
From Mark Osborne comes the first-ever animated feature film adaptation of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's iconic masterpiece, The Little Prince. At the heart of it all is The Little Girl, who's being prepared by her mother for the very grown-up world in which they live - only to be interrupted by her eccentric, kind-hearted neighbor, The Aviator. The Aviator introduces his new friend to an extraordinary world where anything is possible. A world that he himself was initiated into... (Full plot summary below)
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From Mark Osborne comes the first-ever animated feature film adaptation of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's iconic masterpiece, The Little Prince. At the heart of it all is The Little Girl, who's being prepared by her mother for the very grown-up world in which they live - only to be interrupted by her eccentric, kind-hearted neighbor, The Aviator. The Aviator introduces his new friend to an extraordinary world where anything is possible. A world that he himself was initiated into long ago by The Little Prince. It's here that The Little Girl's magical and emotional journey into her own imagination - and into the universe of The Little Prince - begins. And it's where The Little Girl rediscovers her childhood and learns that ultimately, it's human connections that matter most, and that what's truly essential can only be seen with the heart.
Leave your thoughts about The Little Prince.
| L.A. BizAnnlee EllingsonJust lovely and poignant and all the other adjectives that make one's heart swell. |
| Spirituality and PracticeFrederic and Mary Ann BrussatA creative and spiritual reworking of Antoine de Saint-Exupery's magical and enlightening 1943 novella. |
| San Francisco ChronicleDavid WiegandThe Little Prince is heartbreaking, beautiful and irresistible. |
| Globe and MailBrad WheelerThe audience is invited to celebrate the purified wonder of youth and the dazzle of life’s invisible indispensables. |
| National PostChris KnightIf what is essential is invisible to the eye, then The Little Prince has accomplished the impossible; it has made the invisible visible, and in 3D no less. |
| The Young FolksGary ShannonBeing a soft adaptation of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's book, the film doesn't so much opt to tell the story verbatim, but rather celebrate its timeless nuance, reading it through contemporary lenses. |
| Toronto SunSteve TilleyTo be fair, this homage to The Little Prince is a lovely story, lovingly told. And for the first two-thirds of the movie, it feels like one of the freshest animated films in ages. |
| Blu-ray.comBrian OrndorfPerhaps "The Little Prince" isn't the direct take on the novella fans may be expecting, but with relaxed expectations, there's exceptional artistry and profound meaning to examine. |
| Entertainment WeeklyLeah GreenblattAt its inventive best—like the creation of a little cloth fox who never speaks but steals almost every scene he’s in—it does capture the odd, tender wonder of his world. |
| New York PostKyle SmithLike a Pixar movie shorn of the cutesy and manipulative aspects that marred “Inside Out,” the animated remake of The Little Prince, hitting theaters and Netflix, is as fragile and beautiful as the beloved rose guarded by the wee fellow of the title. |