A squirrel's tree is slated for removal, but he won't go down without a fight.A squirrel's tree is slated for removal, but he won't go down without a fight.A squirrel's tree is slated for removal, but he won't go down without a fight.
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A city-wise squirrel is resting comfortably in his new vacation-type room in the middle of a big tree trunk in the Northwest. He's from Flatbush and has his "Brooklyn Dodgers"pennant tacked on the wall. As he is getting ready for his first long nap, he hears what he thinks is a woodpecker. However, he soon realizes it isn't: it's some "lumberjackson" down below chopping the tree (Porky Pig). "One of the local yokels," he says. "I'll fix that icky."
I don't what all the complaints are here. I thought this was very entertaining. The squirrel was a "hipster" that had many dated-but-funny lines. That alone made this worth watching. Some of ploys to keep Porky from chopping the tree down weren't bad, either.
Whoever this squirrel was, it was really HIS cartoon, not Porky's.
I don't what all the complaints are here. I thought this was very entertaining. The squirrel was a "hipster" that had many dated-but-funny lines. That alone made this worth watching. Some of ploys to keep Porky from chopping the tree down weren't bad, either.
Whoever this squirrel was, it was really HIS cartoon, not Porky's.
I don't understand this cartoon at all. Essentially, Porky is the villain, trying to chop down a tree in which a vaguely Bugs Bunny-esque squirrel makes his home. Our villain is a much-beloved regular character, and our hero is a generic wiseacre squirrel that we've never seen before. It's almost as if they were originally going to use Bugs, but decided he was too big to live in a tree, so they used Porky in the other role just to have a "star" in the picture. Also, most of the gags just plain aren't funny. The cartoon just kind of sits there until it's over, and then you forget about it. How this was chosen for the first Looney Toons DVD set over classics like Book Revue and the Great Piggy Bank Robbery, I'll never know.
Even if you were not to know who the director and the writers were before watching this cartoon, it's almost certain that you would start suspecting none of the usual gang at the Warner Brothers animation studio were behind this entry. What we have here are writers who worked at the studio only for a brief time, and a director who was more successful as an animator. The end result is very strange, feeling like it was done by people who had only seen a handful of Looney Tunes cartoons before being assigned to make this cartoon. They have the words, but not the music - the timing is very off, and they don't seem to understand how the characters (both the protagonist and antagonist) need to act. I agree with the previous poster that this was an odd choice for Warner Brothers first box set of Looney Tunes cartoons - it certainly is no classic. Still, I must admit it shines when placed next to some of the cartoons that came out of the cartoon studio during its dying days.
Porky Chops (1949) *** (out of 4)
A squirrel from Brooklyn goes to the great Northwoods to get some rest but then comes across lumberjack Porky Pig trying to cut down his tree. The two start battling one another but soon a third party is going to enter the picture. This is a pleasant short that manages to have quite a few smiles and it's certainly cute enough. The one problem I have with the short is the actual squirrel who just doesn't sit too well with me. I've seen this film several times over the years and each time I can't help but think it would have been different with a better character. As far as Porky goes he's at the top of his game and the poor guy takes a nice beating like he always does. The third party that shows up only appears for a matter of seconds but he clearly steals the film. I won't ruin the gag as it's one of the best in the film.
A squirrel from Brooklyn goes to the great Northwoods to get some rest but then comes across lumberjack Porky Pig trying to cut down his tree. The two start battling one another but soon a third party is going to enter the picture. This is a pleasant short that manages to have quite a few smiles and it's certainly cute enough. The one problem I have with the short is the actual squirrel who just doesn't sit too well with me. I've seen this film several times over the years and each time I can't help but think it would have been different with a better character. As far as Porky goes he's at the top of his game and the poor guy takes a nice beating like he always does. The third party that shows up only appears for a matter of seconds but he clearly steals the film. I won't ruin the gag as it's one of the best in the film.
Porky Pig is clear cutting the North Woods. A squirrel lives in the last tree standing. Porky starts chopping. Well, the squirrel is not surrendering his home yet.
I don't mind Porky Pig as a lumberjack, but maybe there are better choices. The no-name squirrel is fine, but maybe there is a better choice there too. At the end of the day, neither are obviously the perfect choices for the roles. This feels like an extraneous short. There is nothing special about this. Even the bear feels non-special. I don't know the size of this bear, but he ends up in the squirrel's home. Maybe he shrank along the way.
I don't mind Porky Pig as a lumberjack, but maybe there are better choices. The no-name squirrel is fine, but maybe there is a better choice there too. At the end of the day, neither are obviously the perfect choices for the roles. This feels like an extraneous short. There is nothing special about this. Even the bear feels non-special. I don't know the size of this bear, but he ends up in the squirrel's home. Maybe he shrank along the way.
Did you know
- TriviaThe squirrel is from Flatbush, in Brooklyn, or so he implies. He also wears the latest fashion trend, bobby socks, which were hugely popular in the 1940's and 1950's.
- GoofsSquirrel's zoot-suit chain disappears and reappears between shots.
- Quotes
Zoot Suit Squirrel: [to Porky] Read, fat boy! Ya vex me, ya understand? Ya vex me! Now cease the chop-chop, chubby! Blow, Joe! Hit the road! I'm giving me a little shut-eye and so are you!
[giving Porky 2 black-eyes]
Zoot Suit Squirrel: Now scram, Ham!
- ConnectionsFeatured in Behind the Tunes: Blanc Expressions (2003)
- SoundtracksSweet Dreams, Sweetheart
(uncredited)
Music by M.K. Jerome
[Plays when the squirrel gets into bed and tries to sleep.]
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Chuletas de Porky
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 7m
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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