Color, 1981, 86 mins. 4 secs.
Directed by Marcell Jankovics
Arbelos Films (Blu-ray) (US RA HD)
a decade after he revolutionized European animation with the first animated
Hungarian feature in 1973, Marcell Jankovics delivered one of the all-time great brain burners with 1981's Fehérlófia, known in English as Son of the White Mare. Derived from Hungarian folklore wrapping an odyssey story with plenty of surreal characters and fantastic adventures, the film took two years to complete and became Jankovics' second feature, a milestone in the art form despite its extreme scarcity for many years.
Stonecrumbler and Irontemperer. Their respective abilities that go along with their names prove to be an asset at first, but soon conflict erupts as they decide how to go about their mission.
A fateful encounter at a powerful tree seems to be the key to their destiny, though ultimately it's up to Treeshaker to forge fully ahead where he discovers not only the dragons but three princesses whose story will intersect with his own.
timing.
dizzy. Also included are three shorts: 1974's Sisyphus (2m22s), a grunt-filled adaptation of the famous boulder-rolling myth and an Oscar nominee for Animated Short Film; 1977's The Struggle
(Küzdők) (2m34s), a clever look at the relationship between sculptor and subject; and 1968's Dreams on Wings (8m43s), a commercial for Air India taking an impressionistic, ink and watercolored tour around the globe. In the 2020 interview "Brighter Colors" (33m14s), Jankovics (who passed away in May of 2021) recalls his path from studying architecture to animation and the twists of fate that led him to forging his own visual style in Hungarian cinema. He also has some interesting insights into the inherent pitfalls of animation at the time when it was largely considered a children's domain, something he had to batter against through sheer ambition and persistence. After that you get a quick newsreel look (3m15s) at the making and promotion of János Vitéz with the director talking about adapting the epic poem of the title, including a look at the pots of 600 different colors that had to be used for the film, followed by the Arbelos U.S. trailer for Son of the White Mare. The packaging also comes with an insert booklet featuring essays by Eleanor Cowen and Charles Solomon about Jankovics' place in Hungarian cinema and the various influences that informed the main feature.