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Dir.: John Foster and Vernon Stallings
TC4P Rating: 5/9
When Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks made and released The Skeleton Dance in 1929, it had a huge influence on the cartoon industry at large. (And if you are wondering when I will get to The Skeleton Dance on this site, don't worry... it's coming up very soon.) It is hard to find an animation studio that didn't fill the frames of a short or seven with dancing, laughing skeletons in the early 1930s. Not that skeletons weren't used in animation before The Skeleton Dance, but the huge success of the Disney short made sure that skeletons would not go away as subject matter for many, many years.
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High atop the castle, things start to get real spooky. Storm clouds are seen rumbling above the castle, and then one cloud forms its own head and arms and looks down at the castle. The cloud reaches out and starts to play a boisterous tune on the battlements of the castle, pressing down on the merlons along the wall as if playing a pipe organ, with the resulting sounds emitting from the various turrets and other towers forming the top of the castle. In the fields nearby, a pair of trees start playing their branches like flutes to finish the tune
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The lead skeleton sings:
"In the Good Book it says that Cain slew Abel..."
And then the other three skeletons provide the choir...
"Yes, good Lawd!"
The first one sings the next line of his tale, with the call and response style continuing for a while...
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(Choir) "Yes, good Lawd!"
"Didn't Daniel in the lion's den..."
"What he do?"
"He said unto those colored men..."
"What he say?"
"Ya'll wanna get to hebbin?"
"Sho'! Sho'!"
The lead skeleton then takes the next verse himself...
"Den cut out all yo' crapshootin'
an' git on your long white robe
an' your starry crown!
Be ready when de great day comes!"
All four skeletons join voices for the chorus of the song...
"Good lord, I'm ready
Indeed, I'm ready
Oh, good lord, I'll be ready when the great day comes!"
Sitting all the way to left, the fourth skeleton takes a brief, bass solo...
"Good glory hallelujah!"
After the next refrain, the bass skeleton finishes the song portion of our program with a deepening run down the words, "...the... great... day... comes".
At the conclusion of the gospel song, Jerry pulls out a pair of dice and rolls a seven. The four black skeletons can't keep themselves from leaping onto the dice, but it spells their doom and they end up shattering in dozens of pieces instead. Running outside, Tom trips over a rock and smashes his face into the ground. As he lies there prone, we see large black footsteps tracking up towards Tom, and when they reach his head, the footsteps roll up into a ball and then burst into the shapes of the two tall weirdos who took the cab to the castle in the beginning. Tom panics and his underwear-clad body jolts from out of his clothes, slithers around to the back of his suit, and then climbs back inside again.
Jerry finally catches up and both pairs – Tom and Jerry and the bearded weirdos – take turns eyeing each other quizzically. One weirdo turns to the other one and nods his head, making a "mmm-hmmm" noise of approval. The other weirdo makes the same noise and nods back to the first. They both point their index fingers in the direction of Tom and Jerry and then walk away. Tom turns and points his finger at his smaller partner, and Jerry lifts his shirt to discover that there is nothing but a skeleton underneath. Tom is shocked, but all he does is turn away from Jerry, buried his face in his hand and snicker at what has happened to his buddy.
But Jerry moves over to Tom and lifts the back of his shirt to also reveal naught but a skeleton's bones. Panicking yet again, Tom turns and looks down at his chest. His shirt pops open and he sees nothing but ribs. He screams and runs offscreen. Jerry runs after him, and then the pair are shown running away with their hands waving above their heads. Their pants are starting to fall off and revealing even more bones. Tom briefly stops and cries in vain at Jerry, and then both continue running and waving as the film irises to a close.
The film is no great shakes as an adventure or as animation, but it does have moments that transcend the general blandness. The opening set-up of the drenched rail station and the tale leading up to the arrival at the castle is an appropriately eerie and imaginative beginning. It actually makes you think that something greater is going to occur once the castle is reached, but the bat/vampire sequence doesn't pay off (I will grant them that it is quite weird), much in the same way that the giant frog in the cab is an interesting touch but does nothing for the film in the end except give it a fleeting sense of true surrealism. The skeleton sequences are fun in bits, but to be seen as anything but a play off of what The Skeleton Dance did so simply and brilliantly, you've got to bring a little bit more.
