A young dog calls on Betty but fraternity hazers kidnap him. With a Bouncing Ball, Rudy Vallee sings the title tune.A young dog calls on Betty but fraternity hazers kidnap him. With a Bouncing Ball, Rudy Vallee sings the title tune.A young dog calls on Betty but fraternity hazers kidnap him. With a Bouncing Ball, Rudy Vallee sings the title tune.
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Featured reviews
No, it's not Betty Boop. The confusion is understandable because it's the same voice as Betty, the imitation Helen Kane singing voice. Betty Co-Ed, however, is not Betty Boop, but the subject of a rah-rah college song sung by Rudy Vallee in this Fleischer Screen Song.
It's a lively song as performed, with a good assortment of gags that make this a great Screen Song. The artwork is primitive and simplistic for the Fleischers in this period and there are a lot of cartoon mice that resemble that of a competing cartoon producer whose initials are Walt Disney. However, a lot of cartoons were produced with this mocking homage, at least until Disney began to sue.
It's a lively song as performed, with a good assortment of gags that make this a great Screen Song. The artwork is primitive and simplistic for the Fleischers in this period and there are a lot of cartoon mice that resemble that of a competing cartoon producer whose initials are Walt Disney. However, a lot of cartoons were produced with this mocking homage, at least until Disney began to sue.
Betty Co-ed (1931)
*** (out of 4)
The Fleischer Studio produced a number of these animated short films where the "bouncing ball" would have audience members singing together. Rudy Vallee makes his second appearance in this series as he sings the title song. The starting animation sequence has a nerdy college student meeting Betty Co-ed and from here we get the bouncing ball and the song. If you're familiar with the series then you know the format that all of the shorts followed. This one here is pretty good since Vallee does have a unique voice and he does the song justice. Obviously having him sing the tune is much better than any stock singer that the company might have otherwise had doing it. The animation is good and the characters are certainly entertaining in their own way.
*** (out of 4)
The Fleischer Studio produced a number of these animated short films where the "bouncing ball" would have audience members singing together. Rudy Vallee makes his second appearance in this series as he sings the title song. The starting animation sequence has a nerdy college student meeting Betty Co-ed and from here we get the bouncing ball and the song. If you're familiar with the series then you know the format that all of the shorts followed. This one here is pretty good since Vallee does have a unique voice and he does the song justice. Obviously having him sing the tune is much better than any stock singer that the company might have otherwise had doing it. The animation is good and the characters are certainly entertaining in their own way.
Did you know
- TriviaThough "Betty Co-ed" is often erroneously referred to as a Betty Boop vehicle, the titular Betty is actually a completely different character.
- GoofsThe song lyrics appear on-screen with a misspelled word: "And all of it's [sic] engineers."
- Quotes
[first lines]
College Dog: Betty!
- ConnectionsFeatured in Biography: Betty Boop: Queen of the Cartoons (1987)
- SoundtracksBetty Co-Ed
Written by J. Paul Fogarty and Rudy Vallee
Played at the beginning
Performed by Rudy Vallee and ensemble
Details
- Runtime
- 6m
- Color
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