How The Mole Got His Pants...
13th September 1957The Mole and the Car
1st January 1963The Mole and the Rocket
1st January 1966The Mole and the Transistor Set
1st January 1968The Mole and the Chewing Gum
1st January 1969The Mole and the Green Star
1st January 1969The Mole in a Zoo
1st January 1969The Mole as a Gardener
1st January 1969The Mole and the Hedgehog
1st January 1970The Mole and the Lollipop
1st January 1970The Mole and the TV
1st January 1970The Mole and the Umbrella
1st January 1971The Mole as a Painter
1st January 1972The Mole and the Music
1st January 1974The Mole and the Telephone
1st January 1974The Mole and the Matchbox
1st January 1974The Mole as a Chemist
1st January 1974The Mole and the Bulldozer
1st January 1975The Mole and the Carpet
1st January 1975The Mole and the Egg
1st January 1975The Mole as Photographer
1st January 1975The Mole as Watchmaker
1st January 1975The Mole in the Desert
1st January 1975The Mole at Christmas
1st January 1975The Mole at a Carneval
1st January 1976The Mole in Town
1st January 1982The Mole in a Dream
1st January 1984The Mole and the Medicine
1st January 1987The Mole as Movie Star
1st January 1988The Mole and the Eagle
1st January 1992The Mole and the Clock
1st January 1994The Mole and the Little Duck
1st January 1995The Mole and his Friends
1st January 1995The Mole's Birthday Party
1st January 1995The Mole and the Robots
1st January 1995The Mole and the Charcoal
1st January 1995The Mole's Weekend
1st January 1995The Mole and the Mushrooms
1st January 1997The Mole and the Mother
1st January 1997The Mole in the Underground
1st January 1997The Mole and the Flood
1st January 1997The Mole and the Snowman
1st January 1997The Mole and the Little Hare
1st January 1997The Mole and the Source
1st January 1999The mole and the grumbler
1st January 1999The Mole and the Flute
1st January 1999The Mole and the Swallow
1st January 2000The Mole and the Little Fish
1st January 2000The Mole and the Little Frog
1st January 2002Created by Czech director and animator Zdeněk Miler in 1956, Krtek, or The Mole in English, was an international hit with children. Because the cartoons were presented with no dialogue, Krtek was held to no national boundaries. Milers daughter voiced the noises and grunts that Krtek made, and gave Miler the feedback from a child's perspective he needed to keep his stories focus on his young fans.






