Picture of author.

Romeo Muller (1928–1992)

Author of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer [1964 TV movie]

25+ Works 1,723 Members 17 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Romeo Muller

Series

Works by Romeo Muller

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer [1964 TV movie] (1964) — Screenwriter — 376 copies
The Hobbit [1977 TV movie] (1977) — Screenwriter — 238 copies
Frosty the Snowman [1969 TV short] (1969) — Screenwriter — 189 copies
Puff the Magic Dragon (1979) 163 copies
Santa Claus is Comin' to Town [1970 TV movie] (1970) — Screenwriter — 163 copies
The Return of the King [1980 TV movie] (1980) — Screenwriter — 99 copies
Noël (1991) 85 copies
The Little Drummer Boy [1968 TV movie] (1989) — Screenwriter — 73 copies
Jack Frost [1979 TV movie] (1979) — Screenwriter — 54 copies
Here Comes Peter Cottontail [1971 TV movie] (1971) — Screenwriter — 49 copies
The Easter Bunny Is Comin' To Town [1977 TV movie] (1977) — Screenwriter — 32 copies
Cricket on the Hearth [1967 TV movie] (1967) — Screenwriter — 29 copies
The Flight of Dragons [1982 film] (1982) — Screenwriter — 25 copies
Rudolph and Frosty's Christmas in July [1979 TV movie] (1979) — Screenwriter — 18 copies
Frosty’s Winter Wonderland [1976 TV movie] (2011) — Screenwriter — 13 copies
Rudolph's Shiny New Year [1976 TV movie] (1992) — Screenwriter — 10 copies
Puff the Magic Dragon [1978 TV movie] — Screenwriter — 9 copies
The Little Rascals (1982) 8 copies
Mouse on the Mayflower [1968 TV movie] (1989) — Screenwriter — 6 copies
The Leprechauns' Christmas Gold [1981 TV movie] (1981) — Screenwriter — 4 copies

Associated Works

Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town (2004) — Contributor — 35 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

Acting (Voice): 5.0; Theme: 5.0; Content: 5.0; Language: 5.0; Overall: 5.0

Rudolph must overcome his "handicap" (his shining red nose) in order to help Santa save Christmas for all the girls and boys across the globe. When the weather turns very bad, Rudolph becomes a very important feature of Santa and his reindeer as his nose leads them to make sure of their Christmas deliveries. Burl Ives narrates this Christmas classic. Highly recommend.

***December 13, 2022***
***November 30, 2023***… (more)
 
Flagged
jntjesussaves | 4 other reviews | Dec 14, 2022 |
Acting (Voice): 4.5; Theme: 4.5; Content: 5.0; Language: 5.0; Overall: 4.5

Frosty the Snowman comes to life when a little girl and some other school children place a failed magician's hat on the snowman's head. Jimmy Durante narrates this great Christmas cartoon classic. Highly recommend.

***December 14, 2022***
***November 30, 2023***
½
 
Flagged
jntjesussaves | 1 other review | Dec 14, 2022 |
The plot and the dialogue occasionally remind one of a Saturday morning cartoon. A good deal of the subtle humour of Tolkien's original is elided. But the actors and the animation are good. Some of the songs that the goblins sing are positively rousing. The appearance of Gollum and the goblins was ill-conceived, but the dwarves, and Gandalf, the elves, and the dragon are fine.
½
 
Flagged
themulhern | 2 other reviews | May 22, 2022 |
Muller, R. (1979). Puff The Magic Dragon. Avon Books.
Summary: Jackie Draper is a little boy whose parents are worried because he does not speak. They are so concerned that they bring in a team of doctors to figure out what is wrong, and they do what they can do to get Jackie to speak. The prognosis is not good, Jackie does not speak, and the doctors say he probably never will, which really upsets his parents. Just then, when Jackie is alone in his room, something magical happens. A dragon mysteriously appears. The dragon makes himself small enough to enter his bedroom window, and he ultimately befriends Jackie, and Puff takes the “living thing” out of Jackie Drapers’s ear, and puts it into a paper sketch of Jackie Draper named, Jackie Paper. Jackie paper can talk, and Puff takes him on a journey to find the land of Honah Lee which is like a utopia, and Jackie can not wait to get there, and Puff can not wait to take him. Along the way they encounter many things that petrify Jackie with fear, like a giant pirate, which Jackie discovers through a cloud of Puff’s smoke really only ever wanted to be a chef. Once realizing this, Jackie is able to see how things that are scary on the surface, have a much less scary explanation underneath. In this case, The giant scary pirate is upset at everything and everyone because he really just wants to be a chef but was forced by his pirate parents to be a pirate. Jackie is able to find the courage, and bravely confront the pirate, and convince him to pursue being a chef like he really wants. Jackie was very convincing, and the Pirate decides that Jackie is right, and he is very grateful, and he is finally happy being a chef. Jackie goes on to encounter different situations like this one where Puff reveals the not so scary issue underneath the very scary surface which allows Jackie to find his confidence, and to come up with a solution for each of the different characters that they encounter. On the way back from their adventure, the ‘living thing’ is returned to Jackie Draper’s ear, and he discovers that he can speak.

Relevance: The book is a fantasy book of course, but there is a lot here to digest, especially for a book published in 1979 when not a lot was really put into concepts, and terminology about anxiety, like we do today, hence the misconception and accompanying diagnosis by the doctors in this book. Through Puff, Jackie was able to take a step back and find the hope in each situation, which is a crucial coping mechanism when dealing with anxiety.
… (more)
 
Flagged
fmatiella1 | 1 other review | Mar 3, 2022 |

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Jules Bass Director, Lyricist
Peter Yarrow Composer
Fred Wolf Illustrator, Director
Jeffrey Walker Screenwriter
Paul Frees Actor, Voice
Don Messick Actor, Voice
Fred Astaire Narrator, Actor
Maury Laws Composer
Johnny Marks Composer

Statistics

Works
25
Also by
1
Members
1,723
Popularity
#14,914
Rating
3.8
Reviews
17
ISBNs
111
Languages
1

Charts & Graphs