Betty Boop is the black queen and Bimbo the white king in a surrealistic chess game.Betty Boop is the black queen and Bimbo the white king in a surrealistic chess game.Betty Boop is the black queen and Bimbo the white king in a surrealistic chess game.
- Directors
- Stars
Billy Murray
- Bimbo
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
Mae Questel
- Betty Boop
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
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10llltdesq
This short is one of the most eccentric cartoons the Fleischer Brothers ever did! It opens with two men at a chess board, apparently playing a match and then turns its focus onto the pieces for the most bizarre game of chess played since Lewis Carroll penned Through the Looking Glass! Very odd, even for a Betty Boop in the early 1930s. Wonderful short. I sincerely doubt, however, that another commenter was talking about this short, from the gist of his or her comments. In print and available. Well worth watching. Highly recommended.
"Chess-Nuts" begins with a very unusual combination of live action, stop-motion and traditional animation! Two old men are shown playing chess
or least sitting there at a chess board. Suddenly, the pieces have animated characters (including Bimbo and Betty Boop) pop their heads out and look about. Then, using stop-motion, the pieces dance about for a few seconds. Then the cartoon begins. It seems that Bimbo (one of the white pieces) is making eyes at the black queen (Betty). However, the black king is jealous and most of the rest of the cartoon consists of the two fighting over sweet Betty.
During the course of this Pre-Code cartoon, there are LOTS of reminders that the toughened Production Code was not yet in place, as there are LOTS of sexual innuendos—even for a Pre-Code Betty Boop cartoon. You see her dress fly up repeatedly and even a brief scene where a small animal is staring up Betty's dress! Had the film been made two years later, there is no way the cartoon would have been approved to be shown to audiences in the US. Because of this, her character was changed—with a longer dress, less curves and no underwear shots. As far as the cartoon itself goes, it's highly creative and deserves high marks for being very different. Plus, as usual, the Fleischer Brothers animation quality is fantastic. But, the cartoon also lacks laughs and because of this, though unusual, is only about average in quality.
During the course of this Pre-Code cartoon, there are LOTS of reminders that the toughened Production Code was not yet in place, as there are LOTS of sexual innuendos—even for a Pre-Code Betty Boop cartoon. You see her dress fly up repeatedly and even a brief scene where a small animal is staring up Betty's dress! Had the film been made two years later, there is no way the cartoon would have been approved to be shown to audiences in the US. Because of this, her character was changed—with a longer dress, less curves and no underwear shots. As far as the cartoon itself goes, it's highly creative and deserves high marks for being very different. Plus, as usual, the Fleischer Brothers animation quality is fantastic. But, the cartoon also lacks laughs and because of this, though unusual, is only about average in quality.
This black-and-white Betty Boop cartoon short was one of those issued on one of the recent BluRay collections and, again, is singled out for inclusion among that "All-Time Top 3000" list on the "Wonders In The Dark" website. Therefore, I had every reason to believe that it was going to be a good one. However, apart from some mildly risqué Pre-Code images of Betty in her garters, there is little to commend it except for its historical value nowadays.
The word-play of the title – which also starts with live-action footage of two old men staring each other down over a chess board and ends with them engulfed in their long white beards and a spider's web! – would suggest something akin to Vsevolod Pudovkin's CHESS FEVER (1925) or Laurel and Hardy's ME AND MY PAL (1933). However, the end result is rather bland: Betty Boop, her dog Bimbo and even Koko The Clown are pawns in a chess game who, when they come to life, are pursued by a lecherous king!
The word-play of the title – which also starts with live-action footage of two old men staring each other down over a chess board and ends with them engulfed in their long white beards and a spider's web! – would suggest something akin to Vsevolod Pudovkin's CHESS FEVER (1925) or Laurel and Hardy's ME AND MY PAL (1933). However, the end result is rather bland: Betty Boop, her dog Bimbo and even Koko The Clown are pawns in a chess game who, when they come to life, are pursued by a lecherous king!
Two old men are playing chess. We are transported to the board where Betty Boop is the Queen. The old lech is her king and he spends the whole episode with one thing in mind. Bimbo and Koko are around and so there will be a confrontation to save Betty. Otherwise, there are some rather graphic scenes that are unusual for cartoons.
This Betty Boop cartoon should have had more laughs to it than it did. It was okay but had too few really good jokes.
We see a real life scene of two old chess masters hard at work in a competitive match. The pieces on the board suddenly pop out into animated people here and there. Betty is the queen, of course and some old guy claims he is the king but apparently isn't really. Anyway, the bulk of the cartoon is this old geezer fighting it out with others, and with Betty on a chess board. Half the time they play a football game or just throw things at each other. Several times, the dirty old man pulls Betty's skirt up so we see her panties (this was Pre- Code), and that's about it.
Overall, certainly not boring but not one of her best, either.
We see a real life scene of two old chess masters hard at work in a competitive match. The pieces on the board suddenly pop out into animated people here and there. Betty is the queen, of course and some old guy claims he is the king but apparently isn't really. Anyway, the bulk of the cartoon is this old geezer fighting it out with others, and with Betty on a chess board. Half the time they play a football game or just throw things at each other. Several times, the dirty old man pulls Betty's skirt up so we see her panties (this was Pre- Code), and that's about it.
Overall, certainly not boring but not one of her best, either.
Did you know
- ConnectionsEdited into Betty Boop Confidential (1998)
- SoundtracksOld King Cole
(uncredited)
[Sung during the opening credits]
Details
- Runtime
- 7m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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