Hello my friends and happy Saturday morning. Once again it is time for some classic cartoons.
Today's cartoon selection begins with one of my favorites of the early Merrie Melodies cartoons, The Shanty Where Santy Claus Lives (1933). I love the atmospheric feel to the early scenes in this cartoon. There is a delightful amount of detail in these opening moments. I also simply love the title song. Despite being a Christmas cartoon, this film was released to theaters on January 7, 1933, just barely missing Christmas. The animation of the dolls singing, and dancing was reused from an earlier Merrie Melody, Red Headed Baby (1931).
Next is The New Three Stooges cartoon, Dizzy Doodlers (1965). The Stooges voice themselves in this made for TV cartoon. This is one of my favorites of The New Three Stooges cartoons.
Next comes the Terry Toons short, Prescription for Percy (1954). This cartoon was directed by Mannie Davis. Mannie Davis had been with producer Paul Terry, since Terry's silent Aesop's Fables cartoons of the 1920's. Davis remembered working on these Aesop's Fables silents stating, "The story was very sketchy. The main thing was to get a laugh out of each little act. You know, a little piece of antic that a character would do. Today it wouldn't mean a damn thing; it's got to be acted out, and it's got to have continuity of thought. We'd be springing all over the lot. But we would keep it ... in the location it started out in. If it's an African story, everything would be down in the jungle, and then in the desert and all that. I was my own director, my own story man, and my own animator. Each man did his own little thing, his little reel, and we had, I think one month to make them ... and there were five of us making them and [we] rotated." Davis would continue working with Paul Terry and Terry Toons up until 1961.
Now for a classic Donald Duck film, Toy Tinkers (1949). This movie features Donald once again going up against Chip and Dale. This film is directed by Jack Hannah, who at this time was directing the majority of the Donald Duck cartoons. When Chip and Dale had their very short-lived series of shorts, Jack Hannah directed all three cartoons in that series. This cartoon is laugh out loud funny. The slapstick is spot on and timed perfectly. Every joke works and they are all very funny. The humor is also displayed perfectly through the great character animation one should expect form a Disney cartoon. While Disney cartoons are often called sweet and cute in contrast to the hilarious antics at studios like Warner Brothers and MGM, the Disney studio could make slapstick cartoons as great as the rest of them (this is not an insult to Warner Brothers and MGM as I love there cartoons a lot as well). This stands as one of Disney's funniest shorts (a joke involving a telephone never fails to make me laugh out loud). The music in this cartoon was provided by Paul J. Smith, making it the first Donald Duck short in over four years to have music by someone other than Oliver Wallace. Smith's score briefly quotes a bit of music from an earlier Disney cartoon, the Silly Symphony, The Country Cousin (1936), whose music was by Leigh Harline. Unlike many theatrical Christmas cartoons, this short was actually released during the Christmas season. It hit theaters on December 19, 1949. The cartoon was nominated for an Oscar but lost to the Pepe Le Pew cartoon, For Sent-imental Reasons (1949).
Now it is time for a commercial break.
Now for the Van Beuren cartoon, The Family Shoe (1930). The gag where the four singers' mouths all morph into one mouth was used in quite a few of these black and white Van Beuren cartoons. There is a surreal quality to this film that makes it very endearing.
Next comes a delightful Christmas treat from Famous Studios with Hector's Hectic Life (1948). This movie was directed by former Disney animator, Bill Tytla (probably my favorite Disney animator). Tytla had worked on some of Disney's finest feature films including Snow White (1937), Pinocchio (1940), Fantasia (1940) and Dumbo (1941) and his animation was often a highlight even in these masterpieces. Though the Famous Studios cartoons he directed might not be as highly praised as his animation for Disney, these films often showed him as a very capable director. This movie is a good example of this.
Now for the Terry Toons cartoon, The Lion's Friend (1934).
We close with The Simpsons in Simpsons X-Mas (1988). This is one of the shorts made for The Tracey Ullman Show before the animated family got their own TV show.
Thanks very much for joining me. Come back next week for more animated treasures. Until then may all your tunes be looney and your melodies merry.
Resources Used
Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies: A Complete Illustrated Guide to the Warner Brothers Cartoons by Jerry Beck and Will Friedwald
Of Mice and Magic: A History of the American Animated Cartoon by Leonard Maltin.
Donald Duck: The Ultimate History by J.B. Kaufman and David Gerstein
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