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Booby Hatched

Booby Hatched (1944)

October. 14,1944
|
6.9
|
NR
| Animation Comedy Family

A duck struggles mightily and finally hatches her eggs in the bitter cold. All but one, that is: poor little Robespierre. Mama doesn't notice him missing until after he has sprouted legs and run off in search of warmth.

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Lovesusti
1944/10/14

The Worst Film Ever

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FeistyUpper
1944/10/15

If you don't like this, we can't be friends.

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Afouotos
1944/10/16

Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.

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Usamah Harvey
1944/10/17

The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.

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Vimacone
1944/10/18

Frank Tashlin was wrapping up his 2nd stint at Schlesinger's in 1944 (supposedly). He had directed a string of mini-masterpieces during this time frame, including this one.A mother duck hatches her eggs, except one. Robespierre, partially hatched, is in search of a warm spot to hatch, but encounters peril along the way.A little known fact, in between his two stints at Schlesinger's, Tashlin worked on storyboards for Peter And The Wolf when he was at the Disney studio. This would have been done around 1940 and the film was released in 1946. There are some striking similarities in the staging of the snowstorm scenes. Some historians have stated that Tashlin utilized some of the ideas he conceived for Disney in his 1940's WB cartoons. Like Tashlin's other short released in late 1944 THE STUPID CUPID, I got the feeling that this film has some long lost footage, based on a conspicuous jump cut. While it hasn't been really discussed as much as THE STUPID CUPID, I wonder if Tashlin's eventual departure had something to do with the poor edits or if the Hay's Office objected to the adult gags that were prevalent in Tashlin's cartoons from this time frame.Warren Foster reworked this premise for McKimson a few years later as THE SHELL SHOCKED EGG (1948), which was more dialog driven. Both are excellent shorts.

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Edgar Allan Pooh
1944/10/19

. . . knows that 90% of animators are Asian, because that continent is the Ancestral Homeland of Cartoons as much as Africa is the Fatherland of NBA basketball. Yet, most of the artists associated with BOOBY HATCHED sport European-sounding monikers, because Rich People Party Congressional Storm Troopers were sent to kidnap every Japanese man, woman, and child at the outset of World War Two, and truck them to desert Ethnic Cleansing Gulags, which turned out to be Death Camps for many. None of these folks faced a shred of evidence that they had done anything wrong. All of them remained locked up for years without a smidgen of "Due Process." Upon release, none of the surviving detainees got their homes, businesses, or money back. "How could this happen in America?" ask my Millenial classmates. How could White strangers be allowed to occupy the Prime Digs built with the sweat off your brow, and passing down the stolen property through the generations into the 21st Century? Three words: Military-Style Assault Rifles. Not one of these political prisoners being herded like sheep to slaughter had so much as a semi-automatic AR-15. That's why five million Americans ALREADY have stocked up on their Bushmasters, and why 100 million more will do so under President Trump. When THE PURGE happens in Real Life, the descendants of the scabs who BOOBY HATCHED the Japanese animators' jobs and homes may be among the first to go.

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Lee Eisenberg
1944/10/20

One of Warner's many pre-1948 cartoons stripped of its opening credits and carrying the Blue Ribbon logo in their place, Frank Tashlin's "Booby Hatched" really seems to have come out of left field. Probably the neatest scene is when the mother duck rattles off the ducklings' names: Franklin, Eleanor and Winston*, before she realizes that Robespierre is missing. Of course, the thought of her son having that name brings to my mind the fact that so many children nowadays have last names as first names. Above all, it's a good thing that I first watched this cartoon nowadays when I'm old enough to understand what it portrays. Had I watched it when I was about six, I wouldn't have understood the ducklings' names.Anyway, the wolf and bear don't stick in my mind as much as the idea of a duck named Robespierre. But it is a pretty neat cartoon. Worth seeing.*What about Joseph? Then again, she probably wouldn't want to name any of her children after Stalin.

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Robert Reynolds
1944/10/21

This is an incredibly funny cartoon, but a minor character steals the show. There is a hibernating bear who has two lines and the second is one of the funniest bits in the whole short. Other things to watch for are the roll call of the baby ducks' names after they hatch and Robspierre's closing line at the very end. Well worth looking for. Recommended.

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