Beloved children's author Dr. Seuss made his first and only foray
into feature films with The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T., which he
conceived, co-wrote and helped design. Not surprisingly, the look and
story were unlike anything audiences had seen before.
Young Bart Collins doesn't like his piano lessons any more than
most kids, but in his dream world, he has a good reason. His piano
teacher, the maniacal Dr. Terwilliker, secretly runs a sort of death
camp for young boys, forcing 500 of them to practice twenty-four hours
a day, seven days a week at his giant piano with 480,000 keys - all part of his
"Happy Fingers" method.
With the help of sympathetic plumber August Zabladowski, Bart plans
an underground rebellion. Literally underground, in fact, as the boy
tries to spring the miserable prisoners held captive in Dr. T's
dungeon (imprisoned because they chose other instruments over the
piano).
The film was a surreal fantasy, perhaps most memorable for an
elaborate production number with all the non-piano-playing prisoners
in the dungeon. Dr. Seuss wrote the lyrics for this sequence, as well
as the movie's many other songs.
Dr. Seuss' unique style was imprinted all over the film, from the
zany concept to smaller details like the blue beanies with yellow
"Happy Fingers" hands and the tall red ladder to nowhere.
The astonishing design of the film is, in itself, an achievement
worthy of praise without consideration for the story. Though The
5,000 Fingers of Dr. T. was a disappointment in its initial
release, it became an underground classic, surfacing in midnight
revivals, on television and later on video.
Bart Collins
Tommy Rettig AugustZabladowski
Peter Lind Hayes
Mrs. Collins
Mary Healy Dr. Terwilliker
Hans Conried UncleWhitney
John Heasley UncleJudson
Robert Heasley SergeantLunk
Noel Cravat