Obsessiveness? Insanity? Well, what else would you find in a Tex Avery cartoon?
The rooster in Tex Avery’s Cock-a-Doodle Dog (1951) follows the rule. Roosters crow. So that’s what he does. All during the cartoon. Spike wants to sleep, but becomes crazy trying to stop the rooster from doing what roosters do.
Finally, we reach the end of the cartoon. The rooster decides to sleep. Now, it’s the insane Spike who is obsessively crowing. The rooster tries to stop him. The last gag is a complete turnabout as the rooster looks at the camera to end the short.
Mike Lah, Grant Simmons and Walt Clinton are the animators, while Rich Hogan helped Avery with the gags. Avery even plays Spike. Is Daws Butler the rooster? Could be, but I don’t really know. Ed Benedict handled the layouts and Johnny Johnsen painted the backgrounds; if you have John Canemaker’s book on Avery you’ll see two wonderful layouts from this cartoon.
Avery Is a pokemon de la de juegos y sin corbata y pantalones cortos como si fuera en una boda de cena con hollywoodienses 1941 fat cats
ReplyDelete"Ventriloquist Cat", "The Magical Maestro", "Rock-A-Bye Bear" and this cartoon are the only shorts where Spike triumphs at the end. 😎 That "timber" gag will never not be old or a laugh-riot. was re-used from "Wags to Riches" and "Daredevil Droopy." 🪓🤣
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