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8,0/10
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Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA sheepdog thwarts the efforts of a thieving wolf whose tricks include altering the time clock, hiding in a bush, imitating Pan, digging a tunnel, unleashing a wildcat and disguising himself... Ler tudoA sheepdog thwarts the efforts of a thieving wolf whose tricks include altering the time clock, hiding in a bush, imitating Pan, digging a tunnel, unleashing a wildcat and disguising himself as the dog's coworker.A sheepdog thwarts the efforts of a thieving wolf whose tricks include altering the time clock, hiding in a bush, imitating Pan, digging a tunnel, unleashing a wildcat and disguising himself as the dog's coworker.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artista
Mel Blanc
- Ralph Sheepdog
- (narração)
- …
Avaliações em destaque
Don't Give Up the Sheep (1953)
**** (out of 4)
Sam Sheepdog (named Ralph in this film) clocks into work and right away Wile E. Coyote (not the name used here) is trying to steal the sheep. Sam has to stay wide awake because Wile has a lot of stuff up his sleeve. This is an excellent cartoon full of great laughs and violent action. Even though he isn't address as Wile, it's clear who the character is suppose to be and I must admit that I think his character here is a lot better than any of the match ups against the Road Runner. Don't get me wrong, I do love the Road Runner series but for my money this film is flawless. The running gag of sawing through the tree is priceless as are the many attempts to steal the sheep. The coyote also takes a pretty big beating throughout the film, which is always fun to watch.
**** (out of 4)
Sam Sheepdog (named Ralph in this film) clocks into work and right away Wile E. Coyote (not the name used here) is trying to steal the sheep. Sam has to stay wide awake because Wile has a lot of stuff up his sleeve. This is an excellent cartoon full of great laughs and violent action. Even though he isn't address as Wile, it's clear who the character is suppose to be and I must admit that I think his character here is a lot better than any of the match ups against the Road Runner. Don't get me wrong, I do love the Road Runner series but for my money this film is flawless. The running gag of sawing through the tree is priceless as are the many attempts to steal the sheep. The coyote also takes a pretty big beating throughout the film, which is always fun to watch.
Chuck Jones, in addition to both working with solidly established stars such as Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck and doing one-shot cartoons like Martian Through Georgia, did some thematic groupings of short using continuing characters in a small number of cartoons. Ralph and Sam, a sheepdog and wolf, were one of these. The series is one of the better ones as far as I'm concerned. The concept of protector versus predator as a 9 to 5 job just amuses me no end. This particular short isn't the best of the lot (there were seven all told and I believe this was the first of them) but all of them are quite fun and are well worth watching. Recommended.
Ralph the Sheepdog punches in the work clock and takes over guard duty over a flock of sheep. In comes a wolf to scope out the potential buffet. First, he tries to trick Ralph by setting the work clock ahead. This keeps going and going until Ralph truly finishes his shift and is replaced by another sheepdog.
This is the first sheepdog and wolf short. The names are not set yet. What it absolutely gets right is the punch clock. That is the biggest and most important aspect of this franchise. It taps into the postwar workers who have to punch a clock everyday. There are later improvements, but this sets up the formula.
This is the first sheepdog and wolf short. The names are not set yet. What it absolutely gets right is the punch clock. That is the biggest and most important aspect of this franchise. It taps into the postwar workers who have to punch a clock everyday. There are later improvements, but this sets up the formula.
The first in a series of shorts about a sheepdog (usually named Sam) guarding a flock of sheep and a wolf (usually named Ralph) trying to steal them. The joke is that the dog (and in later shorts the wolf) is just doing his job, punching a clock like any blue collar human. Unlike some of the other reviewers here, I don't feel like this is the best of the series. It's a great start, and there are lots of funny gags, but I think some of the others in the series were even funnier. The Pan gag was my favorite in this one. The lively music is supplied by Carl Stalling. Great voice work from Mel Blanc. The animation is colorful and nicely drawn. Ralph's feet are different here than they would be in later cartoons. It's a clever and original start to a great series; yet another example of the genius of Chuck Jones.
