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Moomintroll (Swedish: Mumintrollet – invented mumin + troll, "troll"; also simply Moomin) is the protagonist of most of the books. [2] In the cartoon strip Moomintroll finds himself beset by endless problems. He is a "moomin" – a little white troll with a hippopotamus-like big round snout. [3] Moomin is very close with Snorkmaiden.
Little My (original Swedish: Lilla My, literally: "Little Mu") is a character in the Moomin series of books by Tove Jansson. The character first appeared in the fourth book, The Exploits of Moominpappa (1950). She is a small, determined and fiercely independent Mymble. Little My is brash, aggressive, mischievous and disrespectful, but can also ...
Box art of Moomin's Tale (2000) for Game Boy Color, developed by Sunsoft. In 1997, Muumit ja Taikurin hattu (The Moomins and the Hobgoblin's Hat) was developed by Norsk Strek AS and published by WSOY, later Nordic Softsales. It was only released for the PC. In 2000, Moomin's Tale, developed and published by Sunsoft, was released for Game Boy ...
The Groke appears differently in the 1969 anime version of the Moomins, where she is depicted as white and depressed. In the Polish Moomin TV series, she is more like the character in the novels, but darker and bestial. The Japanese-Dutch anime series Moomin includes her as an antagonist. In the Japanese dub, she is referred to as Morran ...
Meanwhile, Sniff finds a girl worn from fatigue wandering Moomin Valley and takes her to Moomin house for treatment. Akira Miyazaki: Norio Kaneko: January 1, 1991 40 - 140 "The Secret Fireworks" (花火の秘密 Hanabi no Himitsu) The sick girl Sniff rescued wakes up in Moomin House and provides the Moomins the answer to the mystery of the ...
Bergroth’s “Tove” is a biopic of bisexual, Swedish-speaking, Finnish visual artist and author Tove Jansson, creator of the Moomins, the globally beloved cartoon characters.
Moomin (Swedish: Mumin / Mumintrollen; Finnish: Muumipeikko) is a comic strip created by Tove Jansson, and followed up by her younger brother Lars Jansson, featuring ...
The Summer Book (1972) concerns a young girl whose mother has died and her relationship with her grandmother. Hammarsten-Jansson's death marked the end of the Moomin series of novels and Jansson's literary output became primarily adult-oriented. [3]