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Blitz Wolf

  • 1942
  • Approved
  • 10min
NOTE IMDb
7,0/10
1,5 k
MA NOTE
Blitz Wolf (1942)
ComédieFamilleGuerreAnimationCourt-métrage

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueYet another variation on the Three Little Pigs theme, this time told as WW2 anti-German propaganda (the US had just entered the war), with the wolf as a thinly-disguised Hitler.Yet another variation on the Three Little Pigs theme, this time told as WW2 anti-German propaganda (the US had just entered the war), with the wolf as a thinly-disguised Hitler.Yet another variation on the Three Little Pigs theme, this time told as WW2 anti-German propaganda (the US had just entered the war), with the wolf as a thinly-disguised Hitler.

  • Réalisation
    • Tex Avery
  • Scénario
    • Rich Hogan
  • Casting principal
    • Leone Le Doux
    • Sara Berner
    • Pinto Colvig
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,0/10
    1,5 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Tex Avery
    • Scénario
      • Rich Hogan
    • Casting principal
      • Leone Le Doux
      • Sara Berner
      • Pinto Colvig
    • 18avis d'utilisateurs
    • 2avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 1 Oscar
      • 1 nomination au total

    Photos23

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    Rôles principaux6

    Modifier
    Leone Le Doux
      Sara Berner
      Sara Berner
      • The First Two Pigs
      • (non crédité)
      Pinto Colvig
      Pinto Colvig
      • Sergeant Pork, the Third Pig
      • (voix)
      • (non crédité)
      Frank Graham
      • Narrator
      • (voix)
      • (non crédité)
      Kent Rogers
      • Devils
      • (non crédité)
      Bill Thompson
      Bill Thompson
      • Adolf Wolf
      • (voix)
      • (non crédité)
      • Réalisation
        • Tex Avery
      • Scénario
        • Rich Hogan
      • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
      • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

      Avis des utilisateurs18

      7,01.5K
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      Avis à la une

      9scgary66

      Not just for the kids

      I was amused by the way some of the humor was aimed clearly over the heads of the younger end of the audience - and maybe some of the not-so-young-anymore realized they understood some of the humor, but knew better than to spoil their younger friends' innocence. It was fun watching the two naive piggies taunting their more serious kin, "You're diggin' a ditch - " and then freezing for a couple of seconds as they let the audience fill in the rest of the ditty in their heads.

      All in all, another excellent (and enjoyably over-the-top) Tex Avery creation. Though the wolf isn't as top-notch an incarnation of the enemy as some of the other war cartoons employed, it's well in keeping with the tone and background of this entry.
      7TheOtherFool

      THE END... of Adolf

      Very well done propaganda piece from the WWII era has the famous story of the three little pigs told with Hitler as the wolf. He's huffing and puffing away the straw and wood houses but then finds himself at war with the third piggies house, a bunker with hundreds of canons in it.

      Amusing tale is well told, only to be slowed down by some silly gags with little posts here and there throughout the movie. For instance: when the first pig flees from his blown away house, it says 'gone with the wind', only to be followed by another sign: 'Corny gag, isn't it'. Yes, it sure is!

      But overall this short is loads of fun and way better than comparable ones from that time, so if you have a chance of catching this: please do!

      7/10.
      6ackstasis

      "If you'll buy a stamp or bond, we'll skin that skunk across the pond"

      We all love to make fun of Adolf Hitler. He's the sort of political figure who's tailor-made for caricature, as Charles Chaplin discovered with 'The Great Dictator (1940).' But it also happens that he was a monster, one whose success spawned the most devastating conflict the human race has ever known. So it's with some uncertainty that comedy and propaganda combine in Tex Avery's 'Blitz Wolf (1942).' That same year, Jack Kinney's 'Der Fuehrer's Face (1942)' won an Oscar for showing Donald Duck's miserable life in "Nutzi" land, where he is continually battered into submission by the machinery of fascism, but Avery's cartoon is rather more open about its hatred towards Germany's leader. An opening title mocks convention by declaring that "the wolf in this photoplay is NOT fictitious. Any similarity between this Wolf and that (*!!*!) jerk Hitler is purely intentional!" Thus, the knives are sharpened, and Adolf Hitler's animated counterpart is about to receive his due.

      'Blitz Wolf' is styled around the tale of the Three Little Pigs (particularly the 1933 Disney Silly Symphony) – certainly the most offbeat version of the story you'll ever see – with the Big Bad Wolf having attained a characteristic moustache and a distinctive German accent. The first two pigs, having misguidedly entered into a peace treaty with the Wolf, are surprised to have their homes destroyed by his armies (this Wolf is too weak and cowardly to blow down houses himself, and instead uses mechanical beasts to do his dirty work). The third pig, his home a veritable steel fortress (a sign announcing "No dogs/Japs allowed!"), urges his brothers to help fight their collective enemy, both in combat and by purchasing war bonds. Not surprisingly, the remainder of the film consists of the Hitler-Wolf being continually shot and blasted from all angles, until he eventually wakes to find himself in the fiery dungeons of Hell. It gets a little bit repetitive, but, of course, Hitler deserves to be exploded as many times as possible.

