The film was produced by TRIKK17 in
Hamburg,
St. Pauli. The work on the 30 minutes film took over a year. In spring 2006, Jan Weitendorf, from the Friedrich Oetinger company, went to Sweden, to talk with
Astrid Lindgren's grandson Nils Nyman about the project. He told him that he wanted to make the film as a stop motion animation. Nils Nyman found that interesting and agreed to the making of the film. The
original poem about Tomte was made by
Viktor Rydberg.
Harald Wiberg later made some pictures of Tomte. Astrid Lindgren wrote the story much later, so that people all around the world can read the story. The film was made by a total of 41,106 individual images. In Germany next to the film also an audio play of the film has been released.
English release The film was translated into English by
David Henry Wilson. It was shown on several international film festivals. The English version was also released on the German DVD, but only the film was translated and dubbed into English, not the making off which was released on the same DVD. The DVD also features the Tomte Tummetott song in English, German and Swedish. ==Reception==