The Witches Tamil Dubbed < Extended ✭ >
Luke’s final decision to stay a mouse (“I don’t want to live longer than you, Grandmamma”) is a poignant moment. In Tamil, this dialogue gains added weight through the concept of Anbu (selfless love). The dubbing artist would deliver this line with a subdued karunai (compassion) rather than Western heroic resolve, making it more resonant with Tamil film audiences who value familial sacrifice. Dahl’s humor relies on puns and absurd names (e.g., “Formula 86 Delayed Action Mouse-Maker”). Tamil, with its agglutinative grammar and love for alliteration, can replicate this playfully. The Tamil dub might render it as Eli-akkum 86-vathu Kalangiyam (Mouse-making Mixture 86). The Grand High Witch’s speech about removing wigs and wooden limbs becomes a litany of disgust that Tamil dubbing artists can amplify using traditional Koothu (folk theater) hyperbole.
Moreover, the hotel ballroom transformed into a witch convention evokes the Tamil Koottam (mob) horror—a chaotic assembly of hidden enemies, reminiscent of scenes from Aayirathil Oruvan or Maya . The dubbing adds whispered Tamil lines in the crowd (“ Ivanga ellam pei da ”—They are all ghosts) that do not exist in the original, enhancing the paranoia. The Tamil-dubbed The Witches aired on Kalaignar TV and Sun TV during the 2000s. Unlike the English version, which was considered too dark for children in the West, Tamil audiences embraced it as a bayangara comedy (horror-comedy)—a genre beloved in Tamil cinema (e.g., Yamirukka Bayamen ). Children in Tamil Nadu grew up reenacting the “mouse transformation” scene with the chant “ Eli, Eli, Eli! ” instead of the original “Mice, mice, mice!” The Witches Tamil Dubbed
The Tamil voice actor likely employs a mix of Senthamizh (classical, pure Tamil) for the witch’s public pronouncements and a coarse, guttural Kongu or Madras bashai for her private rage. When she declares, “I’ll make you into a hot dog!” in English, the Tamil equivalent might replace “hot dog” with a more locally grotesque image—perhaps omapodi (a savory snack) or kari dosai —to retain the shock-humor. The famous scene where she removes her wig and mask is amplified in Tamil by onomatopoeic sounds ( sutta satham —hissing noise) that resonate with Tamil horror tropes from films like Chandramukhi . The boy’s Norwegian grandmother (played by Mai Zetterling) is the moral and emotional anchor. In the Tamil dub, she becomes Paati (grandmother)—a figure far more layered in Tamil culture than the Western “granny.” The Tamil Paati is often the repository of folk wisdom, ghost stories, and Mantravatham (magic). By reframing the grandmother as a Paati who tells padaikadhai (scary folk tales), the Tamil dub naturalizes the premise: witches are not foreign fairy-tale creatures but extensions of local Pei (ghost) and Muni (demon) lore. Luke’s final decision to stay a mouse (“I
Crucially, the grandmother’s smoking habit (eight to ten cigars a day) is tonally adjusted. In English, it’s a quirky, rebellious trait. In Tamil, a Paati smoking might be coded as eccentric or even shocking, so the dubbing may soften or explain it via dialogue (“This tobacco keeps the witches’ scent away”). This small change reveals how dubbing negotiates cultural acceptability. The protagonist, Luke (Jasen Fisher), is turned into a mouse mid-film. In English, his voice remains human—a sign of unchanged inner self. The Tamil dub must decide: does the mouse’s voice remain the same boy’s voice, or does it acquire a squeaky, cartoonish timbre as in Tamil children’s shows like Chutti TV ? The more sophisticated choice—retaining the human voice—aligns with Tamil cinema’s respect for the balar (child) as a rational being, not merely comic relief. Dahl’s humor relies on puns and absurd names (e
