Summaries

The series follows the comical adventures of a mischievous yet artistic Wolf , trying to catch - and presumably eat Hare. It features additional characters that usually either help the hare or interfere with the Wolf's plans.

Nu, pogodi! (1969) is the Soviet and Russian animated series. The story of this animation began in 1969. Directed by Gennady Sokolskiy was filmed "zero" series for the cartoon Veselaya Karusel (1969), the main idea of which formed the basis of the famous animated series Nu, pogodi! (1969). The basis of the animation is that the wolf chases the hare in the hope of eating it, but for various reasons he can not do it. As a result, the hare is always the winner, and the wolf at the end of each series says or shouts: "Well, Hare, wait!."—Peter-Patrick76 ([email protected])

The odyssey about unlucky Wolf chasing invincible Hare appeared in 1969, with the latest episode produced in 2006, is still one of the leaders in Russian animation. Imagine Tom and Jerry, only with Russian zest: relatable characters, simple but funny humor, and catchy tunes.

Wolf and Hare must remain ahead of the other whatever it takes: except neither one of them anticipates the crazy antics waiting for the other. Nu, Pogodi! is Russia's Tom & Jerry; and it's become a cult classic around the world. It's cartoon zaniness on another level.—Johnny-the-Film-Sentinel-2187

Details

Keywords
  • anthropomorphic animal
  • soviet union
  • anthropomorphic wolf
  • anthropomorphic hare
  • soviet animation
Genres
  • Action
  • Adventure
  • Comedy
  • Animation
  • Family
Release date May 5, 1969
Motion Picture Rating (MPA) TV-G
Countries of origin Soviet Union
Language Russian
Production companies Soyuzmultfilm AMT Christmas Films

Box office

Tech specs

Runtime 10m
Color Color
Sound mix Mono
Aspect ratio 1.33 : 1

Synopsis

Soviet "Tom and Jerry".

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