On Christmas morning, two puppies (and their children) are up early and stumble upon a lot of brand-new toys.On Christmas morning, two puppies (and their children) are up early and stumble upon a lot of brand-new toys.On Christmas morning, two puppies (and their children) are up early and stumble upon a lot of brand-new toys.
Jayne Shadduck
- Pups
- (voice)
Bernice Hansen
- Children
- (uncredited)
Leone Le Doux
- Children
- (uncredited)
Dorothy Lloyd
- Pups
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
10stoutfam
for your kids to watch, Harman and Ising can be an excellent choice. There is an innocence and humor in Pup's Christmas, Alias St. Nick, Peachy Cobbler that I don't see matched by anything on TV today. My grandchild asks me to put it in to play when she comes to visit and enjoys it very much. And wherever Peace on Earth is on this website, I cannot recommend it highly enough. Harman and Isisng appeal to a child's imagination. Compared to what is considered suitable cartoon fare(usually boorish, violent, and/or notable mostly for adult content aimed at children) today, this is far better in content, imagination, and artistry.
It is Christmas morning and the kids sneak downstairs. They are followed closely by their two puppies. The kids begin opening their gifts. The pups are confronted by a stuffed dog toy. They continue to be confronted by all the different new toys.
It is a MGM Happy Harmonies cartoon. The kids look weird with their two pink circle cheeks. It looks like bad makeup. I guess that is the style of animation back in the day. The puppies are only cuteness. It's all very wholesome and very Christmas. It's a Harman-Ising cartoon. The big names in this one are Rudolf Ising, William Hanna, and James Tyer.
It is a MGM Happy Harmonies cartoon. The kids look weird with their two pink circle cheeks. It looks like bad makeup. I guess that is the style of animation back in the day. The puppies are only cuteness. It's all very wholesome and very Christmas. It's a Harman-Ising cartoon. The big names in this one are Rudolf Ising, William Hanna, and James Tyer.
"The Pups' Christmas" is one of those animated Christmas shorts that is low on humor, depending on cuteness to sustain it. The story concerns a bunch of kids and their puppies who sneak downstairs on Christmas Eve to see what Santa brought them. About midway through, it seems that the film makers couldn't decide whether to do a Christmas film with puppies or a toys come alive story. Both elements are used and neither works. A sequence involving an out of control toy tank shows promise, but it quickly fizzles out yet refuses to go away. The quality of the animation is about average. All around a pretty boring short.
7tavm
Just watched this Hugh Harmon-Rudolf Ising Happy Harmonies M-G-M cartoon short on YouTube. It's Christmas Day and the kids and their two puppies have woken up and opened the presents. Among them: a train with tracks provided, a doll that says "Momma", a calico dog, a tank, and an airplane. It's the former that "shoots" at the pups and the latter that gets in the former's way. Those scenes provided most of the humor of this short which mainly relied on the cuteness of the pups' actions. Since Harmon-Ising (harmonizing, get it?) got their start with Walt Disney, that cuteness factor was not very surprising to me. With all that said, The Pups' Christmas was another amusing cartoon that I'd say is worth a look for any vintage animation buff out there.
Slight but cute Christmas cartoon from Harman-Isling. This is about a couple of puppies who follow the kids down to open presents on Christmas morning. It's basically a series of bits where the pups are frightened by each of the toys and generally make a mess. These kids must have been from a rich family because that's a lot of presents, especially for 1936. Anyway, it's treacly stuff but pleasant and innocent. I would assume it was aimed at pre-schoolers. I'm not sure about the movie-going habits of the 1930s and if people took kids that little to the movies or not. But I can't imagine this was aimed at older kids.
Did you know
- TriviaAll of the toys shown here accurately depict popular playthings of the era.
- Crazy creditsThe title is spelled out by fragments of candy canes.
- ConnectionsEdited into Tom and Jerry Christmas Special (1987)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Happy Harmonies (1936-1937 Season) #1: The Pups' Christmas
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 8m
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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