Animated shorts •
Three Little Pigs, a 1933
Silly Symphony cartoon, was produced by
Walt Disney. The production cast the title characters as
Fifer Pig,
Fiddler Pig, and
Practical Pig. The first two are depicted as both frivolous and arrogant. The story has been somewhat softened. The first two pigs still get their houses blown down, but escape from the wolf. Also, the wolf is not boiled to death but simply burns his own behind and runs away. Three sequels soon followed respectively as a result of the short film's popularity: • The first of them was
The Big Bad Wolf, also directed by
Burt Gillett and first released on April 14, 1934. • In 1936, a second cartoon starring the Three Little Pigs and the Big Bad Wolf followed, with a story based on
The Boy Who Cried Wolf. This short was entitled
Three Little Wolves and introduced the Big Bad Wolf's three pup sons, all of whom just as eager for a taste of the pigs as their father. • A third cartoon
The Practical Pig, was released in 1939, right at the end of the Silly Symphonies' run. With its own series banner In this, Fifer and Piper, again despite Practical's warning, go swimming but are captured by the Wolf, who then goes after Practical only to be caught in Practical's newly built Lie Detector machine. • In 1941, a fourth cartoon much of the film was edited into
The Thrifty Pig, which was distributed by the
National Film Board of Canada. Here, Practical Pig builds his house out of Canadian
war bonds, and the Big Bad Wolf representing
Nazi Germany is unable to blow his house down. • Fiddler Pig, Fifer Pig, and Big Bad Wolf appeared in the film
Who Framed Roger Rabbit. • In 1942, there was a
Walter Lantz musical version, ''The Hams That Couldn't Be Cured.'' The wolf (claiming he is a musical instructor) explains to the court how the three little pigs harassed him through their instrument playing which ends up destroying the wolf's house. • In 1942, there was also a wartime version called
Blitz Wolf with the Wolf as
Adolf Hitler. It was produced by
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio and directed by
Tex Avery. • Four cartoons inspired by the Disney version were produced by
Warner Bros. • The first was
Pigs in a Polka (1943) which tells the story to the accompaniment of
Johannes Brahms'
Hungarian Dances, which was a serious musical treatment, directed by
Friz Freleng. • The second was
The Windblown Hare (1949), featuring
Bugs Bunny, and directed by Robert McKimson. In
Windblown, Bugs is conned into first buying the straw house, which the wolf blows down, and then the sticks house, which the wolf also blows down. After these incidents, Bugs decides to help the wolf and get revenge on all three pigs, who are now at the brick house. • The third was
The Turn-Tale Wolf (1952), directed by Robert McKimson. This cartoon tells the story from the wolf's point of view and makes the pigs out to be the villains. • The fourth was
The Three Little Bops (1957), featuring the pigs as a jazz band, who refused to let the inept trumpet-playing wolf join until after he died and went to
Hell, whereupon his playing markedly improved, directed by
Friz Freleng. • In 1953, Tex Avery directed a
Droopy cartoon, "The Three Little Pups". In it, the pigs are replaced with dogs and the wolf is a
Southern-accented dog catcher trying to catch Droopy and his brothers, Snoopy and Loopy, to put in the dog pound. It was produced by
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio. • In 1964 Walter Lantz reimagined the tale as the Three Little Woodpeckers with the Three Little Pigs having been replaced with Knothead (whose tree was made of straw), Splinter (whose tree was made of sticks) and Woody (whose tree was petrified), pursued by a somewhat dopey wolf who kept saying "That was a stupid thing to do." • In 1980, the book with
Erik Blegvad illustrations was made. In 1988,
Weston Woods Studios created a short film based on the book. • In 2023, the winner of the Doric Film Festival,
Spirit of the Festival Award was Aaron Gayle (note: misspelled in citation) for his animated version of the Three Wee Grumphie (
Doric for three little pigs) with all characters speaking the North-east Scotland dialect, and amusing twist in the tale, which features the wolf's mother. •
Home on the Range features a short called
A Dairy Tale, where the character Mrs. Caloway tries to tell the story itself, but is constantly interrupted by other characters, who tell the story in their own ways.
Animated features •
3 Pigs and a Baby is the first animated film in the
Unstable Fables film series. The direct-to-DVD film was released on March 4, 2008, and stars
Jon Cryer,
Brad Garrett,
Steve Zahn and
Jesse McCartney. •
The three pigs and the
wolf appear in the four
Shrek films.
