Añade un argumento en tu idiomaThe first Texas bad man come running into town a million years B.C.The first Texas bad man come running into town a million years B.C.The first Texas bad man come running into town a million years B.C.
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...told as only Tex Avery could! One funny thing is that if you would have seen this in 1955, you would have assumed that Dallas had a subway system. Well, we finally got one (actually a light-rail system) in the 1990s. (Dallas did have a trolley system back then that has fortunately been revived recently!) Whether you are a Texan or not (but ESPECIALLY if you are!), search this cartoon out. You will be a big kick out of it! Just don't come to Dallas searching for those huge cliffs, desert landscapes, or that jail -- but luckily, Dallas has learned to take itself a little less seriously in the past couple of decades, and you will see other fun things!
Love animation, it was a big part of my life as a child, particularly Disney, Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry, and still love it whether it's film, television or cartoons.
Also have much admiration for Tex Avery, an animation genius whose best cartoons are animated masterpieces and some of the best cartoons ever made by anybody. 'The First Bad Man' is perhaps not the great man at his greatest but as far as his 50s cartoons go it's one of the best to me. It may not be among his most imaginative or refined on a technical level, budget was not as big as it was before, but it's still extremely entertaining and highly pleasurable cartoon in typical Tex Avery fashion.
However, much of the animation is very good indeed, often excellent in fact. Very rich in colour, the backgrounds have meticulously good detail when limitations don't kick in occasionally and the character designs are distinctively Avery in style and are fluid in movement. The music, courtesy of Scott Bradley, is typically lushly and cleverly orchestrated, with lively and energetic rhythms and fits very well indeed, even enhancing the action.
Can't fault Avery, whose unmistakable and unlike-any-other style is all over, nor the dynamic voice acting and the very engaging characters. The portrayal of Texas was very interesting.
Voice acting is very nicely done, it's not Mel Blanc, Daws Butler or Bill Thompson but all three were very high in demand as voice actors and couldn't be everywhere and they were also not the only voice actors around (there were a great many and many very talented ones).
In summary, great cartoon. 9/10 Bethany Cox
Also have much admiration for Tex Avery, an animation genius whose best cartoons are animated masterpieces and some of the best cartoons ever made by anybody. 'The First Bad Man' is perhaps not the great man at his greatest but as far as his 50s cartoons go it's one of the best to me. It may not be among his most imaginative or refined on a technical level, budget was not as big as it was before, but it's still extremely entertaining and highly pleasurable cartoon in typical Tex Avery fashion.
However, much of the animation is very good indeed, often excellent in fact. Very rich in colour, the backgrounds have meticulously good detail when limitations don't kick in occasionally and the character designs are distinctively Avery in style and are fluid in movement. The music, courtesy of Scott Bradley, is typically lushly and cleverly orchestrated, with lively and energetic rhythms and fits very well indeed, even enhancing the action.
Can't fault Avery, whose unmistakable and unlike-any-other style is all over, nor the dynamic voice acting and the very engaging characters. The portrayal of Texas was very interesting.
Voice acting is very nicely done, it's not Mel Blanc, Daws Butler or Bill Thompson but all three were very high in demand as voice actors and couldn't be everywhere and they were also not the only voice actors around (there were a great many and many very talented ones).
In summary, great cartoon. 9/10 Bethany Cox
It's Dallas today. It has the first jail which held the first bad man back in one million B.C. It's a Tex Avery cartoon. It's a fun idea but it does need some more characterization. It only has the voice of the narrator which is revealed at the end. It's a funny little reveal but Tex Ritter doesn't strike me as the villainous voice. While I like the switcharoo, it might work better if the narrator has a running argument with the bad man and it is revealed at the end that the narrator is actually the dinosaur.
I know my summary might be confusing, but this is a Tex Avery cartoon featuring the voice of cowboy singing star Tex Ritter. And, incidentally it's set in Texas!
The cartoon is narrated by Ritter and he tells how Texas was originally an old west caveman town...much like Bedrock! You see all sorts of Flintstone-like guys wearing leopard skins and sporting cowboy hats. And, there are tons of anachronisms as well as the world's first bandit doing what old west bandits do best.
While the animation is not good, mostly because studios were deliberately choosing to make simpler (and uglier) cartoons with low cel-counts, it's a very entertaining cartoon. Clever and kinda funny.
The cartoon is narrated by Ritter and he tells how Texas was originally an old west caveman town...much like Bedrock! You see all sorts of Flintstone-like guys wearing leopard skins and sporting cowboy hats. And, there are tons of anachronisms as well as the world's first bandit doing what old west bandits do best.
While the animation is not good, mostly because studios were deliberately choosing to make simpler (and uglier) cartoons with low cel-counts, it's a very entertaining cartoon. Clever and kinda funny.
Tex Ritter narrates this Tex Avery cartoon about the first Texas bank robber, set during the days when cave men and dinosaurs roamed the Permian.
Ritter's narration slows down the pace of this typically gag-filled Avery cartoon. The jokes are all about the juxtaposition of contemporary attitudes about Texas and how cavemen look funny drawing twenty-shot handguns on each other. It's a typically funny Tex Avery cartoon.
Ritter's narration slows down the pace of this typically gag-filled Avery cartoon. The jokes are all about the juxtaposition of contemporary attitudes about Texas and how cavemen look funny drawing twenty-shot handguns on each other. It's a typically funny Tex Avery cartoon.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesDirector Tex Avery was a native of Dallas, Texas. He based the story for this cartoon on one true fact. At Founders Plaza in downtown Dallas, surrounded by skyscrapers, is a replica of a cabin owned by John Neely Bryan, the founder of the city.
- Citas
[first lines]
Narrator: This here sure is Dallas, Texas, the way it stands today. But hidden amid the modern buildings there still stands today a small reminder of the way it used to be, the very first jail house. It was built to house the very first bad man in the history of Texas. Now remember this was a long time ago, back when Texas was young, mighty young.
- ConexionesFeatured in Så er der tegnefilm: Episodio #5.3 (1983)
- Banda sonoraI've Been Working on the Railroad
(uncredited)
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- Duración
- 6min
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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