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Jack Frost

  • 1934
  • Approved
  • 9m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
530
YOUR RATING
Jack Frost (1934)
AnimationFamilyShort

A young grizzly bear, undaunted by his mother's warnings of the coming winter, runs away from home only to be confronted by Old Man Winter himself.A young grizzly bear, undaunted by his mother's warnings of the coming winter, runs away from home only to be confronted by Old Man Winter himself.A young grizzly bear, undaunted by his mother's warnings of the coming winter, runs away from home only to be confronted by Old Man Winter himself.

  • Directors
    • Ub Iwerks
    • Shamus Culhane
    • Al Eugster
  • Writers
    • Otto Englander
    • Ben Hardaway
    • George Manuell
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    530
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Ub Iwerks
      • Shamus Culhane
      • Al Eugster
    • Writers
      • Otto Englander
      • Ben Hardaway
      • George Manuell
    • 12User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos2

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    User reviews12

    6.6530
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    Featured reviews

    7pixrox1

    The title deity of this picture has been identified . . .

    . . . by leading seminarian End Times Instructors as an actual horseman of the Apocalypse. JACK FROST, aka the onset of Winter, is so fearsome that some quailing traditions substituted Famine for Frost so that the kids could sleep at night. However, on six of the Globe's seven continents more people freeze to death than expire from starvation in a given year. Furthermore, a consensus of pain experts rank a frigid demise a fate worse than buying the farm with an empty tummy. As their capillaries explode one by one, many victims turning into literal pop-sickles have been heard to bargain that they'd swear off food for a year for one mug of hot chocolate. JACK FROST does NOT give this scourge of glacial glazing his just desserts.
    9llltdesq

    Iwerks near his best on his own.

    Ub Iwerks was a technical genius, but often plots and story were afterthoughts. Exceptionally visual cartoons not needing much plotting work splendidly, while those needing strong characterization, story or plot fare less well as a rule.

    This one is an exception to that. Visually excellent and technically superb, this is also engaging and has fascinating characters and a good plot. Iwerks was creative in his own area of expertise and one of the reasons that Iwerks and Walt Disney worked so well together was that their strengths were complementary to one another. This is Iwerks Studios near their best. Absolutely beautiful short, it's good to see this in print. Well worth getting. Recommended.
    7tavm

    Jack Frost was a nice Ub Iwerks cartoon

    Just watched this Ub Iwerks ComiColor cartoon on YouTube. It concerns a kid bear who defies his parents and decides to go out during Winter because of his big fur. The title character gently warns him but he keeps singing of how he'll survive because of his skin. Being from the '30s, this short shouldn't surprise when some inanimate objects come to life like some pumpkins or a scarecrow who in this case channels Cab Calloway! There are some touches of humor but this seems mostly to teach kids in the audience a lesson about staying inside when a snow storm comes. That's okay in this instance so on that note, I recommend Jack Frost.
    3planktonrules

    If you ever wonder why Ub Iwerks failed after he left Disney, this cartoon should explain it!

    This cartoon is from Ub Iwerks--the guy who did most of the animating in the early Disney Company cartoons, such as "Steamboat Willie". After a few years with Disney, Ub decided to go out on his own--and less than a decade later, he was back with Disney. Although he was very talented, and you can see some of it in "Jack Frost", you can also see why he failed. On the plus side, the cartoon's animation is very nice. Not as nice as the Silly Symphonies and Mickey cartoons coming from Disney, but still very nice. The cartoon also had color. While it wasn't the Technicolor that Disney was using (they had exclusive rights to it for several years), the Cinecolor looks very nice and has a wider color spectrum than many Cinecolor films--with some actual blues. BUT, despite looking good, the cartoon itself is insipid mush! It consists of lots of happy singing animals in the forest, Jack Frost and Old Man Winter singing and cavorting--and not a single trace of humor!! All in all, this is like torture to have to watch today, as the cartoons were amazingly dull (aside from Disney's) during this era. Cute characters and singing...YECCH!!!
    10TheLittleSongbird

    A beautiful, underrated classic

    Jack Frost is not quite one of my favourite cartoons of all time, but it is a beautiful and hugely enjoyable cartoon that's deserving of more praise. It's also one of those cartoons that I love and appreciate even more as a 23-year old adult than as a child.

    The animation in Jack Frost is absolutely wonderful. Not just the beautifully drawn wintry landscape, that sets up the entire atmosphere of the cartoon and its story so well, and the animation on the autumn leaves and at the end, but also some truly imaginative work in the creation of the snowman and the spooky sight gags. Regarding the latter, the pumpkins/Jack O-Lanterns part stood out. The colours are a lovely mix of brightly colourful and dark, the characters are drawn well with little roughness and no obvious over-cutesiness and the backgrounds are truly beautiful on the eyes.

    Music is a component that is very important to me when judging animation, or any film and such for that matter. The music in Jack Frost in no way disappoints, the little bear's song is adorable without being sickly sweet. In fact all the songs are lovely, with the standout being the irresistibly catchy one of the scarecrow, that song is also a lot of fun and the sequence itself is hilarious. The incidental scoring has a lot of haunting depth, rhythmic energy and lush orchestration, no surprise as it is from Carl Stalling whose work on cartoons was always consistently great, often elevating them to a higher level.

    Often, 1930s cartoons or very visual/technical cartoons are not so strong in the story department, which can have an afterthought feel(but when so many components for that cartoon are so good and when the story still has appeal that's easy to ignore). The story in Jack Frost doesn't come over quite as strikingly as the animation and music, but it does fare stronger than the stories of most cartoons made around the time. It moves swiftly, sustains the running time just right with little obvious padding, and is just a charming, hugely entertaining and poignant story in general. One where you can identify every step of the way with the little bear without being manipulated into doing so. The cartoon has some sweet humour, like with the scarecrow, and the darker parts with Old Man Winter and the spooky sight gags are very imaginatively handled, and in a way that didn't feel too much or out of place. There's even room for morals on obedience and respect, and while it could have been so easy to hammer the morals in a heavy-handed manner Jack Frost manages to avoid this trap, it also couldn't have ended more perfectly either.

    Characters in Jack Frost do a great job moving the story forward and making it as succinct as possible(children will be able to follow it with no problem and it shouldn't be too demanding for adults either). The bear is an adorable leading character without over-sentimentalising the story, as can happen with cute characters, while Jack Frost is similarly engaging and Old Man Winter in his brief appearance is a suitably sinister 'antagonist' without being too scary, in fact he's also fun in a very twisted sort of way. The characters are solidly voiced too.

    All in all, a beautiful classic cartoon and should be seen more often. 10/10 Bethany Cox

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Connections
      Edited into Santa's Magic Book (1996)
    • Soundtracks
      I Don't Have to Worry, I Don't Have to Care
      Written by Carl W. Stalling

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    FAQ1

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 24, 1934 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Джек Фрост
    • Production company
      • Celebrity Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      9 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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