PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,5/10
1,2 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Mickey quiere volar un avión para imitar a Charles Lindbergh. Después de construir su propio avión, Minnie le pide unirse a él para su primer vuelo. Toman el avión fuera de control con situa... Leer todoMickey quiere volar un avión para imitar a Charles Lindbergh. Después de construir su propio avión, Minnie le pide unirse a él para su primer vuelo. Toman el avión fuera de control con situaciones exageradas.Mickey quiere volar un avión para imitar a Charles Lindbergh. Después de construir su propio avión, Minnie le pide unirse a él para su primer vuelo. Toman el avión fuera de control con situaciones exageradas.
- Dirección
- Reparto principal
Walt Disney
- Mickey Mouse
- (voz)
- (sin acreditar)
- …
Reseñas destacadas
I remember watching this as a kid on Youtube and much like many of Mickey's other shorts, I thought this was funny. It may not be Plane Crazy or Steamboat Willie, but it's still entertaining to watch and has some good scenes such as when Mickey dances with Minnie. If you like Mickey, i'd say check it out.
Personally, unlike the other reviewers of this cartoon, I found "Galloppin' Gaucho" very entertaining and I personally prefer it to Mickey Mouse's first two cartoons before it, "Plane Crazy" and "Steamboat Willie", for the following reasons: 1. In the previous episodes, Mickey Mouse was quite a horrible, prank-playing character, who could be quite mean to Minnie Mouse or innocent animals. In this episode, he was not particularly mean to anyone (anyone innocent, anyway) and was very good to Minnie. 2. The plot in this cartoon is somewhat cliché, but I found it very entertaining all the same and is a plot change from the Looney Tunes cartoons I usually watch (where no respected girlfriend is featured). 3. As I mentioned before, Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse are very "cool" in this episode and they both dance very well (in a sort of slow-music style).
In this cartoon, Mickey Mouse is travelling on an ostrich/rhea, in South America and he stops at a bar by the road. There, he sees a very attractive female mouse, dancing to the guitar. She too notices Mickey and also finds him very attractive and they dance together (once both have impressed each other a little more). Suddenly, Minnie Mouse is snatched away by a huge (but normal size in real-life comparison from mice to cats) and fierce cat, who obviously plans on eating her. He takes Minnie away to his abode and Mickey quickly decides to go on after her. Will Mickey Mouse save his new love in time? I recommend this cartoon to anyone who enjoys Mickey and Minnie Mouse cartoons in general and to people who like old cartoons with a clever slapstick style intertwined with the story. Enjoy "Gallopin' Gaucho"! :-) 8 and a half out of ten.
In this cartoon, Mickey Mouse is travelling on an ostrich/rhea, in South America and he stops at a bar by the road. There, he sees a very attractive female mouse, dancing to the guitar. She too notices Mickey and also finds him very attractive and they dance together (once both have impressed each other a little more). Suddenly, Minnie Mouse is snatched away by a huge (but normal size in real-life comparison from mice to cats) and fierce cat, who obviously plans on eating her. He takes Minnie away to his abode and Mickey quickly decides to go on after her. Will Mickey Mouse save his new love in time? I recommend this cartoon to anyone who enjoys Mickey and Minnie Mouse cartoons in general and to people who like old cartoons with a clever slapstick style intertwined with the story. Enjoy "Gallopin' Gaucho"! :-) 8 and a half out of ten.
This cartoon is one of the shorts Walt Disney produced after his contract in the Oswald business concluded. It also among the earliest cartoons to feature Mickey Mouse.
One thing that intrigues me is the girl mouse who wears pumps that are too big for her (She probably borrowed them from her mom.). When she dances with Mickey, her heels would often slip out. And when the villainous cat captures her, the shoes fell off. I think it would be more interesting if we get to see the shoes actually come off (We can't see it because she was swung past the edge of the screen.).
Anyway, the cartoon is quite fun to watch. Mickey will come to the rescue.
One thing that intrigues me is the girl mouse who wears pumps that are too big for her (She probably borrowed them from her mom.). When she dances with Mickey, her heels would often slip out. And when the villainous cat captures her, the shoes fell off. I think it would be more interesting if we get to see the shoes actually come off (We can't see it because she was swung past the edge of the screen.).
Anyway, the cartoon is quite fun to watch. Mickey will come to the rescue.
