Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAfter a traffic accident, a man is treated with dog plasma while his dog is treated with human plasma.After a traffic accident, a man is treated with dog plasma while his dog is treated with human plasma.After a traffic accident, a man is treated with dog plasma while his dog is treated with human plasma.
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- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Candidato a 1 Oscar
- 1 candidatura in totale
Foto
Tex Avery
- Vocal Effects
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Daws Butler
- Samuel
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- …
Dal McKennon
- Dog Barking
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Grace Stafford
- Margaret - Fifi
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
From its title, I wasn't aware that I had watched this one before which, despite being a latter-day Avery effort, is every bit a classic cartoon. Again, the premise is simple yet totally insane: a man and his dog are trampled by a car while crossing the road; a cross-eyed male nurse mistakenly applies the wrong kind of plasma to each, with the result that the man takes on the habits of the dog and vice versa. Of course, this sends the wife (and the dog's own 'spouse') up the wall even if both intermittently revert to their natural states and, obviously, think that it's their respective mates who are nuts! Predictably, then, the ending sees the wife and her pet getting the exact same affliction after being run over themselves by a car and subsequently revived by the same eager but clueless medical attendant! And they all lived happily ever after
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This short, nominated for an Oscar, is pretty typical of Avery, with one small difference-where he typically started with a rather mundane normal situation and then twisted it in insane ways, here he starts with an absurdity (the infusion of dog plasma into a man and vice versa) and THEN twists it in insane ways! A hilariously funny cartoon and the ending is perfect. Highly Recommended.
This one is has a distinct 1950s feel, is very well drawn, and funny to boot. I love the "cuckoo" scene, repeated 3 times, including for the kitten at the end.
Stereotypical 50s homemaker wife with the "screwball element" thrown in for good measure (watch the henpecked husband say "yes dear" in the beginning).
Flattened out cartoons were the best! Loved when the ambulance attendant's eyes went cuckoo. Tex Avery was a genius of awesome animation. His cartoons were the best, funniest, and at times cutest (yes!). And the best part? His characters weren't recurring, unlike Tom & Jerry, Bugs or Daffy, so I never got tired of his, unlike the latter which today I often find downright unwatchable and flip channels.
That's a 9/10 from me for this Tex Avery gem.
Stereotypical 50s homemaker wife with the "screwball element" thrown in for good measure (watch the henpecked husband say "yes dear" in the beginning).
Flattened out cartoons were the best! Loved when the ambulance attendant's eyes went cuckoo. Tex Avery was a genius of awesome animation. His cartoons were the best, funniest, and at times cutest (yes!). And the best part? His characters weren't recurring, unlike Tom & Jerry, Bugs or Daffy, so I never got tired of his, unlike the latter which today I often find downright unwatchable and flip channels.
That's a 9/10 from me for this Tex Avery gem.
Too busy reading his grocery list, poor old "Sam" and his dog "Rover" get hit by a car whilst crossing the road. I'm not sure plasma was on their list but some quick action by the medics appears to have muddled it up and so now the dog has human traits and "Sam" goes around on all fours burying bones in the garden and yapping like a maniac. "Maggie" can't make sense of this changed dynamic, especially when "Rover" refuses to eat his tinned dinner from a bowl. The role reversal aspect works quite well here and at the conclusion you don't know whether to feel more sorry for the cat hiding up the tree or the wife - well until she and her poodle meet a similar fate whilst trying to escape the madness. It's got a lively score from Clarence Wheeler and moves along quickly and quite entertainingly.
. . . over itself to find out who ACTUALLY wrote the 1965 novel THE PAINTED BIRD, originally published under the name Jersey Cold-Shin-Ski. What twisted, warped imp of the perverse could have contrived the implausible canine and human interactions serving as THE PAINTED BIRD's cornerstone, and what led infamous plagiarist Jersey to think that America would lap up such filth? It turns out that Mr. Cold-Shin-Ski, being functionally illiterate in English when THE PAINTED BIRD was released, did what many outsiders do when when seeking the most outrageous, unnatural, illicit material possible: He turned to Texas--specifically, CRAZY MIXED UP PUP. Though Jersey's paltry imagination pales in comparison to the bizarre doodles of Mr. Avery, it is always rewarding to clear up a decades-old literary mystery.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizTex Avery: [song] The theme song is Kingdom Come, or Year of Jubilo, a minstrel show tune written in 1862 by Henry Clay Work. The original song sympathetically recounts an heroic American slave revolt against the Southern plantation system, with plenty of humorous slapstick for comic relief. The tune is very catchy and rollicking, so it is not surprising that many humorous American movies including this cartoon series as well the Christmas movie Incontriamoci a Saint Louis (1944) employ it in their soundtracks. However, you will never hear the original song lyrics sung anymore except as part of an educational lesson or an historically accurate context in a movie. This is because, while the song expresses a commendably benevolent and progressive viewpoint, the writing style sounds quite offensive to modern ears. To wit, the very first line of the song reads "Say darkey, have you seen de massa, wif de moustache on his face?" and it only goes downhill from there.
- ConnessioniEdited into Woody Woodpecker and His Friends (1982)
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 6min
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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