CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.3/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaBimbo the dog is initiated into a secret society in a sadistic 'fun house'; then Betty Boop (with dog's ears) takes a hand.Bimbo the dog is initiated into a secret society in a sadistic 'fun house'; then Betty Boop (with dog's ears) takes a hand.Bimbo the dog is initiated into a secret society in a sadistic 'fun house'; then Betty Boop (with dog's ears) takes a hand.
Margie Hines
- Betty Boop
- (sin créditos)
Billy Murray
- Bimbo
- (voz)
- (sin créditos)
William Pennell
- Leader
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
When I watch David Lynch movies, I sometimes think he is showing us his nightmares. I often feel that the Betty Boop canon may be David Fleischer's nightmares. In this one, Bimbo, her little dog is the star. He is walking down the street when he fall in a manhole. He finds himself in some weird meeting of some kind of clan. They keep asking him if he wants to join (they are holding boards with nails in them and other weapons). He says no and this leads to one horrible situation after another where he must try to survive. It's a terrifying world but that is the Fleischer way of doing things. There is also a kind of vibration, a kind of rhythmic dance that goes on in these cartoons. I am enjoying these cartoons, fifty years after I saw them as a kid.
Fleischer were responsible for some brilliant cartoons, some of them still among my favourites. Their visual style was often stunning and some of the most imaginative and ahead of its time in animation.
Despite the Betty Boop picture on this page, 'Bimbo's Initiation' is not a Betty Boop cartoon, or at least not one where she is a lead. She does feature here, towards the end in a very nice short appearance that shows her trademark charm, sensuality and adorable factor, and also a bravery and care for Bimbo.
'Bimbo's Initiation' is, as the cartoon's title indicates, very much a Bimbo cartoon, and Bimbo is on top form where one really cares what happens to him and often feels the same emotions as he.
As always, the animation is outstanding (though Betty's different-to-usual character design, like with the ears, is a touch odd), everything is beautifully and meticulously drawn and the whole cartoon is rich in visual detail and imagination. Every bit as good is the music score, which delivers on the energy, lusciousness and infectiousness but also an ominous spookiness and eerie quality that sets the tone of the cartoon brilliantly.
The cartoon also is hugely atmospheric and while terrifying to a child (Fleischer rarely got nightmarish, and this is coming from someone who saw the likes of 'The Cobweb Hotel') it's pretty creepy still through adult eyes as it should be. There are some great ideas, very imaginatively drawn and done with great visual creativity and fluid timing.
Overall, a great nightmarish cartoon. 9/10 Bethany Cox
Despite the Betty Boop picture on this page, 'Bimbo's Initiation' is not a Betty Boop cartoon, or at least not one where she is a lead. She does feature here, towards the end in a very nice short appearance that shows her trademark charm, sensuality and adorable factor, and also a bravery and care for Bimbo.
'Bimbo's Initiation' is, as the cartoon's title indicates, very much a Bimbo cartoon, and Bimbo is on top form where one really cares what happens to him and often feels the same emotions as he.
As always, the animation is outstanding (though Betty's different-to-usual character design, like with the ears, is a touch odd), everything is beautifully and meticulously drawn and the whole cartoon is rich in visual detail and imagination. Every bit as good is the music score, which delivers on the energy, lusciousness and infectiousness but also an ominous spookiness and eerie quality that sets the tone of the cartoon brilliantly.
The cartoon also is hugely atmospheric and while terrifying to a child (Fleischer rarely got nightmarish, and this is coming from someone who saw the likes of 'The Cobweb Hotel') it's pretty creepy still through adult eyes as it should be. There are some great ideas, very imaginatively drawn and done with great visual creativity and fluid timing.
Overall, a great nightmarish cartoon. 9/10 Bethany Cox
This is a very weird cartoon with Bimbo the dog who enters a house where he is asked by strange creatures if he "wanna be a member, wanna be a member?" His answer is no and every time he answers that again the house pulls some tricks on him. Near the end there is a short appearance of Betty Boop (with the voice of Mae Questel), only she has dog ears here.
This cartoon is very weird and surreal in some ways. The house has some great surprises, all very well animated. It looks very original. The music fits the action perfectly and the appearance of Betty Boop, with the strange ears, is a nice one and it helps this cartoon with a nice ending. Recommended.
This cartoon is very weird and surreal in some ways. The house has some great surprises, all very well animated. It looks very original. The music fits the action perfectly and the appearance of Betty Boop, with the strange ears, is a nice one and it helps this cartoon with a nice ending. Recommended.
The Fleischer-produced-and-directed cartoons of the 1930's are tremendously trippy feats of classic animation. 'Bimbo's Initiation,' with its endless creativity and absurdist comedy, is emblematic of these free-spirited films, unafraid to be suggestive, violent, and, most excessively of all, balls-to-the-walls weird and wacky. It's practically unpredictable in its madness, one looney laugh after another assaulting the viewer. Its reputation as one of the most surreal cartoons of its time is well-earned, there is little sense to be had: a spark of fire can dance, a sharp blade can lick its lips, creepy cult members can tear off their skin revealing multiple clones of the stereotypically alluring Betty Boop, etc.
