11 opiniones
This is one of those things that defies description. Some sort of outrageous critter and his two pals go to the Quackadero, which is some sort of amusement park. There aren't the usual rides. Instead it's a trip inside the head of these people. One is a hall of mirrors where you can see yourself ten years from now or one hundred years from now. The latter is simply a decomposed skeleton. Another brings dreams to life. It's raucous and pretty senseless, but it vibrates with energy. It reminded me a bit of "Yellow Submarine." The animation is good and the characters really unique. There is a plot line that features the female of the group wanting to get rid of Quasi. But beyond that it's the carnival acts.
- Hitchcoc
- 1 ene 2016
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This must be what tripping balls feels like.
"Quasi at the Quackadero" paints a world of . . . well, it's like "Yellow Submarine" on acid. The colors are vibrant, the character designs are macabre, and it starts to sear into your brain after a while. I'd seen this before (middle of the night, in a theater setting) and I don't think my assessment has improved with being fully alert. And it just seems to go on and on. I'm not really sure it it's arty or some deranged '70s children's show, but I'm not getting the joke.
5/10
"Quasi at the Quackadero" paints a world of . . . well, it's like "Yellow Submarine" on acid. The colors are vibrant, the character designs are macabre, and it starts to sear into your brain after a while. I'd seen this before (middle of the night, in a theater setting) and I don't think my assessment has improved with being fully alert. And it just seems to go on and on. I'm not really sure it it's arty or some deranged '70s children's show, but I'm not getting the joke.
5/10
- Mr-Fusion
- 23 feb 2017
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Two duck-like entities (Quasi and Anita) and their robot (?) colleague visit the Quackadero, a side-show carnival where attractions include memory projection, mind reading, prognostic mirrors, and one-way windows into the past and future (the latter Anita takes advantage of to deal with the obnoxious Quasi). The imagery and the erratic, surreal, pulsating animation have the look of the era's 'underground comic' movement. The weirdly creepy futuristic Quackadero psycho-temporal amusement-park resembles somewhere that, in another generation of cult cartoons, Rick and Morty would visit. Bizarre but entertaining. One of the few 'post-golden age' (and post Timothy Leary) cartoons represented in the '50 Greatest Cartoons' (at #46).
- jamesrupert2014
- 16 oct 2024
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- Horst_In_Translation
- 27 jul 2016
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I saw this in Seattle, WA about 1978. The animated short is about Quasi (a duck) and takes place (of what I can still recall) on a carnival midway that features rides such as "The Ego Trip" (where a plumber taking the ride exclaims "I'm the world's greatest plumber!", etc.) Quite imaginative and a short I would look forward to seeing again.
- jmt-8
- 25 sep 1999
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Wonderful, psychedelic short film about a lazy duck (Quasi) whose frenemy Anita lures him to the Quackadero, a kind of crazy carnival with all sorts of weird carnies and barkers. I first saw it in Cambridge at a wonderful little place called Off the Wall that showed obscure short films.
This beautifully-crafted film was evocative and atmospheric, with a strong late 60s/early 70s vibe. And the music by Robert Armstrong and Allan Dodge adds a sometimes nostalgic, sometimes dreamy quality. One of the funnier "exhibits" was the Past Lives Pavilion, where people could go to relive things that supposedly happened to them in earlier lives. I remember one poor guy with his wife watching himself in some kinky hotel room or something and saying at the end, "That never happened to me!" And yes, youll recognize Cruikshank's style in some of the early Sesame Street cel animated shorts. Fantastic.
This beautifully-crafted film was evocative and atmospheric, with a strong late 60s/early 70s vibe. And the music by Robert Armstrong and Allan Dodge adds a sometimes nostalgic, sometimes dreamy quality. One of the funnier "exhibits" was the Past Lives Pavilion, where people could go to relive things that supposedly happened to them in earlier lives. I remember one poor guy with his wife watching himself in some kinky hotel room or something and saying at the end, "That never happened to me!" And yes, youll recognize Cruikshank's style in some of the early Sesame Street cel animated shorts. Fantastic.
- scrabbler
- 20 ene 2006
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First of all, the music in Quasi was by Al Dodge and Robert Armstrong, who have no connection to Oingo Boingo. However, Danny Elfman did do the soundtrack to Sally's film "Face Like A Frog", which included the Mystic Knights Of The Oingo Boingo song "Don't Go In The Basement" (Actually, even here there's confusion...not sure if it's an old MKotOB song, or a new Elfman song, but it's credited simply to "Mystic Knights") Second, there is no "Ego Trip" scene in this, though it does sound like something that WOULD be in it. This may be from another of Sally's films...I have not seen them all.
Whoever said that the "same guy" (Sally's a she!) must have done some Sesame St cartoons is correct...though most of the ones I've been able to find are from the late 80's and aren't familiar to me. I assumed she was responsible for some of the trippy 70's ones.
I first saw Quasi on PBS late one night in the 80's. I was excited to see it pop up on Youtube recently...posted by Sally herself along with some other works. She also sells DVDs of them.
Whoever said that the "same guy" (Sally's a she!) must have done some Sesame St cartoons is correct...though most of the ones I've been able to find are from the late 80's and aren't familiar to me. I assumed she was responsible for some of the trippy 70's ones.
I first saw Quasi on PBS late one night in the 80's. I was excited to see it pop up on Youtube recently...posted by Sally herself along with some other works. She also sells DVDs of them.
- treemarc
- 19 mar 2008
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Just watched this Sally Cruikshank animated short on YouTube. Recently awarded the United States National Film Registry list by the Library of Congress, this film has the title character of Quasi invited to go the the Quackadero by his girlfriend along with a little buddy. Lots of weird and wonderful things happen when they go to this place and they're not very easy to describe though if you're a fan of many '30s animation that came from the Max Fleischer studios, you may have a really tripping good time watching this, at least I did. The music also seems to be from the period I just mentioned and, well, just watch the thing if you're in the mood. Okay, so once again this thing is on YouTube...
- tavm
- 30 ago 2010
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I saw this once a long, long time ago, and, as I recall, the soundtrack was by The Mystic Knights, and sounded an awful lot like Danny Elfman's Band Oingo Boingo. I subsequently learned that Oingo Boingo once called themselves The Mystic Knights Of Oingo Boingo...
- benswire
- 5 ago 1999
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Sally Cruikshank has always been a huge influence on me ever since I was really little watching her work on Sesame Street. This is one of the most unique art pieces I've ever seen, I truly mean that! The fact that this took 2 years to animate and like 4 months to edit is astonishing! Sally animated it all with other people helping with inking it and voicing it. I love everything about this, except for the fact that it's to short. I want more of this world and it's characters and it breaks my heart to know that nobody in the 70s and 80 wanted to pick up "Quasi's cabaret" for a full movie. I would have jumped at the opportunity to produce that. (I'll one day try my best to get that to be).
- nbmanofmystery
- 3 ago 2022
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I must have seen this right around when it was made, as a short before a longer movie. I don't remember what that movie was, but I remember Quasi! My sister and I often mention it. It was the most surreal, mind-bending thing I'd seen as a kid (preteen?), and at the time was so weird it was even a little disturbing, thought nothing in it was really scary. It was just that different. I I've wanted to see it again ever since. I have a preschooler now who watches Sesame Street, and there are animations on that show that seem like they *must* have been made by the same guy, I I miss Quasi all over again. I'd love to get my hands on a copy of this. I can't even tell you what it was about now, but it made a huge impact on me! If you get a chance to see this, do, even if you don't usually like animation.
- Dianagenta
- 25 ene 2007
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