IMDb RATING
6.8/10
1.8K
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Morty Citymouse invites his cousin Abner Countrymouse for a visit and shows him the ways of the big city, including traps, eating quietly, and busy traffic.Morty Citymouse invites his cousin Abner Countrymouse for a visit and shows him the ways of the big city, including traps, eating quietly, and busy traffic.Morty Citymouse invites his cousin Abner Countrymouse for a visit and shows him the ways of the big city, including traps, eating quietly, and busy traffic.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
- Won 1 Oscar
- 1 win total
Alex Karais
- Morty Citymouse
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Jack Sabel
- Abner Countrymouse
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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In this rather dull 9-minute cartoon a hick mouse visits his well-to-do cousin in the big city where they get up to all the usual mousy hi-jinks. Although this predates the first Tom and Jerry short by a number of years the set-up and scenes will seem overly familiar to you.
Based on Aesop's fable "The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse", there's nothing particularly memorable about this cartoon. The mice peak out of holes, scurry across tables, help themselves to food, agitating the house cat etc. It's fairly standard stuff, ending in the hick mouse being frightened out of town and dashing back to the country along the railroad tracks. It's amazing that this managed to win an Academy Award, I can't imagine how dull the other nominees were that year.
Based on Aesop's fable "The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse", there's nothing particularly memorable about this cartoon. The mice peak out of holes, scurry across tables, help themselves to food, agitating the house cat etc. It's fairly standard stuff, ending in the hick mouse being frightened out of town and dashing back to the country along the railroad tracks. It's amazing that this managed to win an Academy Award, I can't imagine how dull the other nominees were that year.
For those wondering why this would win an Academy Award, consider the year and the level of action animation. The dinner table scene is excellent, with all the possibilities. The mice are really excellent personalities, each with their own beings. Yes, the plot is simple. It's one of those portrayals of the grass always being greener. It's the classic Aesop's Fable of the Country Mouse and the City Mouse.
This Disney short is well-executed visually (as you might expect from Disney in the 1930s) but isn't really all that memorable or impressive for all that. I'm frankly somewhat puzzled at its nomination for an Academy Award and more puzzled that it won. Perhaps it was more impressive in 1936 than it is today. It isn't a bad cartoon-there just isn't anything exceptional about it that struck me other than the visuals. It runs from time to time on the Ink and Paint Club.
This film is the Oscar winner for Best Animated Short for 1937 and when seen today you might be tempted, like me, to marvel at it being the pick. It's not that this is a bad cartoon--it isn't. It's just that the story is awfully familiar and the animation style is more akin to a non-Disney production than a film by the greatest animation studio of the day. As for me, I'd much rather see a cartoon featuring the OTHER Disney mouse instead of this one.
The story is from Aesop and has been done a bazillion times before by various cartoon studios--probably because they didn't have to pay royalties and because the story has already written itself! A bumpkin mouse from 'Podunk' comes to visit his supposedly sophisticated cousin in the city. At first, the bumpkin in impressed by all the marvels of big city life. However, by the end of the film he comes to realize that cities suck and he's better off being happy with his lot in life.
The animation quality is good but not exactly inspired or a thing of great beauty. When I think about several other Silly Symphony cartoons from Disney (such as THE FLOWERS AND THE TREES or FERDINAND THE BULL), it comes up very short. In other words, it's awfully ordinary yet took the Oscar. While I am not a huge fan of Popeye, I have seen POPEYE THE SAILOR MEETS SINBAD THE SAILOR (also nominated this same year) and it was significantly prettier and better animated--with finer line drawings and an amazing 3-D sort of look to it. The other nominee was OLD MILL POND by Harmon-Ising but I just can't bring myself to watch any more of these ultra-cutesy cartoons, though I can just about guarantee it was insipid and that THE COUNTRY COUSIN was better!
The story is from Aesop and has been done a bazillion times before by various cartoon studios--probably because they didn't have to pay royalties and because the story has already written itself! A bumpkin mouse from 'Podunk' comes to visit his supposedly sophisticated cousin in the city. At first, the bumpkin in impressed by all the marvels of big city life. However, by the end of the film he comes to realize that cities suck and he's better off being happy with his lot in life.
The animation quality is good but not exactly inspired or a thing of great beauty. When I think about several other Silly Symphony cartoons from Disney (such as THE FLOWERS AND THE TREES or FERDINAND THE BULL), it comes up very short. In other words, it's awfully ordinary yet took the Oscar. While I am not a huge fan of Popeye, I have seen POPEYE THE SAILOR MEETS SINBAD THE SAILOR (also nominated this same year) and it was significantly prettier and better animated--with finer line drawings and an amazing 3-D sort of look to it. The other nominee was OLD MILL POND by Harmon-Ising but I just can't bring myself to watch any more of these ultra-cutesy cartoons, though I can just about guarantee it was insipid and that THE COUNTRY COUSIN was better!
Walt Disney's October 1936 "The Country Cousin" won the 9th Academy Awards Best Animated Short Film for the year. As part of Disney's 'Silly Symphony' series, the nine-minute film, directed by Wilfred Jackson, concerns the hick-from-the-sticks mouse Podunk, who pays a visit to his sophisticated cousin Abner living in the city. His lack of refinement is visible when Abner shows him a normal human food dining table display in the household he's living in. Like an uncivilized barbarian, Podunk attacks the food while finishing it off with Champagne. The mouse gets drunk and ends up in all sorts of trouble.
The entire narrative takes place without a word heard between the two mice. "The characters are developed through body language," notes film reviewer Dave Sindelar, "and with a bit of help from the musical score." Years later, Disneyland Records recreated an audio version of "The Country Cousins" with actor Sterling Holloway narrating a 30-minute story wrapped around the 1936 cartoon. The 1961 vinyl LP record was issued as part of a record label subsidiary Walt's older brother Roy convince him to establish in 1956.
The entire narrative takes place without a word heard between the two mice. "The characters are developed through body language," notes film reviewer Dave Sindelar, "and with a bit of help from the musical score." Years later, Disneyland Records recreated an audio version of "The Country Cousins" with actor Sterling Holloway narrating a 30-minute story wrapped around the 1936 cartoon. The 1961 vinyl LP record was issued as part of a record label subsidiary Walt's older brother Roy convince him to establish in 1956.
Did you know
- ConnectionsEdited into Les Chefs-d'oeuvre de Walt Disney (1937)
Details
- Runtime
- 9m
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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