A woman goes into a pet store seeking a gift for her husband. She decides to get him a bird with a most unusual talent, but her gift brings about an unforeseen result.A woman goes into a pet store seeking a gift for her husband. She decides to get him a bird with a most unusual talent, but her gift brings about an unforeseen result.A woman goes into a pet store seeking a gift for her husband. She decides to get him a bird with a most unusual talent, but her gift brings about an unforeseen result.
- Director
- Star
- Won 1 Oscar
- 1 win total
Photos
Len Maxwell
- Husband
- (voice)
- …
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8tavm
Last week, the Cartoon Brew site mentioned the passing of one Ted Petok. He was an animator whose works appeared on "Seseme Street" and "The Electric Company" during the '70s. CB linked from YouTube Mr. Petok's Oscar-winning short whose title is up above as tribute. It's only a couple of minutes long. In this one, a lady is searching for a gift for her husband. She comes to a pet shop. She doesn't think her husband would want a dog or cat. She decides to get him a "crunch bird" even though the shop proprietor doesn't think that's a good idea. That's all I'll mention of what appears and just say I found this quite funny and maybe even a little hilarious for such a limited time animated short. Does it really deserve the Academy Award? Well, I've yet to watch what else was nominated that year so I don't know. But it was certainly entertaining for what it was. Anyway, when Petok received his award he said, in a paraphrase of the last line from this short, "Crunch Bird, my Oscar". Rest in peace, Ted.
Considering that the work is from 1971 and still makes me laugh, despite having a simple plot, it surprised me. Not as funny or with deep messages as other Oscar-winning animated shorts but still good.
Many critics were up in arms when Marisa Tomei took home an Oscar for her walk-through in "My Cousin Vinny." And there were those who cried foul when "Crash" won Best Picture instead of "Brokeback Mountain."
As unfair as those may seem, I can safely say that the film that was least deserving of its Academy Award was "The Crunch Bird."
Slapped together over a weekend by one Ted Petok, with all voices done by one man who lacked the talent of Mel Blanc or Don Messick, "The Crunch Bird" won over the smart National Film Board of Canada production "Evolution" and the beautifully animated Oscar Wilde adaptation "The Selfish Giant." Methinks Petok threatened to sic a crunch bird on the Academy members.
This horribly-animated short is based on one joke. One antique, middle-school joke. It probably had you ROTFL in 7th grade but it's merely stupid now.
Classic cartoon, my a*s!
As unfair as those may seem, I can safely say that the film that was least deserving of its Academy Award was "The Crunch Bird."
Slapped together over a weekend by one Ted Petok, with all voices done by one man who lacked the talent of Mel Blanc or Don Messick, "The Crunch Bird" won over the smart National Film Board of Canada production "Evolution" and the beautifully animated Oscar Wilde adaptation "The Selfish Giant." Methinks Petok threatened to sic a crunch bird on the Academy members.
This horribly-animated short is based on one joke. One antique, middle-school joke. It probably had you ROTFL in 7th grade but it's merely stupid now.
Classic cartoon, my a*s!
Yes, it's based on a joke. (Hey, it's a SHORT animation film, right?) Yeah, it's from 1971, with 1971 technology, audio, acting, drawing, and dialog.
Still, it was humorous in its day.
As a theater manager in the mid-70s, I sometimes showed this prior to our main features (back before you PAID to see ADVERTISING on the big screen) and the audience always roared.
I'm not so harsh on this as some.... in those days we definitely needed a big laugh to escape the real world, even if for only a few minutes.
Give Crunch Bird a fair shake for what it is... a short piece of fluff that entertained the audiences of the day.
P.S. I can't speak to the points regarding the Academy selection, not having seen (or having seen but not remembered) the other contenders.
Still, it was humorous in its day.
As a theater manager in the mid-70s, I sometimes showed this prior to our main features (back before you PAID to see ADVERTISING on the big screen) and the audience always roared.
I'm not so harsh on this as some.... in those days we definitely needed a big laugh to escape the real world, even if for only a few minutes.
Give Crunch Bird a fair shake for what it is... a short piece of fluff that entertained the audiences of the day.
P.S. I can't speak to the points regarding the Academy selection, not having seen (or having seen but not remembered) the other contenders.
Yep it's true!
The first thing you do after watching is scratch your head and ask yourself "how did THIS win an Oscar"?
Then You chuckle and realise it doesn't matter and this is a funny short. Worth watching! And what else really matters huh?
Did you know
- TriviaAt two minutes 18 seconds long, this is the shortest film to win an Academy Award.
- ConnectionsFollowed by Crunch Bird II (1975)
Details
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Тріскачка
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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