This MGM short, which stars an all-dog cast, is about Trixie and Fido and their evil boss. They all work at the Dogville Department Store, but the boss has his eye on Trixie and so frames Fi... Read allThis MGM short, which stars an all-dog cast, is about Trixie and Fido and their evil boss. They all work at the Dogville Department Store, but the boss has his eye on Trixie and so frames Fido for murder. Trixie is convinced that her man (er, dog rather) is innocent and works fev... Read allThis MGM short, which stars an all-dog cast, is about Trixie and Fido and their evil boss. They all work at the Dogville Department Store, but the boss has his eye on Trixie and so frames Fido for murder. Trixie is convinced that her man (er, dog rather) is innocent and works feverishly to save him from the electric chair.
- Directors
Featured reviews
I found it completely hysterical, and I laughed continually throughout the picture. It was quite clever and inventive in creating all the various activities going on in each scene, which were staged elaborately with costumes, props, dialogue, and a lot more. I saw Jules White's name as one of the directors, and we all know what he was about be involved with a couple years later.
I couldn't help it, watching the evil boss's nefarious machinations to steal Trixie just cracked me up. The nail in Fido's tire...hahaha! A lot of other scenes were equally funny, such as the ladies pawing through the clothes on sale, dogs at the table eating, in prison breaking rocks, or the guard with the machine gun.
I liked it, but I can see from the other reviews it's not for everyone. Oh well, I admitted freely I'm a big fan of the Bowery Boys, so lowbrow is OK by me if it makes me laugh. I'll also point out that I'm a first time viewer of any Dogville picture, so I have no idea if I would enjoy watching any others. But this one was definitely entertaining.
To quote Lord Flasheart from Blackadder: "Woof!"
Having said that, if FRANCIS, THE TALKING MULE is your style of entertainment, you may fall over laughing at this nonsense.
The dogs say grace at the table, fix a flat tire, go wild at a department store remnant sale, model clothes, cope with a crooked boss, and our hero and his girlfriend are separated when the boss pins a crime on the boy dog so that he can win the affection of the girl.
After spending some time at the penitentiary, where some dogs are seen doing hard labor in jail clothes, the girl dog comes to the rescue and gets her boyfriend saved in time to avoid going to the chair for his crime.
Says one dog to another when sampling jail food: "It ain't fit for a dog!" Hilarius? It depends.
If you have a chance, see all these shorts!!!!!
** The Big Dog House (1930) MGM : Jules White, Zion Myers
Did you know
- TriviaThis series was controversial even at the time due to the methods used to get the dogs to pose and "talk". In the UK, the "Performing and Captive Animals Defense League" printed a circular in 1931 detailing the alleged abuse these animals endured. They were successful in having the British film censors ban these films due to animal cruelty.
- Quotes
[first lines]
Mother: Oh, Trixie! Trixie - breakfast is ready!
- ConnectionsFollowed by Love-Tails of Morocco (1931)
- SoundtracksThe Prisoner's Song
(uncredited)
Written by Guy Massey
Played during the opening credits
Sung by a dog inmate while playing the ukulele
Details
- Runtime
- 17m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.20 : 1