Casper with no success goes out to make friends that he can invite to his birthday party.Casper with no success goes out to make friends that he can invite to his birthday party.Casper with no success goes out to make friends that he can invite to his birthday party.
Photos
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaCasper's final theatrical short film.
- ConnectionsFeatures Casper the Friendly Ghost - Boo Hoo Baby (1951)
Featured review
The late-40s to the early/mid-50s Casper the Friendly Ghost cartoons had a higher budget and overall the overall quality was much better. Onwards, the quality did diminish quite significantly though the overall cartoons varied, some decent, many mediocre.
Famous Studios' cartoons are not for all tastes, but my opinion is that their early stuff and some of the early 50s output are good. While they were very formulaic they were always well animated and voiced with some funny parts, some poignancy and decent characters and their regular composer Winston Sharples could always be relied on to write a great and often outstanding score.
Admittedly though, by the mid-50s through to the late-60s Famous Studios' cartoons did get repetitive. While Sharples' music still shone and the voice actors did their best the animation suffered due to lower budgets and tighter deadlines, the humour became more tired and slow in timing than sharp and funny, the stories became increasingly predictable and rehashed and some characters started losing their initial spark, this is particularly true of most of the later Herman and Katnip cartoons.
There are far better Casper The Friendly Ghost cartoons out there, and 'Casper's Birthday Party' just wasn't a good note for the 40s-late-5os Casper cartoons to go out on. There are some good things in 'Casper's Birthday Party', but for a Casper cartoon it's especially mediocre and one of the weaker cartoons. Also a good example of a lot of the things that were present in a lot of cartoons made during Famous Studio's decline, the difference between that period and the earlier Casper cartoons from the late 40s and early 50s in quality is pretty staggering.
Best thing about 'Casper's Birthday Party' is the music score. Winston Sharples' music score here is typically merry and whimsical, it's beautifully orchestrated, energetic and adds so much to the mood, his music has always been one of the best assets of the Famous Studios cartoons and it's not an exception here. In fact how it's composed and how it meshes so well with everything going on in the animation, story and action contributes to it being the best thing about the cartoon.
While he is a character that won't click with everybody, Casper does win me over with his friendly nature and kindness. The voice acting is dependably decent. The ending is sweet, the only thing that holds any kind of relevance to the cartoon's title, and there are a couple of mildly amusing moments.
However, 'Casper's Birthday Party' is significantly let down by the paper thin (almost non-existent) and repetitive story that has very little to do with a birthday party at all and just repetitive set up with a lot of visually unimaginative and tired reactions to Casper, no emotional engagement, very few funny moments (the couple there are are only mildly amusing), dialogue and Casper alone moments that are forgettable, falls on the wrong side of twee and cloying, no conflict, lax pacing and a lot of fatigue.
Would have much rathered that it was centred wholly on the birthday party (which would have been a nice departure) or like a tribute with characters like Witch Wendy and Spooky returning or something.
Can't say much better about the animation either. Much of it lacks vibrancy, the backgrounds have lost their meticulousness and the characters look hastily drawn and the overall drawing scrappy, as a result of lower budgets and tighter deadlines.
In summary, pretty weak with a lot of the problem being that it's too repetitive, very bland and very thinly plotted. 4/10 Bethany Cox
Famous Studios' cartoons are not for all tastes, but my opinion is that their early stuff and some of the early 50s output are good. While they were very formulaic they were always well animated and voiced with some funny parts, some poignancy and decent characters and their regular composer Winston Sharples could always be relied on to write a great and often outstanding score.
Admittedly though, by the mid-50s through to the late-60s Famous Studios' cartoons did get repetitive. While Sharples' music still shone and the voice actors did their best the animation suffered due to lower budgets and tighter deadlines, the humour became more tired and slow in timing than sharp and funny, the stories became increasingly predictable and rehashed and some characters started losing their initial spark, this is particularly true of most of the later Herman and Katnip cartoons.
There are far better Casper The Friendly Ghost cartoons out there, and 'Casper's Birthday Party' just wasn't a good note for the 40s-late-5os Casper cartoons to go out on. There are some good things in 'Casper's Birthday Party', but for a Casper cartoon it's especially mediocre and one of the weaker cartoons. Also a good example of a lot of the things that were present in a lot of cartoons made during Famous Studio's decline, the difference between that period and the earlier Casper cartoons from the late 40s and early 50s in quality is pretty staggering.
Best thing about 'Casper's Birthday Party' is the music score. Winston Sharples' music score here is typically merry and whimsical, it's beautifully orchestrated, energetic and adds so much to the mood, his music has always been one of the best assets of the Famous Studios cartoons and it's not an exception here. In fact how it's composed and how it meshes so well with everything going on in the animation, story and action contributes to it being the best thing about the cartoon.
While he is a character that won't click with everybody, Casper does win me over with his friendly nature and kindness. The voice acting is dependably decent. The ending is sweet, the only thing that holds any kind of relevance to the cartoon's title, and there are a couple of mildly amusing moments.
However, 'Casper's Birthday Party' is significantly let down by the paper thin (almost non-existent) and repetitive story that has very little to do with a birthday party at all and just repetitive set up with a lot of visually unimaginative and tired reactions to Casper, no emotional engagement, very few funny moments (the couple there are are only mildly amusing), dialogue and Casper alone moments that are forgettable, falls on the wrong side of twee and cloying, no conflict, lax pacing and a lot of fatigue.
Would have much rathered that it was centred wholly on the birthday party (which would have been a nice departure) or like a tribute with characters like Witch Wendy and Spooky returning or something.
Can't say much better about the animation either. Much of it lacks vibrancy, the backgrounds have lost their meticulousness and the characters look hastily drawn and the overall drawing scrappy, as a result of lower budgets and tighter deadlines.
In summary, pretty weak with a lot of the problem being that it's too repetitive, very bland and very thinly plotted. 4/10 Bethany Cox
- TheLittleSongbird
- Jan 14, 2017
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime6 minutes
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