They borrowed a gag from Oswald’s Ocean Hop (1927) and Mickey Mouse’s Plane Crazy (1928) for the climax. Bosko creates a make-shift plane from a broom and a dachshund, twisting the wiener dog’s head to get the “plane” aloft (it was the body in the other shorts; there’s a switch on the gag in Bosko’s Hold Anything involving a goat, and a flower in Ain't Nature Grand, both 1930).
The bad guy gorilla shoots a cannon at Bosko’s plane (in reused animation), and the cannon ball is swallowed by the open-mouthed dog (for some reason, the plane now stays in the air without the dog’s head twirling like a propeller).
Bosko develops long spaghetti arms and fires back.
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The explosion turns the enemy aircraft into dozens of mini-planes buzzing around (the gorilla conveniently disappears from the picture).
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Bosko flies into the scene with an insect spray can.
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Harman ends the cartoon the same way he did Crosby, Columbo and Vallee (1932)—instead of a flame, the last plane is killed by spit.
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Friz Freleng and Max Maxwell receive the animation credit; Bosko and kinky-haired Honey look a little cruder in this one. The opening is imaginative with explosions behind the opening title card, reversing the black and white colours.
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