The Dover Boys at Pimento University: Difference between revisions
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==Subsequent appearances== |
==Subsequent appearances== |
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The characters Tom, Dick and Larry would later make cameo appearances on the 1990s [[FOX Network]] series ''[[Animaniacs]]'', alongside [[Slappy Squirrel]] in "Frontier Slappy". A short clip of this cartoon is featured in the opening credits of "[[Less Than Hero]]", an episode of another FOX TV show, ''[[Futurama]]''. |
The characters Tom, Dick and Larry would later make cameo appearances on the 1990s [[FOX Network]] series ''[[Animaniacs]]'', alongside [[Slappy Squirrel]] in "Frontier Slappy". A short clip of this cartoon is featured in the opening credits of "[[Less Than Hero]]", an episode of another FOX TV show, ''[[Futurama]]''. Dan Backslide also made a cameo appearance in ''[[Who Framed Roger Rabbit]]'', seen on a poster hanging on a wall in the alley which Eddie Valiant enters in [[Toontown]]. |
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== Quotes == |
== Quotes == |
Revision as of 05:06, 16 February 2009
This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2008) |
The Dover Boys at Pimento University | |
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Directed by | Charles M. Jones |
Produced by | Leon Schlesinger |
Animation by | Robert Cannon |
Layouts by | John McGrew |
Backgrounds by | Gene Fleury |
Color process | Technicolor |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures The Vitaphone Corporation |
Running time | 9 min. (one reel) |
"The Dover Boys at Pimento University" or "The Rivals of Roquefort Hall" (better known as simply The Dover Boys) is a 1942 Merrie Melodies cartoon produced by Leon Schlesinger Productions and directed by Chuck Jones. It was released by Warner Bros. on September 19, 1942. The cartoon is a parody of the Rover Boys, a popular juvenile fiction book series of the early 20th century. Jones would later remark that The Dover Boys was the first cartoon of his he found to be funny.[citation needed] In 1994, the cartoon was voted #49 of the 50 Greatest Cartoons of all time by members of the animation field.
Summary
The three Dover Boys, Tom, Dick and Larry (a play on both the Rover Boys' names "Tom, Sam and Dick" and the generic reference "Tom, Dick and Harry") are having a day out with "their" fiancée, "dainty" Dora Standpipe (a play on the name of the eldest Rover's fiancée "Dora Stanhope").
The Boys are called upon to rescue Dora when she is kidnapped by stock villain "The Nefarious" Dan Backslide (a play on the name of the Rover Boys series villain "Dan Baxter"), the "former sneak of Roquefort Hall", whose feelings for Dora are summed up in his comment, "How I love her! ... (father's money!)" Backslide takes Dora to a remote mountain cabin, but discovers that despite appearances, Dora is anything but "dainty"; she proceeds to give him quite a beating while still acting the damsel in distress — crying for help and pounding on the door and on Backslide — to the point where Backslide is also crying out for help from Tom, Dick and Larry.
When the Dover Boys finally arrive, they proceed to lay a few punches on the barely conscious Backslide before managing to knock each other out as Backslide collapses to the floor beneath their swinging fists. Dora is then escorted away by an odd man in an old-fashioned bathing suit who was a running gag throughout the cartoon, appearing periodically to interrupt the story by walking up, jumping in place, and moving on (to the tune of Ed Haley's "While Strolling Through the Park One Day"); he and Dora repeat these movements as they walk (and hop) off into the sunset.
The Boys are from Pimento University ("good ol' P.U.") and from time to time lapse into their "alma mater", sung to the tune of George Cooper and Henry Tucker's "Sweet Genevieve" ("Pimento U., old sweet P.U.", etc.)
Production notes
The Dover Boys is notable for being one of the earliest examples of stylized animation, a technique which used shape-heavy designs with minimal movement, as opposed to the type of animation done at that time by the Walt Disney studio. In addition, the short is among the earliest Schlesinger/Warner Bros. cartoons to utilize "smear" animation, where characters move with sudden bursts of speed depicted with only a frame or two of a smeared image between two extreme poses. Jones would go on to use similar animation techniques in later cartoons he directed starring Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck. Stylized animation would later be made famous by the artists at startup animation studio UPA, for which Jones moonlighted to direct the political film Hell-Bent for Election in 1944.
According to Jones, Schlesinger and the Warner Bros. studio executives were less than pleased when they screened The Dover Boys, and went through the process of attempting to fire him, despite the fact that the studio wanted him to abandon his Disney-like animation (this cartoon might have been seen as going too far to do so). [1] A replacement for Jones could not be easily found, so he was kept aboard.
Although voice credits from Warner Bros. cartoons are not easy to find beyond Mel Blanc, it is assumed that John McLeish voiced the part of the narrator (he performed a similar role as the stately, unctuous narrator on several Goofy shorts for the Disney studio).[citation needed] The voice of Tom Dover was performed by long-time Termite Terrace writer Tedd Pierce, who also provided the story.
Subsequent appearances
The characters Tom, Dick and Larry would later make cameo appearances on the 1990s FOX Network series Animaniacs, alongside Slappy Squirrel in "Frontier Slappy". A short clip of this cartoon is featured in the opening credits of "Less Than Hero", an episode of another FOX TV show, Futurama. Dan Backslide also made a cameo appearance in Who Framed Roger Rabbit, seen on a poster hanging on a wall in the alley which Eddie Valiant enters in Toontown.
Quotes
- Dan Backslide: A Runabout! I'LL STEAL IT! NO ONE WILL EVER KNOW!!
- Dan Backslide: Dear rich Dora Standpipe! How I love her... (father's money)!
- Tom: Unhand her, Dan Backslide! Unhand her, Dan Backslide! Unhand her, Dan Backslide!... (Facing audience) Hey, we're getting in a rut... Stand up and fight, you coward, bully, cad, and thief!
See also
References
- ^ Beck, Jerry (editor) (1994). The 50 Greatest Cartoons. Atlanta: Turner Publishing. Pg. 182.