IMDb RATING
7.0/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Mickey seeks shelter from a storm in a house that turns out to be haunted. The skeletons command him to play the organ; they dance and play along.Mickey seeks shelter from a storm in a house that turns out to be haunted. The skeletons command him to play the organ; they dance and play along.Mickey seeks shelter from a storm in a house that turns out to be haunted. The skeletons command him to play the organ; they dance and play along.
- Directors
- Stars
George Magrill
- Grim Reaper
- (voice)
Walt Disney
- Mickey Mouse
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Cartoons are tough to assign as genre, but this is one, with actual dancing skeletons and other tropes. Enjoyable if repetitive, but it's only 7 minutes or less. Great animation... FREE ONLINE.
"The Haunted House" is a very good Walt Disney cartoon, though I wouldn't place it among the best of the era. On the positive side, for a black & white cartoon, the animation is exceptional and the print is very crisp. On the negative, there's a lot of dancing...too much dancing.
The story begins with Mickey Mouse being beckoned into a haunted house. There, he meets a bunch of skeletons that force him to play the organ for them...at which point they all dance about the place. There really isn't much more to the story than this.
The cartoon started great but the sheer amount of dancing really became a bit tiresome...despite some amazingly good animation considering it was 1929.
The story begins with Mickey Mouse being beckoned into a haunted house. There, he meets a bunch of skeletons that force him to play the organ for them...at which point they all dance about the place. There really isn't much more to the story than this.
The cartoon started great but the sheer amount of dancing really became a bit tiresome...despite some amazingly good animation considering it was 1929.
On August 29, 1929, Walt Disney publicly screened the first film in his "Silly Symphonies" series, 'The Skeleton Dance (1929).' Needless to say, it was a rousing success, and ensured a further decade of similar musical short films. 'Haunted House (1929)' was released on August 1, 1929, and is similar in many ways, not least because a lot of the footage originally intended for 'The Skeleton Dance' was instead recycled into this Mickey Mouse musical horror short. Though this recycling is rather obvious in the film's second half, in which our mousy hero disappears for a while, I nonetheless enjoyed the film for its vivid imagination, and, especially in its opening minutes, eerie atmosphere. This was one example, at least, where Disney's work benefited from black-and-white animation {the studio's first outing in three-strip Technicolor was 'Flowers and Trees (1932)'}, and the creepy shadows of the haunted mansion bear the sinister atmosphere of a 1930s Universal horror, with the whistling wind providing an ominous air, at least until the music starts up.
Truth be told, 'Haunted House' is the first Mickey Mouse cartoon that I can remember watching, though a reasonable portion of my childhood would no doubt have been occupied in a similar manner. I wish that less of the film had been concerned with dancing skeletons, because Mickey's initial exploration of the dark mansion is stylistically creative and almost genuinely frightening. A lingering trace of the silent era is noticeable when the house's lighting goes out, and Mickey is illuminated only by a circular ring of light that calls to mind the camera iris favoured by so many early filmmakers. A scary Grim Reaper then enters the room, points to an organ against the wall and instructs our hero to "play." Mickey doesn't really know how to, but he nonetheless obliges, and soon the army of skeleton are tapping merrily across the room, using their bones as musical instruments. This Mickey Mouse short could have been better, but it has some good atmosphere, and is well worth watching.
Truth be told, 'Haunted House' is the first Mickey Mouse cartoon that I can remember watching, though a reasonable portion of my childhood would no doubt have been occupied in a similar manner. I wish that less of the film had been concerned with dancing skeletons, because Mickey's initial exploration of the dark mansion is stylistically creative and almost genuinely frightening. A lingering trace of the silent era is noticeable when the house's lighting goes out, and Mickey is illuminated only by a circular ring of light that calls to mind the camera iris favoured by so many early filmmakers. A scary Grim Reaper then enters the room, points to an organ against the wall and instructs our hero to "play." Mickey doesn't really know how to, but he nonetheless obliges, and soon the army of skeleton are tapping merrily across the room, using their bones as musical instruments. This Mickey Mouse short could have been better, but it has some good atmosphere, and is well worth watching.
This animated short is cute but lacks the fun of The Skeleton Dance (1929). In fact, The Haunted House borrows quite a bit from The Skeleton Dance.
In this short we have Mickey who enters a house during a storm only to find out the house is haunted. A ghoul commands Mickey to play the organ while the skeletons dance. It's a fun watch for Halloween.
8/10.
In this short we have Mickey who enters a house during a storm only to find out the house is haunted. A ghoul commands Mickey to play the organ while the skeletons dance. It's a fun watch for Halloween.
8/10.
Haunted House is a true Disney's classic. Mickey is that innocent,funny and sometimes naughty mouse that finds refuge in a old and of course haunted house. Several times Mickey appears to look at the camera when he finds himself in a difficult situation or when he gets surprised by an event. This short movie, made in 1929, has amazing special effects for such an early cartoon. I enjoyed the story simplicity but interesting. I consider this cartoon the best of Disney's black and white era. Also it prompts you to ask yourself how the current TV cartoons, like the horrible Cow and Chicken, has taken the minds of our children.
Did you know
- TriviaThis short is rarely seen in its entirety nowadays as it contains a scene in which Mickey imitates Al Jolson's infamous blackface routine and says "Mammy!" Controversial by today's standards, this was a fairly standard joke when the short debuted in 1929.
- ConnectionsEdited from The Skeleton Dance (1929)
Details
- Runtime
- 7m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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