Just got a disc of transfers of a few films in my collection that I loaned Tom Stathes to transfer at his Vintage Film Archive (aka his mom’s house).
Lady Play Your Mandolin never looked that good wherever I’ve seen it (including the one Warner movie DVD it was included as an extra with), so I had to get this awesome print transferred. I have to say that anyone who doesn’t love that drunk horse at the end (Mark Kausler’s educated guess is that ‘Ham’ Hamilton animated those scenes) obviously hates freedom and justice.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TvPVFZxzQwU&hl=en&fs=1]
Cow Cow Boogie isn’t that good of a short, but it’s rare. It has some funny animation and gags (the udder warmer, the one steer getting shot in the face) and a great soundtrack though. Pull out your DVDs to see how much Shamus Culhane brought to the table (and rose the bar) with his own “darkies is hepper than honkeys” cartoon Boogie Woogie Man.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xZs5HD6JPDM&hl=en&fs=1]
Finally, some I.B. Tech footage from The Bugs Bunny Show. It’s obviously the work of the Jones unit (looks like Dick Thompson’s animation). I like how the sheepdog’s ass morphs into his face inexplicably (cartoondom really owes a lot to Lou Chaney Jr.’s performance in Of Mice and Men). It’s not the complete show (I really want to know how Daffy got out of that one), though it should give you an idea of how bright Technicolor is supposed to look (and everyone complaining about the DVDs being too bright are talking out of their asses).
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VL8w-0-w2jQ&hl=en&fs=1]
Welcome to another edition of Your Saturday Bowl of WTF! Tonight’s main course is yet another gem from the Columbia studio’s 1940s library, Polly Wants a Doctor. Watch as the [Nazi sympathizer] Polly engorges himself on scrap metal prepared by an overly-pleased-with-himself goat (possibly Pervis’s gay cousin). As proven by earlier entries, it looks as though the staff at Columbia were having real fun with coming up with these oddities while forgetting that it was their job to entertain the audience. I still love ’em though. Things like Polly’s dance crack me up, because it looks so stupid, it’s funny. This cartoon was written by Dun Roman, who also directed the WTF masterpiece The Herring Murder Mystery at Columbia around the same time (later writing for Jay Ward’s shows).
The Screwy Squirrel modelsheet on display here has had me thinking about the backlogging of cartoon shorts again. For those unfamiliar with the term, it refers to how the cartoons were sitting on the shelf for months to years before being released to theaters. It’s why Rod Scribner’s animation shows up in cartoons released in 1955 even though he was part of the 1953 Warners layoff, or why Dick Lundy’s Barney Bear cartoons were released three years after he left MGM.