I'll give it all away.
- No, thanks. Eat yourself!
With the abundance of cartoons that were released in the Soviet Union, it is very easy to get lost and miss a few truly worthy works that are able to please both children and their parents. And looking at more than modest ratings of these or other cartoons, the idea creeps in that users of this glorious site cartoons do not watch, but if they do, it is either modern cartoons, ala “Three Bogatyrs and Oak of All Power”, or full-length cartoons of the Mickey Mouse studio, or animated series, as a rule, American, whether it is “Futurama”, “The Simpsons”, “South Park” and others. And no, I have nothing against these cartoons, but after all, Soviet animation is our property and it should be loved and revered, and come on, only a few decent people write reviews of them, and there are not so many assessments. And I would like to believe that this is only a temporary phenomenon and soon my respected colleagues will pay attention to Soviet animation, after all, it is worth it. Okay, enough empty conversations and move on to the culprit of the celebration – “Pierozhka”.
So, we have a cartoon, which decided not to dilute with humor, as was customary at the time, and to present what is happening with seriousness. Which is fair, because there is nothing to laugh about. We have a chicken with three chicks that work from morning to night in the field so that in winter they have something to eat and drink, and we also have a house next door, which is home to a couple of lobosharks - Sharik and Murzik, who are lazy even to clean their own house, covered with dust and spider webs, let alone help the neighbors. What do puppies and kittens do? Oh, and they play and move out all day long, kids. Children who were left without a lookout and there was no one to tell them that it was time and fun. Well, since the cat and puppy did not hear this simple truth, well, or heard, but did not understand, then naturally, at any attempt to invade their cheerful and carefree life, Sharik and Murzik will try in every way to shirk from work and pretend to be sick and unhappy. But at the same time, young slackers, as well as all living creatures, want to eat, and since so they naturally want to get the same pie that the mother-chicken baked, thanks to the fact that she worked with her chicks in the field. Can a puppy and a kitten get a piece of cake? This question will be answered by the cartoon itself, not me.
I still have a little clarification to make here. Yes, in the cartoon the right morality and in general he teaches the child good, with one "but". A chicken watches and teaches three children, and if so, seeing a kitten and a puppy growing up without adults, she could take patronage of them. Well, if not patronage, then at least show care, because it's children, and what do children like to do without supervision? The right thing to do is play and have fun. Their world, as a rule, is narrowed to what surrounds them and they rarely wonder what will happen next week, careless youth. But the chicken didn't do that. Yes, you can blame all this on the fact that she worked on the field all this time, and therefore the kitten and the puppy are not her problem, but it still seems to me that this would be the same excuse that Ballik and Murzik invented. And no, these thoughts of mine will not affect the final assessment for the cartoon, after all, ten minutes is very little to tell everything about everything, it is rather so, information for thinking for adult viewers.
As for the cartoon itself, it turned out bright and rich. Landscapes turned out to be colorful, and the heroes were fascinating. We will add here a great musical accompaniment, as well as the fact that the characters of the cartoon are expressed in poems and we will get a cartoon watching which you can have a great time.
8 out of 10