Walt Disney knew he had a winning model in Mickey when he introduced the character in May 1928's "Plane Crazy." But he was discouraged not buyers wanted to pick up the cartoon. He had Ub Iwerks draw up a second Mickey cartoon, "The Gallopin' Gaucho," in an attempt to create interest in his mouse. Mickey is not the innocent rodent fans later knew him by. He rides into town on a South American rhea-not an ostrich as most believe his transport looks like. He enters a tavern and immediately lights up a cigar, swilling a beer with it. Minnie displays an erotic tango dance movement, and the two recreate Douglas Fairbanks' lusty steps with Lupe Valez in his 1927 "The Gaucho." The evil Black Pete, familiar to fans of Disney's "Alice's Comedies" and "Oswald the Lucky Rabbit," kidnaps Minnie and drags her out of the place. Mickey retrieves his rhea, only to discover the giant bird is smashed by drinking several beers. The mouse ends up carrying the passed out rhea while Pete brings Minnie to a house upstairs to take advantage of her. Mickey uses a Fairbanks trick to get up to Pete's third floor bedroom where the two duel with swords. Mickey throws a bedpan, landing over Pete's head, incapacitating him. Minnie escapes with Mickey on top of the now sober rhea. They all race behind a screen of trees, hiding what the two mouses romantically intend to do.
Viewers were ambivalent towards Disney's new cartoon, released August 1928. In the preview surveys, a majority felt felt Mickey, Minnie and Black Pete acted immoral and not characters they wanted their kids to look up to. What's unusual about "The Gallopin' Goucho" is Minnie is first seen wearing her famous oversized shoes early in the cartoon, but doesn't have them on towards the end. Disney wasn't totally in despair with his first two Mickey cartoons' rejection and would revisit them after sound was introduced to animation months later. Over a course of time, Mickey changed his adult behavior, appealing more to children than adults. The rodent became a model of good behavior, a wholesome character where parents weren't embarrassed by his actions.
Viewers were ambivalent towards Disney's new cartoon, released August 1928. In the preview surveys, a majority felt felt Mickey, Minnie and Black Pete acted immoral and not characters they wanted their kids to look up to. What's unusual about "The Gallopin' Goucho" is Minnie is first seen wearing her famous oversized shoes early in the cartoon, but doesn't have them on towards the end. Disney wasn't totally in despair with his first two Mickey cartoons' rejection and would revisit them after sound was introduced to animation months later. Over a course of time, Mickey changed his adult behavior, appealing more to children than adults. The rodent became a model of good behavior, a wholesome character where parents weren't embarrassed by his actions.
The Gallopin' Gaucho (1928)
*** (out of 4)
Mickey Mouse is visiting Mexico and walks into a Cantina where he sees Minnie Mouse dancing up a storm. Naturally he jumps in and two begin to have a swell time but then a large cat jumps in and steals her. THE GALLOPIN' GAUCHO was the second of three Mickey cartoons that were made in 1928 and there's no question that, drawing wise, Mickey went through some changes since the first one. With that said, out of the three films this here is clearly the weakest but it's certainly still worth watching and especially if you're not too familiar with these early films. There's certainly good animation throughout but there's really no giant laughs to be had.
*** (out of 4)
Mickey Mouse is visiting Mexico and walks into a Cantina where he sees Minnie Mouse dancing up a storm. Naturally he jumps in and two begin to have a swell time but then a large cat jumps in and steals her. THE GALLOPIN' GAUCHO was the second of three Mickey cartoons that were made in 1928 and there's no question that, drawing wise, Mickey went through some changes since the first one. With that said, out of the three films this here is clearly the weakest but it's certainly still worth watching and especially if you're not too familiar with these early films. There's certainly good animation throughout but there's really no giant laughs to be had.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThis was the second Mickey Mouse cartoon produced before "Steamboat Willie", and after "Plane Crazy", but the second one to be released after "Steamboat Willie", and the next Mickey Mouse cartoon, "The Barn Dance".
- PifiasMickey's and Minnie's designs change after the arrival of Pete the villain.
- Versiones alternativasFor some reason, a scene with Minnie tango dancing has been deleted. Also a scene with Mickey smoking.
- ConexionesEdited into Disneylandia: Mickey's 50 (1978)
- Banda sonoraKingdom Coming
Heard during the main title and finale
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 4249 US$ (estimación)
- Duración6 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1
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