Tiki Tiki

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tiki_Tiki an entity of type: Thing

Tiki Tiki is a Canadian comedy film, directed by Gerald Potterton and released in 1971. 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. 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. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Tiki Tiki
rdf:langString Tiki Tiki
rdf:langString Tiki Tiki
xsd:integer 60430981
xsd:integer 1122374184
rdf:langString Gennadi Tsekavyj
rdf:langString Viktor Yakushev
rdf:langString Canada
rdf:langString Peter Hearn
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Jerry Blatt
rdf:langString L. Burnstein
rdf:langString Gerald Potterton
rdf:langString Potterton Productions
<second> 4260.0
rdf:langString Joan Stuart
rdf:langString Ted Zeigler
rdf:langString Patrick Conlon
rdf:langString Barry Baldaro
rdf:langString Gayle Claitman
rdf:langString Gerald Potterton
rdf:langString Tiki Tiki is a Canadian comedy film, directed by Gerald Potterton and released in 1971. 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. 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. 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", 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'. , 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.
<minute> 71.0
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3234
xsd:double 4260.0

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