Anyone familiar with the history of animation knows the name of Grim Natwick, responsible for one of cinema's greatest short cartoons in the history of film, July 1931's "Bimbo's Initiation." Natwick's legendary career is most recognizable in Walt Disney's 1937 "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" where he was the lead animator in the first feature film cartoon. Earlier, he was responsible for designing Betty Boop, one of 1930s most popular on-screen animated characters. Max Fleischer, president of Fleischer Studio, said he wanted a girlfriend for his popular cartoon dog Bimbo, so Natwick came up with the flapper nightclub singer sporting a pug nose and dog ears. From Betty's introduction in August 1930 "Dizzy Dishes" to July 1931's "Bimbo's Initiation," Natwick was in charge of Betty's look in the ten cartoons she appeared with Bimbo.
The Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin-native had a knack for drawing at an early age. He specialized in sheet music cover art after graduating from New York City's National Academy of Design. Future film director Gregory La Cava (1936 "My Man Godfrey"), a school chum of Natwick's, first suggested the artist go into the film cartoon business at William Randolph Hearst's animation studios where La Cava was the supervisor. He did, launching a fifty-year career in the animation field. He worked for several cartoon studios, including Fleischer's, Ub Iwerks', where he animated a number of "Flip The Frog" cartoons and ran Ub's studio, and Walt Disney's, becoming the head animator for his "Snow White" production.
As he was was drawing "Bimbo's Initiation," Natwick knew it was the last cartoon he would sketch Betty Boop and her boyfriend dog. Fleischer Studio assigned him to other projects, so he wanted his final Bimbo effort to go out with a bang. It turned out "Bimbo's Initiation" has been acknowledged as one of cartoons' greatest works. The surreal-like short has the pup falling through a manhole into a secret society's underground clubhouse. Throughout his attempts to escape, he asked by its leader of its freaky-appearing membership club if he wants to join. After several minutes of heart-pounding sequences, including Betty's surprise appearance, the cartoon ends in a complete surprise as to whom belongs to this society. Voted #37 in the 'Fifty Greatest Cartoons' ranked by professional animators, "Bimbo's Initiation" had been credited by cartoonist Jim Woodring (the creator of "Jim" magazine) as "one of the things that laid the foundation for my life's philosophy."
Natwick's career reads like a "Who's Who" in drawing circles, not only originating Betty Boop, but also animating Mickey Mouse in 1940 Disney's "Fantasia," Mr. Magoo, Popeye, Felix the Cat, among a host of other characters. He lived to be 100, and is remembered by the South Wood County Historical Museum in his hometown of Wisconsin Rapids showcasing many of his works.
The Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin-native had a knack for drawing at an early age. He specialized in sheet music cover art after graduating from New York City's National Academy of Design. Future film director Gregory La Cava (1936 "My Man Godfrey"), a school chum of Natwick's, first suggested the artist go into the film cartoon business at William Randolph Hearst's animation studios where La Cava was the supervisor. He did, launching a fifty-year career in the animation field. He worked for several cartoon studios, including Fleischer's, Ub Iwerks', where he animated a number of "Flip The Frog" cartoons and ran Ub's studio, and Walt Disney's, becoming the head animator for his "Snow White" production.
As he was was drawing "Bimbo's Initiation," Natwick knew it was the last cartoon he would sketch Betty Boop and her boyfriend dog. Fleischer Studio assigned him to other projects, so he wanted his final Bimbo effort to go out with a bang. It turned out "Bimbo's Initiation" has been acknowledged as one of cartoons' greatest works. The surreal-like short has the pup falling through a manhole into a secret society's underground clubhouse. Throughout his attempts to escape, he asked by its leader of its freaky-appearing membership club if he wants to join. After several minutes of heart-pounding sequences, including Betty's surprise appearance, the cartoon ends in a complete surprise as to whom belongs to this society. Voted #37 in the 'Fifty Greatest Cartoons' ranked by professional animators, "Bimbo's Initiation" had been credited by cartoonist Jim Woodring (the creator of "Jim" magazine) as "one of the things that laid the foundation for my life's philosophy."
Natwick's career reads like a "Who's Who" in drawing circles, not only originating Betty Boop, but also animating Mickey Mouse in 1940 Disney's "Fantasia," Mr. Magoo, Popeye, Felix the Cat, among a host of other characters. He lived to be 100, and is remembered by the South Wood County Historical Museum in his hometown of Wisconsin Rapids showcasing many of his works.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe final cartoon featuring Betty Boop to be animated by her creator, Grim Natwick.
- Citas
[repeated lines]
Leader: Wanna be a member? Wanna be a member?
Bimbo: No!
- ConexionesEdited into Betty Boop Confidential (1995)
- Bandas sonorasGo In and Out the Window
(uncredited)
[Played when Bimbo is walking down the street at the beginning]
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución6 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.20 : 1
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Principales brechas de datos
By what name was Bimbo's Initiation (1931) officially released in Canada in English?
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