Baseball. The Chicago Giants, led by rooster pitcher Dizzy Dan, are playing the Hicksville team. Dan arrives in Hicksville and sings the title song while eyeing local pitcher Claude's girl. ... Read allBaseball. The Chicago Giants, led by rooster pitcher Dizzy Dan, are playing the Hicksville team. Dan arrives in Hicksville and sings the title song while eyeing local pitcher Claude's girl. The game. Showboat Dan throws two strikes so hard his catcher is thrown backwards; the tur... Read allBaseball. The Chicago Giants, led by rooster pitcher Dizzy Dan, are playing the Hicksville team. Dan arrives in Hicksville and sings the title song while eyeing local pitcher Claude's girl. The game. Showboat Dan throws two strikes so hard his catcher is thrown backwards; the turtle catcher uses a stovepipe to send the third strike back to Dan. A Giant batter hits the... Read all
- Horse Whinny Noise
- (uncredited)
- Emily
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Dizzy Dan
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
If nothing else, this cartoon is a look into Warner Bros. animation's early years; at this time, Porky Pig was their top star and Mel Blanc wasn't yet providing the voices. Worth seeing, if only once.
'Boulevardier from the Bronx' is not one of Friz Freleng's, a director who did many great cartoons and a director held in high admiration by me, best, not being one of his funniest, wittiest or freshest. For relatively early Freleng, 'Boulevardier from the Bronx' is good though he would do much better later. It is never what one would call properly hilarious (but is never unfunny), Freleng's later efforts show more evenness and confidence in directing and the story.
It is quite thin in terms of story and the structure is predictable (not an awful lot different from other baseball themed cartoons and basically an excuse to string the gags along. The gags in the first half lacked a bit in wit and did lack invention and sometimes energy even.
However, the characters are fun as is the conflict. Dizzy Dan is a fun lead character.
The cartoon has a lot of very amusing moments in particularly the second half, some variety and there is a good deal of liveliness. The fun and danger of baseball is very well captured.
Animation is very good, it's fluid in movement, crisp in shading, vibrant and very meticulous in detail. The music is outstanding, it is lovely on the ears, lushly orchestrated, full of lively energy and characterful in rhythm, not only adding to the action but also enhancing it. The title song is a highlight.
Overall, nice cartoon. 7/10 Bethany Cox
When the story begins, the Giants are traveling the country playing exhibition games. Now they are in Hicktown playing the local team. But the Giants don't take them seriously, and their cocky pitcher, Dizzy Dan (a take-off on the real life Dizzy Dean of the St. Louis Cardinals), is especially cocky. Once the game begins he blows away the competition....until the final inning.
The story looks great but the whole thing feels like a complete unsubtle attempt to brainwash the kids in the audience with the message that without humility, you're bound to fail...making the conclusion a foregone conclusion. Easy to skip.
Dan is the star pitcher for the Giants who are in this whistle stop of a town called "Hickville" for an exhibition game. The town welcomes Dan with a band at the railroad station and Dan treats them with a long poem explaining how great he is!
The game features the normal stuff I've seen in other animated shorts, whether they feature "Goofy" or "Daffy" or "Bugs." Most of it's funny and revolves around the arrogant pitcher Dan and how he looks great until the bottom of the ninth when he gets a dish of humble pie.
Overall, a decent cartoon, nothing super, but the excellent artwork should be noted, too.
Did you know
- TriviaThe catcher bears more than a passing resemblance to an early incarnation of Porky Pig.
- GoofsIn the setup for the cartoon's finale, the score is supposedly 3-0 Giants. But earlier, with the score at 2-0, Claude gave an in-the-park home run to a dachshund and a four-base error to Dizzy Dan, meaning the score should be 4-0, and Claude's grand slam should have tied the game, not given him the win. A similar, but less game-breaking, math error happened in Baseball Bugs (1946), another Friz Freleng production.
- Quotes
[Claude throws a fast ball that almost beans the batter]
Pig Umpire: Ball!
Dachshund Batter: Hey! Be careful!
- Crazy creditsThe opening uses much thinner rings for the "bullseye" graphic and a very off-model Merrie Melodies logo.
- ConnectionsEdited into Porky's Baseball Broadcast (1940)
- SoundtracksMerrily We Roll Along
(uncredited)
Music by Murray Mencher
Merrie Melodies theme music played at the beginning
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- El hombre equipo
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime8 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1