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DVD Cartoons That Time Forgot - The Ub Iwerks Collection, Vol. 2:

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  • Director(s): Ub Iwerks 
  • Editor: Image Entertainment
  • Category: Classics (Silents/Avant Garde)
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  • DVD Cartoons That Time Forgot - The Ub Iwerks Collection, Vol. 2


    Ub Iwerks was one of the greatest animators of the silent and early sound eras: he animated "Steamboat Willie" and other early Disney shorts virtually by himself. But the films he produced at his own studio after breaking with Walt Disney in 1930 lack the vitality of his earlier work. During the '30s, the animators with Disney, the Fleischers, Warner Bros., and MGM developed a new style of cartoon humor that centered on characters with strong, recognizable personalities. Iwerks's first recurring character, Flip the Frog, who appears in more than half the cartoons in this collection, never developed into a wholesome good guy or a sarcastic antihero. He remained an observer, rather than someone who initiated the action, as Mickey Mouse and Bugs Bunny did. The rambling plots further weaken these films. Flip stumbles into a haunted house in "Spooks" (1932), but the artists can't decide if they're trying to be funny or scary, and the film falls between two chairs. The garish colors and bizarre designs in "Balloon Land" (1935) have a camp appeal, but the inflatable hero and heroine and the spiny villain simply aren't very interesting. Iwerks's cartoons unfortunately remain less than the sum of their parts, but this disc (in unison with Vol. 1) offers an interesting historical perspective on the development of popular animation. --Charles Solomon
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    Review(s): DVD Cartoons That Time Forgot - The Ub Iwerks Collection, Vol. 2
    Historical collection, and quite interesting.


    Many of the other commentators of Volume 1 and Volume 2 have very nicely described the contents of these two collections. I'd like to just say that I found these cartoons to be very essential for anyone interested in the history of animation.

    Flip the Frog comes across as another Mickey Mouse, Willie Whopper is somewhat interesting, while the Comicolor series is somewhat similar to Silly Symphonies. I'm not surprised at this since Ub worked at Disney, and is responsible for the early animation of Mickey Mouse and several Silly Symphonies.

    I found the liner notes helpful in explaining the social context of these cartoons. Many are poking fun at the Hollywood stars of the day (Disney and Warner also have several of their own similar cartoons), others have relevant commentary about various conditions in our country at the time, and others are just interesting trips into the supernatural. Keep in mind that all these things have been pursued by Disney, Warner Brothers, etc., so there is nothing unusual here. There are plenty of sight gags and the usual exaggerations that early cartoons are especially known for.

    Also, I think it would be fair to say that the characters and stories as a whole tend not to progressively develop over the short life of Ub's studio. If you treat all the cartoons simply as individual accomplishments, then it's not a big deal, but as a whole they don't really change much. This isn't necessarily a problem, just an observation.

    It's kind of interesting to me that I always felt I was almost watching Disney cartoons, but at the same time there are definitely other edgier influences at work here. The fact that Ub's staff of animators largely came from the Fleischer studio, and included Betty Boop's creator, made the difference. Because of this, innuendo abounds in several of Flip's cartoons, produced from 1930-1933 (pre-Code era). One cartoon, "The Milkman" ends with Flip and the kid singing "Hail, Hail, the gang's all here", and the horse responds by singing "What the hell do we care?". The second time around, as the horse startes to sing the same response, Flip bashes him over the head with a milk bottle to stop him from using the "naughty" word. Holy cow!!! Can you imagine Disney doing this? In "The Office Boy", the sexual innuendos hit a high, especially with the secretary. I was laughing for being taken by surprise. I didn't expect this sort of content. Well, get ready for an interesting time. By the way, unless I'm mistaken, it seemed like Volume 2 was the one for the edgier cartoons. Willie Whopper's cartoons are not too bad, really. They are tall tales told by a kid. Lastly, the Comi-Color cartoons, though fairly delightful, never measure up to the quality of Disney's Silly symphonies. I'd have to say that they are probably the highest quality cartoons Ub produced.

    Both DVD cases say that these cartoons are "now viewed for the first time on DVD in unfaded, pristine prints from the orginal negatives". I must protest! Many of these cartoons don't look or sound pristine at all, but are in many cases faded and dirty, with sound to match. It depends on the cartoons. Most of the Flip cartoons aren't so bad, the Willie Whopper ones are the worst of these two collections, and The Comi-Color cartoons all seem to have a softness about them (video and audio). I'd say that perhaps this is the best we can get our hands on, but, really, to say "unfaded, pristine prints" is just flat-out not the case. Overall, most of them are qujite watchable, but just keep these observations in mind. I give both collections four stars due to the technical issues.

    Volume 2 contents


    26 cartoons fill up this volume for 190 minutes worth of cartoon nostalgia. Some of the humor isn't "politically correct", and some of it is a bit ribald, but the cartoons are for the most part entertaining. All but five of the cartoons star the character of "Flip the Frog", a character best taken in small doses (in watching all the cartoons at once, the humor wears a bit thin.) All the Flip cartoons are in black and white, as is one of the Willie Whopper cartoons. The remaining four cartoons are in color, three of which stand alone. The fourth was apparently released at different times under "Famous Fairytales" (as on this disc) and "Willie Whopper" labels.

    Here is a list of the disc's contents:
    1) Flip the Frog / The Nurse Maid (1932)
    2) Flip the Frog / Room Runners (1932)
    3) Flip the Frog / The Office Boy (1932)
    4) Flip the Frog / The Milkman (1932)
    5) Flip the Frog / The New Car (1931)
    6) Flip the Frog / Ragtime Romeo (1931)
    7) Flip the Frog / What a LIfe (1932)
    8) Flip the Frog / The Bully (1932)
    9) Flip the Frog / Funny Face (1932)
    10) Flip the Frog / Movie Mad (1931)
    11) Flip the Frog / The Cuckoo Murder Case (1930)
    12) Willie Whopper / Stratos Fear (1933)
    13) Comi Color / Jack Frost (1934)
    14) Flip the Frog / Chinaman's Chance (1933)
    15) Willie Whopper / Hell's Fire (1934) (aka Famous Fairytales / Masquerade Holiday)
    16) Flip the Frog / Techno-Cracked (1933)
    17) Flip the Frog / Soda Squirt (1933)
    18) Comi Color / The Headless Horseman (1934)
    19) Flip the Frog / Spooks (19331)
    20) Comi Color / Balloonland (1935)
    21) Flip the Frog / Laughing Gas (1931)
    22) Flip the Frog / Circus (1932)
    23) Flip the Frog / Stormy Seas (1932)
    24) Flip the Frog / Coo Coo the Magician (1933)
    25) Flip the Frog / School Days (1932)
    26) Flip the Frog / The Goal Rush (1932)

    Creative, imaginative, and hilarious roll into one


    It's as good if not better than Volume 1 of Cartoons That Time Forgot. The episodes are a bit more wierd in this volume. Hope there will be a Volume 3 coming out soon.


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