Tiki Tiki | |
---|---|
Directed by | Gerald Potterton |
Written by | Jerome Chodorov Donald Brittain Gerald Potterton |
Produced by | Gerald Potterton |
Starring | Barry Baldaro Gayle Claitman Patrick Conlon Peter Cullen Jean Shepherd Joan Stuart Ted Zeigler |
Cinematography | Gennadi Tsekavyj Viktor Yakushev |
Edited by | Peter Hearn |
Music by | Jerry Blatt L. Burnstein |
Production company | Potterton Productions |
Release date |
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Running time | 71 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Tiki Tiki is a Canadian comedy film, directed by Gerald Potterton and released in 1971.[1] Created by intercutting animated sequences with live-action footage from the Russian children's film Aybolit-66, the animated sequences tell the story of a group of monkeys who are working to produce a film, while the Aybolit-66 footage represents the film they are making.[1] The film was inspired in part by Woody Allen's 1966 film What's Up, Tiger Lily?, which used original dialogue to recontextualize a foreign-language film.[2]
The film's voice cast included Barry Baldaro, Gayle Claitman, Patrick Conlon, Peter Cullen, Jean Shepherd, Joan Stuart and Ted Zeigler.
During the film's promotion, Potterton acknowledged that it was a challenging film to market, as his production company wasn't sure whether to aim it at "kids or stoned teenagers or whatever",[3] and has referred to the finished product as "a cross between a whacked out animated version of Easy Rider and the Olsen and Johnson musical Hellzapoppin'".[2]
Aleksandr Kuznetsov, the production designer of Aybolit-66, was named the winner of the Canadian Film Award for Best Art Direction/Production Design at the 23rd Canadian Film Awards.[4]
In 2023, Telefilm Canada announced that Tiki Tiki was one of 23 titles that will be digitally restored under its new Canadian Cinema Reignited program to preserve classic Canadian films.[5]