Aaron J. Brenner
Film and Video Adaptations
Red Riding Hood
(2011) – Catherine Hardwicke
Into the Woods
(2015) – Rob Marshall
Faerie Tale Theatre: Little Red Riding Hood
(2008) – Shelley Duvall
The Company of Wolves
(1984) – Neil Jordan
Red Riding Hood
(1987) – Adam Brooks
Freeway
(1997) – Matthew Bright
Red Riding Hood
(2007) – Randal Kleiser
Red Riding Hood
(2003) – James Marshall
Petya and Little Red Riding Hood
(1958) – Boris Stepantsev and Evgeny Raykovsky
La Caperucita roja
(
Little Red Riding Hood
, 1960),
Caperucita y sus tres amigos
(
Little Red Riding Hood and Her Three Friends
, 1961) and
Caperucita y Pulgarcito contra los monstruos
(
Little Red Riding Hood and the Monsters
, 1962) – Roberto Rodriguez
The Dangerous Christmas of Red Riding Hood
(1965)
Red Riding Hood
(2003) – Giacomo Cimini
Red Riding Hood
(2006) – Randal Kleiser
Little Red Riding Hood and the Wolf
(1937) – Nazi propaganda film
Adaptations of the Red Riding Hood tale or allusions to it also appeared in:
The Carol Burnett Show
(1974)
An ad for Chanel No. 5 (2007) directed by Luc Besson
The season 5 episode of
Charmed
entitled “Happily Ever After” (2002)
The “Red-Handed” episode of the series
Once Upon A Time
(2011)
The pilot episode of the series
Grimm
(2011).
Animated Adaptations
“The Big Bad Wolf” (1934) – Burt Gillett
“Red Hot Riding Hood” (1943) and “Little Rural Riding Hood” (1949) – Tex Avery
“Little Red Riding Rabbit”; “Little Red Rodent Hood”; “Little Red Walking Hood”; “Red Riding Hoodwinked”; and “The Trial of Mr. Wolf” from Looney Tunes (1944 – 1955) – Chuck Jones
“Redux Riding Hood” (1997) – Steve Moore
Hoodwinked
(2006) – Corey Edwards, Todd Edwards, and Tony Leech
Comic/Graphic Adaptations
A version appears in Marvel Comics’ series
Journey Into Mystery
#114 (1965).
Neil Gaiman uses a version in his
The Sandman
comics.
The webcomic
No Rest for the Wicked
(2004 – present) has a character named Red who lives in the woods and kills wolves.
Streetfables has a modern, urban adaptation called Red.
Little Red Riding Hood and the Kind Wolf
is a manga version that features Red as an abused child.
Musical Adaptations
“Lil’ Red Riding Hood” – Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs (1966)
“How Could Red Riding Hood (Have Been So Very Good)?” – A.P. Randolph (1925)