boblipton
feb 2002 se unió
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Distintivos11
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Calificaciones41.7 k
Clasificación de boblipton
Reseñas17.2 k
Clasificación de boblipton
Punchy loves Judy, but believes he has nothing to offer her. Fortunately a horse has a n old straw hat which grants its wearer his or her secret desire. He gives it to Punchy, who wins Judy's heart, and gets taken in front of a judge. Soon everyone has his or her secret desire revealed in this typically eccentric Puppetoon from George Pal.
Pal's stop-motion short subjects for Paramount revealed him as the most cartoony of the stop-motion workers, most of whom strove for verisimilitude, like Willis H. O'Brien and Ray Harryhausen, or beauty, like Lotte Reiniger. Working from a script by Bob Wickesham -- who spent a lot of time animating and directing cartoons for Columbia -- he certainly achieves his purpose here!
Pal's stop-motion short subjects for Paramount revealed him as the most cartoony of the stop-motion workers, most of whom strove for verisimilitude, like Willis H. O'Brien and Ray Harryhausen, or beauty, like Lotte Reiniger. Working from a script by Bob Wickesham -- who spent a lot of time animating and directing cartoons for Columbia -- he certainly achieves his purpose here!
Heckle and Jeckle are flying south for the winter or north for the summer or east for the spring. Spotting a nice country manor, they decide it's a fine place to rest their weary wings for the evening. It's unfortunate that a bulldog chases every creature out of the place so he can enjoy it in solitude: unfortunate for the bulldog, because Heckle & Jeckle are more than a match for the mean dog.
I'm not a fan of Terrytoons as a general matter, but I have always enjoyed this comic pair. A pair of easy-going fellows, they were always amiable, like the Goofy Gophers -- another childhood favorite of mine -- and in any game of tit-for-tat they were provoked into, invariably proved the superior of the selfish and aggressive foes they faced. They never started anything, but they always finished it, and that's admirable. And funny.
I'm not a fan of Terrytoons as a general matter, but I have always enjoyed this comic pair. A pair of easy-going fellows, they were always amiable, like the Goofy Gophers -- another childhood favorite of mine -- and in any game of tit-for-tat they were provoked into, invariably proved the superior of the selfish and aggressive foes they faced. They never started anything, but they always finished it, and that's admirable. And funny.
The first cartoon starring Dingbat has the little yellow bird burst out of his shell. He observes the fox trying to get to birds to eat them. These being cartoon birds, they are well equipped with mallets and mousetraps and nests that pack into suitcases. So Dingbat decides to try out his cartoon powers, and discovers them to be sufficient to best the fox.
Terrytoons produced four more Dingbat cartoons over the next five years, and then he vanished. I suspect he was too raw a cartoon character, like Chuck Jones' Myna Bird: a creature of raw chaos with a weird laugh and general destruction for the sake of destruction. Too bad. As an occasional treat, he's fine.
Terrytoons produced four more Dingbat cartoons over the next five years, and then he vanished. I suspect he was too raw a cartoon character, like Chuck Jones' Myna Bird: a creature of raw chaos with a weird laugh and general destruction for the sake of destruction. Too bad. As an occasional treat, he's fine.