 | THE EMPEROR'S NEW CLOTHES recasts history in 19th Century France. Based on the novel by Simon Leys, THE DEATH OF NAPOLEON, the film supposes that Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from exile in St. Helena and returned to Paris in 1821, whereas the history... |
 | From the pen to the screen, this collection gathers together three Hans Christian Andersen stories. First up is THE EMPEROR'S NEW CLOTHES, in which a magical robe is created for a demanding emperor. Next in line comes THE UGLY DUCKLING, the classic... |
 | A scatterbrained king hires a new tailor to provide him with dazzling royal outfits. The tailor pockets the loot and sells the king on a garment that can only be seen by the wisest of men in this musical version of the classic fairytale. |
 | High and low society meet in this wacky silent comedy starring silent superstar Pickford. She stars as Amarilly, the belle of Clothes-Line Alley, an area near San Francisco's Chinatown. After a fight breaks out in the bar where she works as a... |
 | Two classic children's stories are presented here, each in two animated half-hour episodes. Each part is introduced by the Wizard, who also recaps the previous episode. Excellent animation and voice acting mark these quality children's programs.... |
 | An animated version of the classic Hans Christian Andersen tale in which a pair of con artists make a suit for the Emperor out of elegant, invisible fabric and the one child willing to tell the truth. |
 | Three classic children's stories are presented: THUMBELINA, THE LITTLE MERMAID and THE EMPEROR'S NEW CLOTHES. |
 | THE EMPEROR'S NEW CLOTHES recasts history in 19th Century France. Based on the novel by Simon Leys, THE DEATH OF NAPOLEON, the film supposes that Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from exile in St. Helena and returned to Paris in 1821, whereas the history... |
 | NOTEBOOK ON CITIES AND CLOTHES is a fascinating documentary by Wim Wenders that explores the work of noted Japanese fashion designer Yohji Yamamoto. The filmmaker follows Yamamoto from Tokyo to France as the designer arranges his Paris showing.... |
 | Two con men trick the gullible emperor into buying an imaginary suit of clothes. They tell the emperor that only the "wise and worthy" can see the expensive "garments." |