Television • In 1985, the story was re-told as the first episode of Season Four of ''
Shelley Duvall's Faerie Tale Theatre'', with
Billy Crystal as artistic "Larry Pig" (the smart third pig),
Jeff Goldblum as henpecked "Buck Wolf",
Stephen Furst as capitalistic "Peter Pig" (the first pig),
Fred Willard as
narcissistic "Paul Pig" (the second pig),
Doris Roberts as "Mother Pig" and
Valerie Perrine as love interest "Tina Pig". In this version, all three pigs buy their building materials from the same junk salesman (
Larry Hankin). • In
Rabbit Ears Productionss
Storybook Classics adaptation, the pigs appear to be female. • The 1992
Green Jellö song,
Three Little Pigs was adapted to a
claymation music video. • A few episodes of
Barney and Friends feature a retelling where the Big Bad Wolf, instead of being boiled alive, is defeated when he faints from running out of breath trying to blow down the brick house. • In the
Shining Time Station episode, ''Schemer's Alone'', Midge Smoot reads a version of this story to Schemer who paid her an
IOU instead of real money, despite the fact that he's tricking his friends. • The characters from the 1933 film adaptation of
The Three Little Pigs appeared in the 2001 television series
House of Mouse in many episodes, and again in the direct-to-video film ''
Mickey's Magical Christmas: Snowed in at the House of Mouse''. • In 1996, from
What a Cartoon! shorts program, in
William Hanna's final cartoon short "Wind-Up Wolf", The Big Bad Wolf creates a robot minion wolf to attempt to finally get the Three Little Pigs. •
The three pigs and the
wolf from the
Shrek films appear in the TV specials
Shrek the Halls and
Scared Shrekless. • In the PBS Kids series
Super Why!, Pig (Littlest Pig) is one of the main characters of the show. In the episode "The Three Little Pigs: Return of The Wolf," it is revealed that he is the youngest of the three little pigs. He transforms into Alpha Pig with Alphabet Power. • In 2018, the story was told in the first season of
Tell Me a Story, a serialized drama that interweaves The Three Little Pigs, Little Red Riding Hood and Hansel and Gretel "into an epic and subversive tale of love, loss, greed, revenge, and murder. • Episode 1 of
Dino Babies, "These Doors Are Made for Knocking", is based on this story. • In the series
Between the Lions, the story itself is featured in the episode "Huff and Puff"; however, two different sequels were written by two of the main characters: Leona's sequel shows the Big Bad Wolf becoming friends with the pigs after getting his tail burned while Lionel's depicts him being brought back to life by a mad scientist and renamed "the Wolf-inator", who is able to blow the brick house down, but gets chased away by the pigs as robots. • In
The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh episode "Three Little Piglets", an alternate version of the story is told with the pigs replaced with three Piglets, the wolf replaced by a big bad bunny (played by Rabbit), the house of sticks replaced by Eeyore's house and then a house of playing cards, and the brick house replaced with Piglet's house. • The
Little Einsteins episode "Build It, Rocket!” is based on the story itself, but the plot also involves the main characters finding materials needed to build the brick house and the wolf being blown away by the pigs after failing to blow down the brick house. • The
Very Important People episode "Pig #2" features
Ally Beardsley portraying one of the Three Little Pigs, who is coping with trauma caused by the death of their mother to the Big Bad Wolf, later revealed to actually be a
miniature dachshund.
Literature • One of
Uncle Remus' stories, "The Story of the Pigs" (alt. title: "Brer Wolf and the Pigs"), found in
Nights with Uncle Remus (1883), is a re-telling of the story, with the following differences: • There are five pigs in this version: Big Pig, Little Pig, Speckle Pig, Blunt and Runt. • Blunt is the only male; all the rest are females. • Big Pig builds a brush house, Little Pig builds a stick house, Speckle Pig builds a mud house, Blunt builds a plank house and Runt builds a stone house. • The Wolf's verse goes: ''"If you'll open the door and let me in, I'll warm my hands and go home again."'' • The 1989 parody
The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs! is presented as a first-person narrative by the wolf (here called Alexander T. Wolf), who portrays the entire incident as a misunderstanding; he had gone to the pigs to borrow some sugar to bake a cake, had destroyed their houses in a sneezing fit, ate the first two pigs not to waste food (since they had died in the house collapse anyway), and was caught attacking the third pig's house after the pig had continually insulted him. •
Elton John's song "And the House Fell Down" (from
The Captain & the Kid) is based (metaphorically) on the story. • Barbadian singer
Rihanna referenced a line from the story in her 2007 song "Breakin' Dishes" (from
Good Girl Gone Bad). • In 2014,
Peter Lund let the three little pigs live together in a village in the musical
Grimm with
Little Red Riding Hood and other fairy tale characters. • The second single from metal band
In This Moment's 2014 album
Black Widow, "Big Bad Wolf," references a little pig as well as the big bad wolf.
Other • The Disney version of the three pigs can be seen in
Walt Disney Parks and Resorts as meet-and-greet characters. • The direct-to-video film
Muppet Classic Theater includes
The Three Little Pigs as one of the stories, featuring
Miss Piggy,
Andy and Randy Pig as the titular characters. • In
The Shining,
Jack Nicholson's rampaging character,
Jack Torrance, recites part of the tale ("Little pigs, little pigs let me come in...") before attempting to break-in to the bathroom in which his wife, Wendy (
Shelley Duvall), is hiding. • In the Japanese live action series,
Kamen Rider Saber, this story is adapted into a "Wonder Ride Book", named "Kobuta 3Kyoudai (The 3 Little Sibling Pigs)", which was used by Kamen Rider Saber, the main character, for a while, but later becomes commonly used by Kamen Rider Kenzan. ==References==