The dynamic between Tom and Jerry is always what brings the most enjoyment to me out of their films. Tom is a big, tall basket case in any situation and useless in a fight for their lives, but Jerry – the more diminutive one who is roughly the shape and size of a cannonball with limbs – is always utterly calm in any situation. He usually stands with his hands in his pockets, taking in whatever is happening before them, and then either acting or exiting depending on the severity of their danger. In this film, it takes his ultimate magical turn into a skeleton to finally lose his composure, but before that, he could almost be sleepwalking through most scenes. In contrast against the more manic Tom (who has a couple of good moments, especially when he crawls out of his clothes in his long johns), Jerry is quite enjoyable to watch here.
The more racist themes that pop up often in the series are here in its very beginning as well. In late September, I posted a piece on another Tom and Jerry short from a year later than this one called Plane Dumb. [You can read that article here.] That adventure, in which the pair travel to Africa, is a full-on blackface-makeup adventure, so at least this film doesn't go quite as far in offense. But this one does contain the first version of a sequence that is replicated in Plane Dumb: the animation and music (though a longer take) of the four black skeleton minstrels that Tom and Jerry encounter. It is unfortunate that otherwise light, silly cartoons are tainted by such sequences, but that's history, folks. You gotta take the lumps with the smooth.
As a Halloween cartoon, though, this one has the goods, in quantity if not quality. Perhaps parents looking for a safe cartoon for the kiddies might want to steer clear for those particular scenes, but experienced adults can make up their own minds for their party atmosphere.
Until the next haunting time,
RTJ
Sitting all the way to left, the fourth skeleton takes a brief, bass solo...
"Good glory hallelujah!"
After the next refrain, the bass skeleton finishes the song portion of our program with a deepening run down the words, "...the... great... day... comes".
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But Jerry moves over to Tom and lifts the back of his shirt to also reveal naught but a skeleton's bones. Panicking yet again, Tom turns and looks down at his chest. His shirt pops open and he sees nothing but ribs. He screams and runs offscreen. Jerry runs after him, and then the pair are shown running away with their hands waving above their heads. Their pants are starting to fall off and revealing even more bones. Tom briefly stops and cries in vain at Jerry, and then both continue running and waving as the film irises to a close.
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The dynamic between Tom and Jerry is always what brings the most enjoyment to me out of their films. Tom is a big, tall basket case in any situation and useless in a fight for their lives, but Jerry – the more diminutive one who is roughly the shape and size of a cannonball with limbs – is always utterly calm in any situation. He usually stands with his hands in his pockets, taking in whatever is happening before them, and then either acting or exiting depending on the severity of their danger. In this film, it takes his ultimate magical turn into a skeleton to finally lose his composure, but before that, he could almost be sleepwalking through most scenes. In contrast against the more manic Tom (who has a couple of good moments, especially when he crawls out of his clothes in his long johns), Jerry is quite enjoyable to watch here.
The more racist themes that pop up often in the series are here in its very beginning as well. In late September, I posted a piece on another Tom and Jerry short from a year later than this one called Plane Dumb. [You can read that article here.] That adventure, in which the pair travel to Africa, is a full-on blackface-makeup adventure, so at least this film doesn't go quite as far in offense. But this one does contain the first version of a sequence that is replicated in Plane Dumb: the animation and music (though a longer take) of the four black skeleton minstrels that Tom and Jerry encounter. It is unfortunate that otherwise light, silly cartoons are tainted by such sequences, but that's history, folks. You gotta take the lumps with the smooth.
As a Halloween cartoon, though, this one has the goods, in quantity if not quality. Perhaps parents looking for a safe cartoon for the kiddies might want to steer clear for those particular scenes, but experienced adults can make up their own minds for their party atmosphere.
Until the next haunting time,
RTJ
*****
And in case you haven't seen it...
1 comment:
Never ever heard of this one before, so what a treat it was to watch! Thanks for posting!
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