Bambi, A Life in the Woods
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Bambi, ein Leben im Walde (Bambi, A Life in the Woods) is a book by Felix Salten, first printed in 1923. Bambi is the name of the main character, a male roe deer beginning life as a fawn, then an adolescent spike, and finally a buck. Felix Salten was the pen-name of Siegmund Salzmann, who was born in Budapest, Hungary but grew up in Vienna, Austria. The book was translated from German into English by Whittaker Chambers, who needed to supplement his income while working at a Communist newspaper. Felix Salten wrote a sequel, entitled Bambi's Children.
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[edit] Adaptations
The story was made into an animated film by Walt Disney Productions first released in the United Kingdom on August 8, 1942. The company took the liberty of changing the species into a white-tailed deer, and of putting him into an American forest. Additionally, the tone of the story was significantly lightened; the original book was much darker and more brutal.
Besides the popular Disney film, two movies based on this book, Detstvo Bambi (Bambi's Childhood) and its sequel Yunost Bambi (Bambi's Youth), were released in the USSR in 1985 and 1986 respectively. These movies were made as an allegory, with human actors playing animal parts without make-up or costume and only minimal suggestions of the animal species. (For instance, the deer characters wore circlets and short capes, suggesting nobility but nothing of the actual animal's appearance.)
[edit] Trivia
- A famous Georgian writer Vazha-Pshavela earlier published a book "A fawn's tale", which is about little fawn, whose mother is killed by a hunter.
[edit] Text
- Salten, Felix. Bambi; a life in the woods, New York, Simon and Schuster, 1928.
- Salten, Felix. Bambi, Aladdin; Reprint edition (July 1, 1988), ISBN 0-671-66607-X
[edit] External links
- Bambi at the Internet Movie Database
- Detstvo Bambi at the Internet Movie Database
- Yunost Bambi at the Internet Movie Database
- The Big Cartoon DataBase entry for Bambi
- Bambi, the Austrian deer, article by Paul A. Schons published in Kulturecke by the Germanic-American Institute, September, 2000