fantasia | Fantasia/2000 | Bee Movie | And Now for Something Completely Different | Juiskers II: The Sequel with No Prequel |
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| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| IMDb Animation section | IMDb Italy section |
Many many years ago, I saw this film and I was absolutely transfixed. This film cannot helped BUT be compared to Fantasia due to the fact that they mention this themselves. But what sets this film apart is its absolutely brilliant interpretations, in animated form, of these wonderful classical pieces that don't get as much attention as the ones Fantasia made popular amongst the general public. And there is one classical piece, above all, that was so brilliantly interpreted that it STILL stands out as one of the most moving pieces ever to be put on screen and that is the "Valse Triste" segment set to the music of Sibelius. Don't get me wrong, Disney's "clean" animation of Fantasia is a wonderful film, but none of its segment moved me as much as Valse Triste. And I think it's free form, scrubby, its understated color use and none heavy handed animation fits BRILLIANTLY here. You don't feel you are watching an animation, you feel as you are watching a painter, with each stroke, visualize the musical note of this wonderful classical piece. You get to see the abandon cat go from fantasy, reality, fantasy, that you wish you could adopt the poor cartoon kitty. If you are a teacher of music, especially classical, get this film and show it to your students, if they are not moved, then nothing will move them. This is the type of stuff that stays with you for YEARS and I guarantee you will be the better for it.