      Whereas I found 'Der Fuehrer's Face (1942)' to be a highly rewatchable cartoon, even nearly seventy years later, Avery's take on Nazism isn't quite so fresh. There are some excellent word gags, such as a title on the Wolf's tank reading "Der Fewer (Der Better)," but there are also some self-referential signs that may elicit a disbelieving groan: "Gone with the Wind" when the first pig's house is blown away (despite the animators' acknowledgement of its corniness) and "Long darn thing, isn't it?" when we can clearly already see that the pigs' weaponry is rather lengthy. For the adults, there's also plenty of mischievous sexual innuendo at play, particularly in the comparisons made between the length of each army's cannons. One gag, with a suddenly-limp American cannon being rejuvenated by a dosage of Vitamin B1, was certainly more forward than I'm used to from 1940s children's cartoons. Overall, 'Blitz Wolf' is not the most intelligent of animated shorts, but it's an interesting historical document, and a bit of fun, too.
      7Hitchcoc

      Those Lazy Pigs

      This is a fairly slick propaganda film, with some pigs being a disinterested citizenry and the wolf being Hitler and the Germans. The third pig builds an armed fortress with bombs and guns. His bullet are war bonds. The wolf eventually meets some people who will become lifelong friends (and then some).
      7nikitalinivenko

      It's Blitz!

      This cartoon short might be one of the best war-time propaganda pieces ever made, along with 'Der Fuehrer's Face' (Both were nominated for Best Animated Short at the Oscars, with the latter winning). As usual, Tex Avery's visual gags were wild, unruly, all over the place, and top-notch. I love the character design of the Hitler Wolf (though why is the moustache split? Why not draw him with the regular Charlie Chaplin? The inaccuracy of the moustache is the one thing that annoys me) (Also, Adolf is an amalgam of Adal Wulf "Noble Wolf", so the character was of course a no-brainer, but still clever in this context) and his "combat" with the Three Little Pigs (Lead by Sergeant Pork) using an arsenal of gags, goofs, and antics. I've lost count how many times I've watched this cartoon, and I can honestly say it's more well thought-out than most action movies, and a far more brilliant piece of American propaganda than the generic Lone Survivor/Black Hawk Down/American Sniper crap we have today. P.S. This cartoon was made in 1942, and I know it's in reference to the Doolittle raid, but there's a scene where they wipe out Japan with a single bomb, which is oddly prescient the more you think about it.

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      Histoire

      Modifier

      Le saviez-vous

      Modifier
      • Anecdotes
        This was Tex Avery's first cartoon for MGM, after his disagreement with Warner Brothers' animation producer Leon Schlesinger, about the closing scene in 1941's Une vie de lapin (1941) because of Avery's newest idea and creation, "air breaks". Schlesinger thought "air breaks" cartoons could cause injuries, and worse, to children who saw it in the cartoon and tried it.
      • Citations

        Adolf Wolf: [coming up to the First Pig's house of straw; speaking in faux German] Open the door! Or I'll huff and I'll puff and I'll blow your house in!

        First Pig: But Adolf, that would break our treaty. You're a good guy. Why, you hate war. You wouldn't go back on your word.

        Adolf Wolf: Are you kidding?

        [the wolf laughs and brings in "Der Mechanized Huffer und Puffer" to blow down the house, but the First Pig manages to escape]

      • Crédits fous
        After Adolf Wolf's mechanism blew down the straw house of the first pig, a sign "GONE WITH THE WIND" appears in the debris of straw.
      • Versions alternatives
        There were some changes to the version airing now sporadically on the show "Toonheads." The two changes to the original version were:
        • The "No Dogs Allowed" sign, which had "Dogs" crossed off and was replaced with "Japs" on the smart pig's house now has "Japs" digitally removed.
        • A scene that comes just after the firing of the big cannon that shows the shell hitting and sinking Tokyo and being replaced by a sign saying "Doolittle Dood It!" and a red, white, and blue skyline was cut.
      • Connexions
        Featured in The Stork's Holiday (1943)
      • Bandes originales
        Tiger Rag
        (1918) (uncredited)

        Music by Edwin B. Edwards, Henry Ragas, Larry Shields, Edwin B. Edwards and Tony Sbarbaro

        Performed by studio orchestra

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      Détails

      Modifier
      • Date de sortie
        • 22 août 1942 (États-Unis)
      • Pays d’origine
        • États-Unis
      • Langue
        • Anglais
      • Aussi connu sous le nom de
        • Der Gross méchant loup
      • Sociétés de production
        • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
        • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon Studios
      • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

      Spécifications techniques

      Modifier
      • Durée
        • 10min
      • Rapport de forme
        • 1.37 : 1

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