The wolf arrives at the cottage, has a spirited fight with the grandmother, swallows her, puts on her clothes, and waits in her bed. Meanwhile, at a windmill near the cottage, the miller Sans-Souci has comic trouble with his mule. Encountering her friends from the village school, she happily pauses her journey to play and dance with them. Red Riding Hood travels through the forest on her errand, meeting a wolf, who finds out where she is going. Her father and mother return, chagrined by her escapades, and she is told to take a pot of butter and a galette to her grandmother's cottage. She starts to play boisterously, getting the bakery staff mixed up in hijinks and pratfalls. The Latourtes' young daughter, called Red Riding Hood, reads by the firelight until her parents leave for a moment. In a bakery in the French countryside, Father Latourte, his wife, and their staff are busy with customers, pastries, and baked goods of all kinds. The film was distributed internationally, including in its native France by Méliès's Star Film Company, in Britain by the Warwick Trading Company, and in the United States-without permission from or credit to Méliès-by the Edison Manufacturing Company. Red Riding Hood is rescued by the bakery staff just in time, the wolf meets his end during a dramatic chase, and all return home victorious. In the film, Red Riding Hood is a high-spirited, adventurous daughter in a family of bakers in the French countryside, nearly eaten by a wolf during her journey to take a galette to her grandmother. Méliès's adaptation expanded and altered the Charles Perrault version of the story to allow for additional comedy and detail, as well as a happier ending than Perrault provided. Red Riding Hood ( French: Le Petit Chaperon rouge) was a 1901 French silent film by Georges Méliès, based on the folktale " Little Red Riding Hood".
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