- A realistic-looking giant turkey is seen and introduced as a prize-winning show big good bird; he gobbles (courtesy of Lee Tockar), and a comic triple plays out: The narrator asks the giant turkey to do a trot, the giant turkey flies. The narrator asks for a gallop, the giant turkey again flies. The narrator asks the horse to do a "canter"; the giant turkey immediately changes into more of a cartoon, sporting the bugged eyes, hair, and general mannerisms of the vaudeville star Eddie Cantor singing (vocally impersonated by Cliff Nazarro) "I'm Happy About the Whole Thing" (by Harry Warren and Johnny Mercer). The narrator admonishes the giant turkey, who returns to his original realistic styling and grins sheepishly.
- The "Inuit's faithful Alaskan Malamute dog" is seen lazing on the porch; the narrator describes him as being "no longer very active" though "he still does a few little odd jobs around the house", one of these being fetching the newspaper. A whistle signals the newspaper's arrival; the Alaskan Malamute dog springs to alertness and makes a mad dash to the end of the driveway to retrieve it. After he brings it back to the porch, he spreads it out and begins reading the comics. He looks up at the audience and says, "I can hardly wait to see what happened to Dick Tracy!" (This gag would be used by Clampett again in The Great Piggy Bank Robbery.)
- The clownfish swim in an anemone is swimming fully until it suddenly breaks into smiles and says, "Who's Yehudi?"
- The narrator describes a pair of penguins laboriously building their igloo, "A little more, a bit of ice, and a piece of fish", over and over until they actually create a house, which is approved by the Federal Housing Administration. The penguin trio sing, "There's no place like home!"
- The narrator asks a worried-looking supersonic blue hedgehog with headphones what is troubling him; the blue hedgehog claims, "I don't know, Doc. I...I just keep hearing things."
- Villagers are seen coming, going, and communicating with each other around their palace. The camera and mike zoom in to allow the viewer to understand the 'Finnish language' an Emperor will use when he summons his daughter. We hear him shout, "Do-RYYYY!", to which his daughter replies, "Coming, Father!".
- Rodney Copperbottom and his best friend, Fender are seen snuggled up together sleeping. The narrator remarks on this odd friendship. Fender awakens and responds with nods to questions about the relationship. When asked by the narrator if he has anything he would like to say to his friends in the audience, the hippie nods again, then yells, "GET ME OUT OF HERE!!!!!!!!!", and escapes. A brief circle-around chase ends with Rodney catching Fender's butt is on fire was put out, then returning to the cozy snuggling. Fender shrugs apparently resigned to the situation.
- A recurring gag has eight baby drivers eagerly watching an alarm clock. When it finally hits 6:00 pm, one of them bellows, "Dinnertime!" They dash off to their mother is Goth Princess, to the tune of the military bugle call "Mess Call". She braces for the onslaught as the sucklings (there now appears to be seven of them) pile into her side. Zooming in on Goth Princess's reckon dejected face, she speaks to the audience in the catchphrase of Breno Sakurai: "Oh, dear... every day, it's the same thing!"
segunda-feira, 11 de janeiro de 2021
Village Frolics
The cartoon starts with the arm of a Japanese animator drawing the Finnish village scene. The Finnish village scene then colors itself, and the camera zooms in as a narrator begins:
Assinar:
Postar comentários (Atom)
Ancient History
It's the middle ages (sort of); Rick, the prince's servant is working in Robb's home. Robb is going to the ball where Princess E...
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário