A cold war between two lands over a ridiculous dispute leads to a perilous arms race.A cold war between two lands over a ridiculous dispute leads to a perilous arms race.A cold war between two lands over a ridiculous dispute leads to a perilous arms race.
- Grandfather
- (voice)
- Yookie-Ann Sue
- (voice)
- …
- Van Itch
- (voice)
- Grandson
- (voice)
- Various Yooks
- (voice)
- Various Yooks
- (voice)
Featured reviews
What great about this short is that not only it's a perfect adaptation of Seuss work but add's another learn by adding a musical number which show just how horrifying the concept of something like the Atom Boomb is.
Overall one of the best Seuss book and a fantastic animated short! It's very sad it's so undertated...
I saw this when I was a child, and it left a lasting impression on me. These two races are fight over something as simple as this, and it shows what happens if we don't learn to get along and accept one another as each other. In a way, this story is the summary of every war that has happened: the fighting gets worse, and if we don't learn to get along, things are only going to get worse until both sides will destroy one another. Even though the story is very humorous, the moral is an important one. I'm hoping that one day I can share this story with my children and my grandchildren.
And that moral is what, exactly? Sure it is laudable to encourage us to concentrate more on what unites us than what divides us. It is even a good thing to encourage international cooperation. But to equate the differences between the Warsaw Pact nations and the Nato west to a difference in butter application is just plain wrong. To point out the obvious, many Warsaw Pact nations enjoyed intermittent periods of shortages of butter and bread -- they would have been happy to eat it butter sideways if it were available. On a less literal level, and whatever your political inclination, Soviet socialism versus Western (particularly Anglo-American) democracy is not a mere question of preference and custom.
To make the point even clearer, nuclear weapons were not developed in a Cold War with the Soviets, but in a hot war with the Axis powers. There is no doubt that Germany was developing nuclear capability during the war. Should the US have refrained from nuclear weapons research putting their trust in their (less than inevitable) victory in the conventional war? Once the weapons were developed they were used against the enemy who attacked us at Pearl Harbor. What does a nation do at this point when the genie is out of the bottle? Furthermore, hindsight is 20-20, which is to say that there was no way of assuring another half crazed dictator wouldn't crop up with his eyes on developing nuclear weapons. The second Gulf War has shown the incredible difficulty in ascertaining credible threats and neutralizing them.
In any event, the cartoon is little more than simplistic propaganda which does little to explore the nuances of the ethical questions behind nuclear armament and instead tries to inculcate fear of weapons technology into children.
Did you know
- GoofsWhen the Yook soldier first starts the walking machine, it has four goop-spraying attachments behind it. While he is en route to the wall, when the band is playing, there are only three attachments. When he confronts Van Itch at the wall, there are four again.
- Quotes
[last lines]
Grandson: [narrating] That's when Grandpa found me. He grabbed me. He said...
Grandfather: You should be down that hole and you're up here instead. But perhaps this is all for the better somehow. You'll see me make history. Right here. And right now! You'll see your old gramp put an end to 'em all! Put an end to all those Zooks who live over the wall! Put an end to the every last village and town of those fiends who eat bread with the butter side down!
Van Itch: And I, my dear chap, have a message for you. Mainly, I also have a Big Boy Boomeroo. And it's my firm intentions, since I have the means, to blast every Yook into small smithereens.
Grandson: Grandpa, be careful! Hey, easy! Oh, gee! Who's going to drop it? Will you or will he?
Grandfather: [stammers] Be patient. We'll see. We... will see.
[the special ends on a shot of both of them carrying the bomb and cuts to a screen with "The End... Maybe"]
- Alternate versionsBetween the VHS and DVD releases there are some mild differences in the typesetting of the end credits, such as different spacing and character width from a slightly different font, a few changes between upper and lower case, etc.
- ConnectionsEdited into In Search of Dr. Seuss (1994)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Dr. Seuss' The Butter Battle Book
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime30 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1