Before I get to the first part of "Tigers," I'd like to            address the non-Floyd song vaguely heard in the background of the movie's            opening section. It's called "The Little Boy That Santa Claus Forgot,"            by Vera Lynn (see "Vera" later in this analysis). The lyrics are as            follows: "Christmas comes but once a year for every girl and boy/ The            laughter and the joy/ They find in each new toy./ I tell you of the            little boy who lives across the way/ This fella's Christmas is just            another day..." At            this point, the vacuum cleaner whirs into electric life and "When the            Tigers Broke Free, Part 1" begins. After the song ends and we get that            wonderful close-up of the Mickey Mouse watch, Vera's song continues            with : "He's the little boy that Santa Claus forgot/ And goodness knows,            he didn't want a lot./ He sent a note to Santa, what he wanted was a            drum/ This broken little heart when he woke and he hadn't come/ In the            streets, yes he..." Once again, the vacuum drowns out the song. From            the outset, Waters sets up a few brilliant parallels that will recur            throughout the movie (and album). The very title of Vera's song, "The            Little Boy That Santa Claus Forgot," is steeped with ideas of anticipation            and disappointment, of longing for something and being (seemingly) overlooked.            The connections with Pink are fairly obvious when viewing Vera's song            in this light of hollow expectations. Maybe the little boy of Vera's            song received nothing because Santa does not exist in reality. I know            this seems a bit oversimplified, but perhaps the point is that placing            your faith and hope in the unseen and the unreal is as futile as, say,            expecting to be born into a loving world, a stable country, and a loving            family complete with two parents. If anything, "The Wall" is a postmodern            requiem for both former and present times, lamenting the pass of a pre-war            era that will never be again while grieving the state of the post-World            War II world. Correspondingly, Vera's song becomes less a charming song            about a down-on-his-luck kid and more a dirge concerning the uncertainties            of life during and after the War. In a sense, her message is the very            first message one would learn in a highly fragmented, postmodern world:            there is no certainty. Accordingly, Pink's life is bookmarked by post-war            fragmentation and uncertainty, both literally and symbolically. The            artistic "first chapter" of Pink's life (i.e. the opening of the movie)            is Vera's song about the futility of hope while the real "first chapter"            finds Pink fatherless. Even more interesting is the vacuum cleaner that            interrupts Vera's song in order to segue into "When the Tigers Broke            Free, Part 1." The vacuum is both the object that obstructs Pinks thoughts            in the present as well as the physical embodiment of the void around            which Pink's entire life is based. Therefore it is only fitting that            Waters, known for his fascination with cycles (as evidenced throughout            most, if not all, of Pink Floyd's albums), leads us from Pink/the-little-boy-that-Santa-Claus-Forgot            to the vacuum/void before taking us to the main root of this abyss…the            absent father. 
"When            the Tigers Broke Free" is perhaps one of my favorite songs from "the            Wall" movie simply for its astounding emotional depth. Although it is            one of my favorite songs in the movie, I can see why it wasn't included            on the album: it's too straightforward. (On the DVD commentary, Waters            says that "Tigers" was written specifically for the movie, although            he later says that it was a song that was just lying around. Could be            that it was a fragment during the album's recording but wasn't polished            until the movie was in production.) The album "The Wall" is beautiful            and compelling in the very fact that it is so hazy and cryptic. Rarely            is there a song with astraightforward narrative chronicling one incident            at one point in time with such a clear and concise point of view. But            that's what we get with "When the Tigers Broke Free," a rare and extremely            raw portrait (at least in terms of "the Wall") of personal loss more            in tune with the songs from the follow-up (and quasi-sequel) album "the            Final Cut: a Requiem for the Post-War Dream." Yet even this is fitting            for the album's beginning as a sort of parallel to the beginning of            Pink's life. Pink doesn't start building his wall until after he is            born and, even then, after he comes to certain key realizations. Therefore            it is fitting that Waters uses "Tigers" during Pink's symbolically pre-birth            state (with his birth taking place during "In the Flesh?"), a time when            there are no bricks and therefore no wall; a quiescent time when emotion            is just that, raw and unfiltered. While the narrative voice is grown            up and reflective and, in this first part, almost detached, like a historian            recounting events of the past, it is still very prenatal both in terms            of chronology and narrative action. Chronologically speaking, the events            recounted are, as previously noted, events of the past taking place            before or just after the narrator's birth, thus accounting for the semi-detached            tone of the first half of the song. In terms of the album's story, the            song acts as a kind of prelude to Pink's own story, with Pink still            lethargic in his hotel room/wombuntil his metaphorical birth into narrative            action with "In the Flesh?"
