The film was released in cinemas on 25 September 2014 in Germany and on 31 July 2015 in the US. The director Harald Siepermann died in February 2013 during the production of the film. It received negative reviews from critics and audiences.
In the castle, Fantabularasa is a big celebration for the 18th birthday of Princess Rose, who has been cursed by the evil ice fairy, Dellamorta. If she is pricked with a sharp object before midnight, the whole kingdom will sleep for 100 years. For protection, the princess is required to wear armor. All is going well until clumsy Bobo, the seventh dwarf, makes a big mistake — and Dellamorta's curse is fulfilled.
Only with a kiss of true love can the curse be lifted. Dellamorta captures the kitchen boy, Jack, who loves Rose. With the help of a dragon named Burner, the dwarves search for "Prince Charming".
Cast
Nearly all performers of the first two films voice their characters.
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 22% based on 9 reviews, and an average rating of 5/10.[2] On Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating to reviews, the film has a weighted average score of 20 out of 100, based on 6 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[3]
Deutsche Zwerge-Fans dürften nach sieben Jahren Wartezeit enttäuscht sein, denn der animierte Film ist zwar kindgerechter als die ersten beiden Filme, bietet dabei allerdings (noch) weniger witzige Momente.
German 'Dwarves fans' are likely to be disappointed after seven years of waiting, because although the animated film is more aimed at children than the first two films, it has (even) fewer funny moments.
Die Fans der Realfilme sollten sich klar sein, dass Der 7bte Zwerg in seinem Humor gemäßigter ist. Nina Hagen spielt die Hexe mit herrlicher Bösartigkeit. Unterm Strich gilt: Flotte Unterhaltung für Kids.
The fans of live-action films should be aware that The 7th Dwarf is more limited in its humor. Nina Hagen plays the witch with great viciousness. The bottom line is: Fast entertainment for kids.
Sandie Angulo Chen of Common Sense Media gave the film three stars out of five, saying that "musical fairy tale has a familiar story but is fine for kids."[6] The Staff of The Hollywood Reporter calls it the film, "a garish-looking, slapdash mashup of an animated fairy tale." It also noted that "some truly grotesque CGI animation, this utterly charmless Shout! Factory release probably will creep out kiddies […]."[7] Justin Chang of Variety Magazine calling it "CG-animated musical mash-up of fairy tales would still be a pretty pathetic excuse for children’s entertainment," and the film "offers a witless recombination of elements from classic Grimm stories and some of the bigger U.S. toon hits of recent vintage […]."[8] Charles Solomon of Los Angeles Times says that elements from the animated movies "ineptly stitched together into a leaden film that children will enjoy about as much as lumps in their oatmeal."[9]