Mickey Mouse is a mischievous deckhand on a riverboat that is under the command of the tyrannical Captain Pete.Mickey Mouse is a mischievous deckhand on a riverboat that is under the command of the tyrannical Captain Pete.Mickey Mouse is a mischievous deckhand on a riverboat that is under the command of the tyrannical Captain Pete.
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Walt Disney
- Mickey Mouse
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
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... the end of Buster Keaton's career? This cartoon was released at the end of 1928, eight months after the release of Buster Keaton's final independent film - Steamboat Bill, Jr. Why should somebody shell out money for Keaton to take a chance with life and limb with his wonderful acrobatics when Walt could draw a mouse that could do all of those antics, not show up late to the set, not require lunch breaks, and come back for the next film/cartoon fresh as a daisy and uninjured?
I don't know if the similarity between the title of this cartoon and Buster's last independent creation is anything but coincidence, but I wonder. Always worth a look to see the wonderfully creative Walt at work in the beginning. He would shake his head at what his company is outputting as product today. But I digress.
Highly recommended for the film history angle.
I don't know if the similarity between the title of this cartoon and Buster's last independent creation is anything but coincidence, but I wonder. Always worth a look to see the wonderfully creative Walt at work in the beginning. He would shake his head at what his company is outputting as product today. But I digress.
Highly recommended for the film history angle.
While in France as Germaine Dulac created a benchmark of short-subject, cinematic surrealism with The Seashell and the Clergyman, Walt Disney and his collaborator Ub Iwerks in America worked on Steamboat Willie, the most prominent of the early synchronized sound cartoons (it was revealed that this was not the first, contrary to other reports). It's also one of the more successfully simplistic and funny of the Mickey Mouse shorts (still in a silent-film way- the only sounds are little irks and bleeps from the Mickey and the animals). It also goes by fairly quickly for its less-than-ten minute run, if only by how quick and dopey the gags are.
But in these minutes one gets the immediate sense of how much fun Disney has with his characters, and how the newfound use of sound changes how his creation uses the animals as musical tools. There's no story to speak of, just random things that happens and occurs because of Mickey (err, Steamboat Willie) on this boat on a river. And like the better Mickey Mouse shorts, his lack of speaking acts as an advantage. It's a must-see if you haven't seen it as a kid, but if you have it might still be worth another look.
But in these minutes one gets the immediate sense of how much fun Disney has with his characters, and how the newfound use of sound changes how his creation uses the animals as musical tools. There's no story to speak of, just random things that happens and occurs because of Mickey (err, Steamboat Willie) on this boat on a river. And like the better Mickey Mouse shorts, his lack of speaking acts as an advantage. It's a must-see if you haven't seen it as a kid, but if you have it might still be worth another look.
This 8 minute gem is not only timeless, but it is a cartoon milestone. It is Mickey's third cartoon, and one of his best ones too. It is a cartoon milestone because it was the first one with synchronised sound. And my goodness, even after 70+ years it is ever so good, and gives real additional weight to the narrative. The black and white animation is excellent, and the character features are convincing enough. The music is wonderful, I love the soundtrack, it does add to the fun the cartoon has, no matter how thin the story sometimes is. And the cartoon is funny! So many memorable moments, like the cow's teeth being used as an xylophone and its udder as a bagpipe. The characters are also engaging, Mickey and Minnie two landmark Disney characters are well voiced by Walt Disney, and Pete serves well as "the villain of the piece". All in all, "Steamboat Willie" is just a timeless gem that everybody should see at least once. 10/10 Bethany Cox
Seeing again, after a very long time, this short seems real - real creepy. So, the recent version by Nick Lives can be defined as wise one comparing with original.
Cruelty , sexism and sexual jokes, bad treatment to animals and horror in pure form.
A strange work from beginnings of Walter Disney , so funny in childhood for many from us , frighting today because the permisity about taboo themes seems just the rule.
In short, a form of revenge, reminding children sadism or teens teribilism , of Mickey against Captain Pete . And its forms are not so amusing, in fact.
But, sure, a classic. Served by a sort of a controversy answer at start of 2024 year.
Cruelty , sexism and sexual jokes, bad treatment to animals and horror in pure form.
A strange work from beginnings of Walter Disney , so funny in childhood for many from us , frighting today because the permisity about taboo themes seems just the rule.
In short, a form of revenge, reminding children sadism or teens teribilism , of Mickey against Captain Pete . And its forms are not so amusing, in fact.
But, sure, a classic. Served by a sort of a controversy answer at start of 2024 year.
10JV-6
Steamboat Willy was not the first cartoon to feature Mickey Mouse. The first film to star America's friend was "Plane Crazy". "Plane Crazy" was released May 15th 1928 in Hollywood California,in the silent movie format. "Steamboat Willy" was released November 18th 1928 as a SOUND movie (it was also released July 29th 1928 as a silent film). Thus making "Steamboat.."the first SOUND film of Mickey but NOT the first film for the little American Mouse. While many game shows have used the question: "What was the first appearance of Mickey Mouse?" The true answer is "Plane Crazy" not "Steamboat Willy". These dates can be checkout on IMDb under "release dates".
Did you know
- TriviaBefore the copyright for the cartoon was set to expire in 2003, Disney lobbied the US Congress successfully for an extension of copyright protection by 20 years. It officially entered the public domain on January 1, 2024.
- GoofsAt the Podunk Landing site, the cow's tag around her neck disappears for a second when she moos and is back again.
- Alternate versionsAfter Mickey pulls nursing piglets in tune to music, he removes them and plays on their mother's teats like an accordion. This scene has been deleted for Mickey's 25th Anniversary theatrical release in 1953.
- ConnectionsEdited into The Mickey Mouse Anniversary Show (1968)
Details
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- Пароплав Віллі
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Box office
- Budget
- $4,986 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 8m
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- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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