A cat learns the art of ventriloquism in order to play a series of practical jokes on a slow-witted bulldog...A cat learns the art of ventriloquism in order to play a series of practical jokes on a slow-witted bulldog...A cat learns the art of ventriloquism in order to play a series of practical jokes on a slow-witted bulldog...
- Director
- Writer
- Stars
Red Coffey
- Cat
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
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Featured reviews
10maymad
Another hilarious Tex Avery cartoon with breakneck pace and always with a new twist on old gags!
This short from 1950 predates ANY other use of "Sound sampling" which became a norm in the 80's with the advent of electronic samplers, especially for Rap.
(Sound sampling is where you take a snippet of a musical or voice recording and repeat it several times, therefore using the original sound instead of having the performer repeat it).
I could not imagine how either Tex or the sound engineer came up with the idea nor how it was performed cause this was recorded to magnetic 35 mm film stock, so I guess they PRERECORDED and dubbed(and spliced) the "MEOW MEOW!" to another sound reel and synchronized its playback when the orchestra and cast did the soundtrack (sound was always recorded BEFORE the cartoon was done)...
He repeated this experiment in "Billy Boy" a few years later, except that then it was with SEVERAL samples from Daws Butler's voice...
These early Hollywood pioneers are all but forgotten but they paved the way to all things modern...
"MEOW, MEOW!!!.. MEOW, MEOW!!!"
10wbhickok
Tex Avery made many classic cartoons, but this may very well be his very best, as the title implies, it concerns a ventriloquist cat with nothing better to do than make a dogs life miserable. Non-stop laughs from beginning to end.
A cat uses ventriloquism to torment a dog. Plus dynamite.
The structure is the usual one for a Tex Avery cartoon: one gag after another, until the length of the cartoon is used up.... although there is an ending that's a bit different in tone from the rest. Here, as always, Avery's gags are beautifully composed and executed, with a little fillip at the end of each to induce a further giggle, that makes him one of the great cartoon directors at Termite Terrace at the start of the 1940s, each with their own style. Alas, Avery's theatrical cartoon career would last only another eight years, before the declining economics of the industry drove him to the ad business... where he would prosper, as befitted his genius.
The structure is the usual one for a Tex Avery cartoon: one gag after another, until the length of the cartoon is used up.... although there is an ending that's a bit different in tone from the rest. Here, as always, Avery's gags are beautifully composed and executed, with a little fillip at the end of each to induce a further giggle, that makes him one of the great cartoon directors at Termite Terrace at the start of the 1940s, each with their own style. Alas, Avery's theatrical cartoon career would last only another eight years, before the declining economics of the industry drove him to the ad business... where he would prosper, as befitted his genius.
When I began watching this cartoon, I was prepared for the worst, but it really seemed to be a good cartoon. But after a while, it has multiple faults. The basic theme is original, but after a while it was obvious the cartoonists only tried to form a new couple of natural born sadists like Tom and Jerry. Off course they failed doing so. Tom and Jerry are cult, this stupid dog and cat couldn't be as funny as worlds most loved cat and mouse team. In less than one minute, I believe I saw five explosions. Imagine if the kids of today would think killing somebody is funny! No, I really dislike this demonic cartoon. But I can't stop human evolution, so I guess it's too late to stop it now.
Did you know
- TriviaVentriloquism was a big part of early Vaudeville shows and still provided laughs at the time of this short. The practice dates back to the days of ancient Greece and Rome.
- GoofsWhen the cat opens up the "Be a Ventriloquist" box, the device inside is of an oval shape. In the next shot, when he takes the device out and puts it into his mouth, its shape has changed to rectangular.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Så er der tegnefilm: Episode #11.1 (1988)
- SoundtracksFrankie and Johnny
(uncredited)
Traditional
Details
- Runtime
- 7m
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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