The Red Balloon

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

The Red Balloon (French: Le Ballon rouge) is a 1956 34 minute short film about a boy and his balloon, directed by Albert Lamroisse.

One day, a young boy named Pascal finds a red balloon. The balloon is actually alive and has a sentient mind of its own. Thus, they set off an adventure in Paris.

While a simplistic film made for children and to preserve the Ménilmontant section of Paris in film, critics noted the beautiful cinematography, woodwind score, and idealist allegories in a post World War II Paris. It is noted as an art film.

The film became a sensation in the United States especially with the children, thanks in part to its appearance on CBS Children's Film Festival. Schools often show the film in cafeterias and the film, for a while, became the largest selling non-running theatrical print.

The film won an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay, the Palme d’Or; Best Short Film at Cannes, and similar awards (BAFTA, National Board of Review).

It is also available on the Criterion Collection website, under the "Janus Films" label.

Tropes used in The Red Balloon include: