× Pinocchio ( pt. 2 ) ×

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Disney’s “Pinocchio” came from Carlo Collodi’s 1883 Italian classic “The Adventures of Pinocchio.”

You might think Pinocchio was mischievous in the movie, but he is far more so in the book.

In the book, he runs away as soon as he learns to walk.

He is found by the police, who imprison Geppetto because they believe Pinocchio was abused. 

Pinocchio returns home, where he kills a talking cricket (sorry, Jiminy) who warns him of the dangers of hedonistic pleasures and obedience.

Geppetto is released, and insists that Pinocchio goes to school.

Pinocchio sells his school books for a ticket to the Great Marionette Theatre. 

He encounters a fox and a cat, who steal his money and unsuccessfully try to hang him.

Luckily, after saving Geppetto from the terrible dogfish (you might know it better as the gigantic, angry whale from the film), Pinocchio shapes up and eventually becomes a real boy (and, you know, all that stuff about boys getting turned into donkeys and then sold to evil circuses did end up making it into the movie, surprisingly).

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