Here is another prime Dave Tendlar cartoon with Blackie the Lamb and Wolfie, the perverse Sheep Shape (1946). This is before Marty Taras joined Tendlar’s crew, but Johnny Gent more than adequately fills those shoes with some beautiful animation in this one. Unfortunately, all of my copies of this cartoon have faded to what Tom Stathes and I call “menstruavision”, so you can’t enjoy the eye candy that is Famous Studios color styling.
This has a lot in common with that very bizarre, but very wonderful, Bob Clampett Bugs Bunny cartoon, Hare Ribbin’ (1944). In both, the protagonist’s cross-dressing works so well, and they get so into it, that it gets a little uncomfortable to watch. Much more so in the Famous cartoon, where Blackie seems to have either shaved his wool or donned a flesh-colored body suit. Laughs are laughs, though, and this one has plenty of them. The adoption of suburban (or maybe rural?) rivalry over the prey-predator formula in this cartoon also gives this a unique Fleischer-like vibe to it.
I want to call your attention to a bit of animation by Gent from 2:17 to 2:37. This is a perfect instance of how great some of these guys were: that they’d do amazing work even if the material didn’t require it. Rather than just have him walk in and place the board in the door, Gent actually has Blackie stagger and struggle with the board, emphasizing its weight and what a struggle it is for a squirt like him to lift it. When Wolfie rams the revolver in the lamb’s face, every syllable of his dialog is reflected in the gun being jammed that many times in Blackie’s forehead. The scurry-in when Wolfie digs his way into the house is beautiful. In short, “that is some good shit.”
Also, enjoy a less disturbing (?) model of Blackie in drag by Tendlar.











