Junior wants to be a Big Fry, but learns the hard way that he just isn't ready for smoking in the pool room when he should be in the school room.Junior wants to be a Big Fry, but learns the hard way that he just isn't ready for smoking in the pool room when he should be in the school room.Junior wants to be a Big Fry, but learns the hard way that he just isn't ready for smoking in the pool room when he should be in the school room.
- Directors
- Stars
Margie Hines
- Mrs. Catfish
- (voice)
- …
Jack Mercer
- Pool Room Fishes
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
This odd cartoon from 1939 is really a cult film. The bizarre story makes it enjoyable. It has a great score by Hoagy Carmichael.
I first watched this movie as a kid, and I thought it was great. I watched it again today and I still loved it. This is a very old cartoon, which by today's standards of what good animation is, lets just say it doesn't score high marks. But I think what really matter is the story, not the quality of the animation. This cartoon is old and it shows, but its a lot better than the stuff kids watch today i.e. pokemon,which has basically the same plot recycled each episode about a thousand times. This cartoon is original and I think it still stands the test of time. No, its not very long, and its kinda hard to find now days, but if you do get a chance to see, I suggest sitting down and watching it. This movie over all is short but sweet.
A pretty simple story with some nice animation. A little fish leaves his family to show them that he is a "big fry." But, of course, he doesn't realize that the guys he is gravitated toward are thugs. Of course, it was 1939 and the outcome is pretty predictable.
This Fleischer cartoon is infamous for it's unusual fish freak out scene. A small fry fish, still in 'school', wants to smoke and be one of the big boys. He sneaks away after Momma catfish puts him in his room to study and winds up at the 'pool' hall, where all sorts of different kinds of larger fish smoke and shoot pool. They decide to induct him into the fish union and slip him a mickey before pushing him into a dark cave where he hallucinates as he bumps into all sorts of fish eating images. He runs home to momma and is happy at school thereafter. A simple enough storyline but the animation is cherce. A+++ M:
This is a very good cartoon. However, it's no longer in general circulation due to changing times--as well as folks who want to protect our kids. I find it strange that this film was shelved because it depicts smoking and advocates slapping the crap out of your kids when worse mind-rot is available on most TV channels. As for the smoking, the film is AGAINST that. And, while the mother fish in the cartoon talks about 'putting him across me knee', no acts of violence were perpetrated in the cartoon. It's just a very cute morality tale about a young fish who wants to grow up too quickly--and do all the things the tough older fish want to do. And, while I usually hate singing in cartoons, the tune "Small Fry" is very catchy and fun. My advice is watch the cartoon (it's available for free download at archive.org) and forget about the do-gooders who hate this and other old cartoons that might actually be fun!
By the way, although the film says it's in Technicolor, it sure looks like the old Two-Color Technicolor due to the effects of aging and a need for restoration. The film is VERY orangy--which sometimes happens with older Technicolor film with age.
By the way, although the film says it's in Technicolor, it sure looks like the old Two-Color Technicolor due to the effects of aging and a need for restoration. The film is VERY orangy--which sometimes happens with older Technicolor film with age.
Did you know
- TriviaIncluded in the Rhino Home Video compilation "Bambi Meets Godzilla and Other Weird Cartoons".
- ConnectionsFeatured in Le Cercle : The Ring 2 (2005)
- SoundtracksSmall Fry
Music by Hoagy Carmichael
Lyrics by Frank Loesser
Played during the opening credits
Sung by the mother fish
Details
- Runtime7 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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