The            tone of the first part of "Tigers" is very detached and observational,            only hinting at the more personal voice that breaks out in the second            part of the song later in the movie with certain colored (and therefore            subjective) adjectives such as "miserable," "black," and "ordinary."            As previously noted, the song is very straightforward and calm in comparison            to the rest of the album, lacking the more dense metaphorical imagery            of subsequent songs. As such, the actual song lyrics need little explanation            in terms of narrative and symbolism: the action takes place in a trench            at the frontline of the Anzio bridgehead in 1944. Waters comments on            "the Wall" DVD commentary that his father, who served as the model for            Pink's own dad, was 2nd Lieutenant of the 8th Battalion of the Royal            Fusiliers Company C. The company held the frontline in February 1944            when the Germans launched a counterattack against the Allies in an attempt            to drive them back to the sea. The fate of the men is still undetermined            at this point in the film / album as is that of the still unborn Pink.            Yet history (and Waters) reveals that the Royal Fusiliers Company C            was completely destroyed by the counterattack, taking a "few hundred            ordinary lives," among which was Roger / Pink's father.
        One of the most interesting things to me, cinematically, at this point            is the plethora of extreme close-ups during "the Little Boy that Santa            Clause Forgot" and "When the Tigers Broke Free, Part 1." The movie opens            with a gorgeous long shot of the hotel hallway, very ghostlike and almost            sterile in its absolute barren whiteness. The shot also is evocative            of the birth canal leading to the womb/room that Pink currently occupies.            Yet from here, the viewer is treated to one close-up after another,            from Pink's father lighting his lantern with Lions matches (perhaps            suggesting the noble cause and hearts of the Allied forces) to Pink            in his hotel room with a cigarette burned down to his fingers. Every            scratch on the glass of Pink's Mickey Mouse watch            is visible (the watch serving as a reminder of the childhood he never            had) as is every hair on his arm. The effect is both intimate and unnerving;            we feel a certain closeness with Pink's father as he lights his lantern            and a cigarette, utterly alone in a womb of darkness as sounds of bombs            and guns fire sporadically all around him; yet at the same time, we            feel a paranoid sense of scrutiny as the camera details every pore and            hair of Pink's arm. In an instant we become both the rabid media / fans            obsessively observing every facet of Pink's being as well as Pink himself            under the world's microscopic eye as a result of his fame.
Another shot which has many fans guessing is the transition            between Pink's father and Pink in which a young boy (presumably Pink)            runs across an open rugby field with only a goal post breaking the horizon.            I've received many e-mails specifically addressing this one shot alone,            a few even speculating that the goalpost, resembling the letter H, foreshadows            Pink's drug addiction, particularly heroin. While this is quite possible,            I believe that the shot is used to set up the contrast between Pink's            psychological stages at many points during his story. The young child            running across a playing field as well as the quick cut to the Mickey            Mouse watch both denote a certain childlike innocence that Pink seems            to keep trying to revisit throughout the narrative. The field is            open and limitless save for the goal posts, alluding to the infinite            possibilities of life before birth and during childhood. Yet as every            scratch and blemish on Pink's watch shows, one's past childhood is etched            and unattainable, especially for Pink whose innocence was marred far            too early by the loss of his father. Like the watch, Pink's mental landscape            is quite different in later, parallel scenes when the older Pink sits            in a chair watching television surrounded by a hostile, barbed landscape.            Even the childlike innocence of the child on the rugby field is underscored            by his very solitude. He is the only visibly living being in the landscape.            Viewed in this light, the scene might not only foreshadow Pink's drug            dependence but also his alienation as a child as the result of losing            his father in the war. As such, the sequence creates both a visual and            thematic chain of events, starting with Pink's father engulfed by the            darkness of war leading to Pink's pre and after-birth isolation eventually            spawning thedrugged-out, unresponsive man who is so mentally fragmented            that he doesn't even notice that his cigarette has burned down to his            fingers let alone the maid's knock athis door. 
Interestingly, the conclusion of the calm, pre-album sequences (those cinematic events that take place before the album-proper begins) focuses on both the chain on Pink's door as well as the locked doors preventing the concert-goers from entering the stadium. The chains which held Pink together to this point are about to burst, not only allowing for Pink's conception and birth on the chronological plane of the story but also for the release of the very emotions and memories against which Pink is building his wall.
http://www.thewallanalysis.com/firsttigers.html