The Little King, comic strip character, meets Betty Boop.The Little King, comic strip character, meets Betty Boop.The Little King, comic strip character, meets Betty Boop.
- Directors
- Writer
- Stars
Jack Mercer
- The Little King
- (voice)
- …
Mae Questel
- Betty Boop
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The little king is at an opera when a soprano begins to belt out a horrible aria. He becomes bored and sneaks out of theatre. He goes to a music hall where Betty Boop is performing. She is adorned in Western gear and does some singing. Meanwhile, the king continues to interrupt things, at one point buying fifty dollars worth of the plot .
We are at the Imperial Opera House where there is a special performance for the king and queen of this unknown place. The royalty take their bows, and a huge-chested opera singer leads off what we see of the performance. In no time, the king is not happy and sneaks off. Down the road, he sees a poster outside a theater of Betty Boop. so he goes inside to investigate. Hey, it looks better than that opera.
This little king is really a cool guy. In the theater, a vendor is selling pretzels. The king buys all of them and then distributes them free to the other people. Betty starts her show, rides a horse around a small ring a few times (Bronco Betty?) and the kings goes on-stage and asks if he can ride the horse. He's a little rough with the horse, but then changes positions and lets the horse ride him!! (This is kind of a strange story, to be honest.)
Meanwhile, the crabby queen finally notices the king is gone from the opera house and goes to get him. And - talk about strange - you should see the ending!
This little king is really a cool guy. In the theater, a vendor is selling pretzels. The king buys all of them and then distributes them free to the other people. Betty starts her show, rides a horse around a small ring a few times (Bronco Betty?) and the kings goes on-stage and asks if he can ride the horse. He's a little rough with the horse, but then changes positions and lets the horse ride him!! (This is kind of a strange story, to be honest.)
Meanwhile, the crabby queen finally notices the king is gone from the opera house and goes to get him. And - talk about strange - you should see the ending!
Soglow's 'Little King' meets Betty Boop, and the results are a delight. Those familiar with the comic-strip King know of his propensity to try anything he sees his subjects doing -- and in this cartoon, he ends up selling pretzels to members of Betty's audience and even joining Betty's 'Wild West' act. The animation is Fleischer-good; the laughs are Soglow-great.
'The Little King' was a very successful cartoon from the 1930s-1970s (when the creator, Otto Soglow, died). When it debuted, it ran in "The New Yorker" magazine and was also made into cartoons by the Van Buren Studio. However, by 1936, the strip was now in Hearst newspapers and made one appearance with Fleischer Brothers Studio in "Betty Boop and the Little King". Unlike the strip, in this Betty Boop cartoon, the King actually speaks a bit.
The cartoon begins with the King at a performance of the world's worst (and largest chested) singer. He's utterly bored and sneaks off to the Burlesque theater to watch Betty Boop perform. He has a lovely time--that is, until the Queen discovers he's gone and goes to bring him back! All in all, this is a very cute cartoon. It also features some of the best animation the Fleischers could muster--with some great 3-D effects. Well done and well worth your time.
The cartoon begins with the King at a performance of the world's worst (and largest chested) singer. He's utterly bored and sneaks off to the Burlesque theater to watch Betty Boop perform. He has a lovely time--that is, until the Queen discovers he's gone and goes to bring him back! All in all, this is a very cute cartoon. It also features some of the best animation the Fleischers could muster--with some great 3-D effects. Well done and well worth your time.
Betty Boop and the Little King (1936)
** (out of 4)
Betty Boop is performing on stage while The Little King is in the audience trying out a few new things. He ends up falling for Betty but his wife isn't going to let that happen. I guess some would attack me for saying this but I really didn't find The Little King character to be all that entertaining. The film gets off to a pretty good start with the King seeing a man selling pretzels so he decides to buy all of them up so that he can sell them himself. Sadly this is where the entertainment stopped as we see the King getting into all sorts of trouble and of course he eventually runs into Betty. Fleischer and company were clearly using this short to try and sell The Little King character onto people but overall I just don't think the film worked very well. The King just isn't interesting enough to take any of the spotlight away from Betty and another problem is that there's really no funny material here. As you'd expect, the animation is top-notch as usual and Boop is as cute as ever but this here just isn't enough to really sell the movie.
** (out of 4)
Betty Boop is performing on stage while The Little King is in the audience trying out a few new things. He ends up falling for Betty but his wife isn't going to let that happen. I guess some would attack me for saying this but I really didn't find The Little King character to be all that entertaining. The film gets off to a pretty good start with the King seeing a man selling pretzels so he decides to buy all of them up so that he can sell them himself. Sadly this is where the entertainment stopped as we see the King getting into all sorts of trouble and of course he eventually runs into Betty. Fleischer and company were clearly using this short to try and sell The Little King character onto people but overall I just don't think the film worked very well. The King just isn't interesting enough to take any of the spotlight away from Betty and another problem is that there's really no funny material here. As you'd expect, the animation is top-notch as usual and Boop is as cute as ever but this here just isn't enough to really sell the movie.
Did you know
- TriviaThe pretzel salesman is Oscar, a character from the Thimble Theater (Popeye) comic strip.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Phelous & the Movies: Pocahontas (Dingo Pictures) (2016)
- SoundtracksYip-e-i-yo
(uncredited)
Music by Sammy Timberg
Lyrics by Dave Fleischer
Sung by Betty while jumping rope with the Little King
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Betty Boop und der kleine König
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 7m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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