A blog reviewing all the available American animated cartoons of 1939, in approximately release order (or reverse order from the perspective of someone reading the blog after it is done).
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
019 The Three Bears
Title: The Three Bears
Studio: Terrytoons
Date: 2/10/39
Credits:
Story by
JOHN FOSTER
Directed by
MANNIE DAVIS
Music by
PHILIP A. SCHEIB
Series: -
Running time (of viewed version): 6:59
Synopsis: Goldilocks is invited to stay with the three Italian bears because she can play the fiddle and the baby bear can't, and she ends up taking down the hunter who comes for the bears.
Comments: This cartoon is awesomely inexplicable. It's actually like two inexplicable cartoons in a a series stitched together tho. The first story, complete in and of itself, involves the more or less traditional Goldilocks story (which 1939 is none too short on presenting in cartoon form, as last month's Krazy Kat entry attests to), except that the parent bears are Italian-accent immigrants who eat spaghetti instead of porridge and they go out to argue about why the baby bear (who has an American accent; guess he was born or grew up here) doesn't practice his fiddle (tho as it turns out he's pretty good on the trumpet, trombone, and drums). Goldilocks takes her liberties, and the papa bear tells her to go home, and changes his mind when he realizes she can play the fiddle. This is probably the most interesting take on Goldilocks I've seen, making the bears essentially act how neighbors would have in the real world. The second story is a hunter story. The hunter has attributes that would not be out of place for a certain WB character that would soon emerge who enjoyed hunting smaller game. He's essentially robbing them of their fur coats. The second story isn't quite as interesting as the first, but it is still enjoyable. The characters are all ugly, unfortunately.
You can see this cartoon at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a9a7Qwnpqbk
Goldilocks takes her liberties, and the papa bear tells her to go home, and changes his mind when he realizes she can play the fiddle. This is probably the most interesting take on Goldilocks I've seen, making the bears essentially act how neighbors would have in the real world.
ReplyDeleteThere's been relatively few adaptations that sometimes end this way with Goldie making up for her mistakes with the bears. A Disney series aimed at preschools "Goldie & Bear" as this for the show's origins as both Baby Bear and Goldie are friends together. Reminded of a cheap Aussie-produced version where Goldie even helps the bear family when they were captured by a circus.
But I guess you know why I bothered to comment here in the first place....
SOMEBODY TOUCHA MY SPAGHET!!!!
Good to see I'm not the only one digging into the origins of this meme... I just can't find the voice actors anywhere
DeleteSomeone always has to look around. The real problem is that most cartoons never cared to credit much of anyone back then. You could see that with the sparse list Terrytoons stuck with for a long time, it wasn't until Gene Deitch stepped in during the 50's when they began crediting voice actors in their cartoons.
DeleteI heard Arthur Kay done the voice of the Mama and Papa bear including the Hunter and the Dog. No word on who done Baby bear or Godilocks. Although, Paul Terry's own daughter Patrica is rumored to have done some girl voices during this time
DeleteSomebody TOUCHA MY SPAGHET!!
ReplyDeleteImagine if you were living in the year 1939 and someone told you that a certain line from this cartoon would become very popular in the year 2018.
ReplyDeleteSOMEBODY TOUCHA MY BLOG!
ReplyDeleteOH, ALL THESE FRICKING TEENAGERS!!
ReplyDeleteSOMEBODY TOUCHA MY SPAGHET!
ReplyDelete