Chuck Jones's 'Don't Give Up the Sheep' is the first of six cartoons Jones made with the lesser known characters of Sam Sheepdog and Ralph Wolf (although in this early entry to the series it is the Sheepdog who is called Ralph and the Wolf is unnamed). The first thing cartoon buffs will notice is that, but for his red nose, the Wolf is basically Wile E Coyote. What provoked this design decision is uncertain and it may have just been down to laziness but Jones later turned it into a brilliant comment on both the similarity and difference between the Sheepdog and Wolf shorts and the Road Runner series. The Wolf's attempts to capture the sheep in a series of blackout gags could and have been likened to the style of storytelling in the Road Runner cartoons but there's a key difference that tells us that Ralph Wolf is completely different from Wile E Coyote. The Coyote is an insanely obsessive creature driven by his one track mind to catch and devour the Road Runner. The highly unusual opening scenes of the Sheepdog and Wolf cartoons, however, reveal that Ralph is simply fulfilling his duties as he punches in on a timecard like any other workaday stiff. His duties are presumably determined by either nature or the all powerful cartoonists. The fact that only the Sheepdog punches in at the beginning of 'Don't Give Up the Sheep' suggests that maybe Jones extension of this gag to the Wolf as well may have been a sly joke at the expense of those who accused him of repeating himself.
In my opinion, those who claim that the Sheepdog and Wolf cartoons are just a retread of Road Runner are absolutely wrong. This is a quite different setup in which the antagonist has the added inconvenience of having to remain covert. The brutal, threatening presence of Sam the Sheepdog is a quite different proposition from the falling boulders and malfunctioning gadgets that scupper Wile E Coyote's plans. The implication here is that Ralph is extremely good at catching sheep and would undoubtedly be a success were Sam just not that tiny bit better at his job. Ralph is not the self-sabotaging dupe that the Coyote is, he's merely the victim of a superior co-worker.
All of which tells you nothing specific about 'Don't Give Up the Sheep', for which I apologise. To finally set aside all the prevarication, 'Don't Give Up the Sheep' is a superb cartoon. The jokes, courtesy of Michael Maltese, are brilliantly inventive and unpredictable. The funniest gags are often the simplest, such as the panpipe sequence or the wildcat joke. There's also a hilarious extended piece involving the sawing of branches which leads up to the only already well-used punchline in the cartoon. I always enjoyed the later episodes in which the Wolf punched in alongside the Sheepdog and it was implied that they were casual friends outside the working hours of a job that demanded they be enemies but 'Don't Give Up the Sheep' makes up for this omission by sheer quality of the gags and their impeccable execution. They may live in the shadow of the more popular Road Runner cartoons but I've always greatly preferred the extraordinarily witty Sheepdog and Wolf series and 'Don't Give Up the Sheep' gets it off to a riotously
In my opinion, those who claim that the Sheepdog and Wolf cartoons are just a retread of Road Runner are absolutely wrong. This is a quite different setup in which the antagonist has the added inconvenience of having to remain covert. The brutal, threatening presence of Sam the Sheepdog is a quite different proposition from the falling boulders and malfunctioning gadgets that scupper Wile E Coyote's plans. The implication here is that Ralph is extremely good at catching sheep and would undoubtedly be a success were Sam just not that tiny bit better at his job. Ralph is not the self-sabotaging dupe that the Coyote is, he's merely the victim of a superior co-worker.
All of which tells you nothing specific about 'Don't Give Up the Sheep', for which I apologise. To finally set aside all the prevarication, 'Don't Give Up the Sheep' is a superb cartoon. The jokes, courtesy of Michael Maltese, are brilliantly inventive and unpredictable. The funniest gags are often the simplest, such as the panpipe sequence or the wildcat joke. There's also a hilarious extended piece involving the sawing of branches which leads up to the only already well-used punchline in the cartoon. I always enjoyed the later episodes in which the Wolf punched in alongside the Sheepdog and it was implied that they were casual friends outside the working hours of a job that demanded they be enemies but 'Don't Give Up the Sheep' makes up for this omission by sheer quality of the gags and their impeccable execution. They may live in the shadow of the more popular Road Runner cartoons but I've always greatly preferred the extraordinarily witty Sheepdog and Wolf series and 'Don't Give Up the Sheep' gets it off to a riotously
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesFirst appearance of Sam Sheepdog (referred to here as "Ralph") and Ralph Wolf (unnamed here).
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen 'Ralph' (Sam) clocks in, he uses the bottom time card. When Fred (the dog 'Ralph' is relieving), he clocks out using the top time card. So, when all the clocking is done, 'Ralph's' time card is in the bottom 'In' slot, and Fred's time card is in the upper 'Out' slot. However, when Wolf changes the time on the time clock, there is one card in the lower 'Out' slot and one time card in the upper 'In' slot.
- Versões alternativasThe only gag edited from TV versions of the film is the very last gag, where the coyote dresses as Ralph's friend. It is reinstated for the Golden and Premiere DVD collections.
- Trilhas sonorasBah Bah Black Sheep
(uncredited)
Traditional
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Detalhes
- Tempo de duração
- 7 min
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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