Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueTwo thugs from The Citizens' Fair Play Committee arrive to see that Screwloose's amateur talent show is run on the level.Two thugs from The Citizens' Fair Play Committee arrive to see that Screwloose's amateur talent show is run on the level.Two thugs from The Citizens' Fair Play Committee arrive to see that Screwloose's amateur talent show is run on the level.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Mel Blanc
- Count Screwloose
- (non crédité)
- …
Harry Lang
- Announcer
- (non crédité)
- …
Pat McGeehan
- Citizens Committee Commercial
- (non crédité)
- …
Georgia Stark
- Mother Goose
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
When Count Screwloose and J.R. the Wonder Dog are suspected of setting up a talent show only to take off with the money, a sadistically looking vigilante forces them to carry it out, but the real act of sadism here is to force the viewers to sit through the atonal eight-minute talent(less) show in what can best be described as the Trout Mask Replica of cartoons.
It's not entirely without merits – for one thing the characters are drawn decently amusingly – but overall it's pretty low on laughs and not remotely as funny as the Marx brothers movies it comes with as a bonus.
It's not entirely without merits – for one thing the characters are drawn decently amusingly – but overall it's pretty low on laughs and not remotely as funny as the Marx brothers movies it comes with as a bonus.
Milt Gross is one of the unjustly forgotten comic strip artists. He created Count Screwloose of Tooloose in 1929, and in the late thirties brought the character to MGM studios to build an animated series around him. Due to disagreements with producer Fred Quimby, the series only lasted for two films, but the two that were made are a stitch! In "Jitterbug Follies", the Count and his "Wonder Dog" rig a crooked dance contest under the threatening gaze of the Citizens Fair Play Committee, which comes across more like a gang of mobsters. Even process of elimination doesn't make it much easier to find a sympathetic figure in the bunch, but the film manages to hold your interest by being so doggoned funny. Add to that two of the strangest looking penguins even to be captured on celluloid.
10tavm
Jitterbug Follies is one of only two MGM cartoons to star comic strip characters Count Screwloose and J.R. the Wonder Dog as directed by their creator, Milt Gross. The other one was Wanted: No Master. In this one Screwloose and J.R. try to bilk some money out of a bogus talent contest but are forced by a couple of thugs for "Citizens for Fair Play" to put one on. So we see a hippo singing opera, Mother Goose singing big band as she strips to reveal a young woman with a short-skirted dress, an ostrich "fan dancing", and a couple of penguins who keep going on stage attempting to sing despite constantly getting thrown out. Those gags make this one of the most creative cartoons for MGM before Tex Avery and Tom and Jerry put the studio on the animation map. Too bad Gross didn't make any more films after this one. You can see both this and Wanted: No Master on YouTube.
It's a black and white MGM cartoon. Count Screwloose and J.R. the Wonder Dog are caught trying to steal the take from the theater. It's a $10k swing contest. They are forced to host the contest for real by a couple of gun wielding thugs. Count Screwloose seems to be a short-lived attempt at adding to the MGM animated portfolio. It doesn't really set up the Count and his dog that well. It starts well but then it follows the other dance acts. I can do without the Mother Goose performance. Screwloose should be trying to steal the money all the way through the short. They could be thwarted time and again until the last two minutes. The ending is fine. This is an interesting side trip in the animation history.
Count Screwloose and J.R. are about to skip town with the $10,000 prize from their talent show when a couple of hoods show up to persuade them otherwise. Instead, they try to win the prize themselves.
Fred Quimby was appointed producer of MGM's carton department and decided to make it something that could run without his doing anything except show up at the Academy Awards ceremonies to collect Oscars. In 1938, he appointed comic-strip genius Milt Gross head of the story department. This meant he had to okay the latest 'Captain and the Kids' script and ignore what Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising was doing. Since he had time on his hands, he directed a pair of cartoons based on his own creations. This is the first, and it's a dandy, with penguins singing sentimental songs and other startling and hilarious images.
Fred Quimby was appointed producer of MGM's carton department and decided to make it something that could run without his doing anything except show up at the Academy Awards ceremonies to collect Oscars. In 1938, he appointed comic-strip genius Milt Gross head of the story department. This meant he had to okay the latest 'Captain and the Kids' script and ignore what Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising was doing. Since he had time on his hands, he directed a pair of cartoons based on his own creations. This is the first, and it's a dandy, with penguins singing sentimental songs and other startling and hilarious images.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis film short is available as an extra in the Warner DVD of Un jour au cirque (1939).
- Citations
Narrator: Come on you jitterbugs - get in and swing! Get in the big contest! Count Screwloose and J.R. The Wonder Dog present the $10,000 swing talent contest! Get in line, you 'gators!' Come on you rug-cutters! Get the $10,000 prize for the winner of this big contest!
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Détails
- Durée
- 9min
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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