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Farm Frolics

Farm Frolics (1941)

May. 10,1941
|
6.4
| Animation Comedy

A series of wacky vignettes involving farm animals.

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Reviews

Numerootno
1941/05/10

A story that's too fascinating to pass by...

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Usamah Harvey
1941/05/11

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

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Adeel Hail
1941/05/12

Unshakable, witty and deeply felt, the film will be paying emotional dividends for a long, long time.

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Juana
1941/05/13

what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.

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Edgar Allan Pooh
1941/05/14

. . . FARM FROLICS is a good bet. Any school text worth its blood-pressure-friendly low-sodium table seasoning will shake out three words explaining each obsolete syllable used by that Avon dude who croaked 400 years ago. (Now that Bill's product line is dying out, perhaps the writings of someone who stuck with timeless words--such as Dr. Seuss--rather than faddish ones will come to the forefront, and Avon will finally stop calling.) If anything, FARM FROLICS is MORE obscure than Shakespeare, since it references lots more people who've been dead since at least the 1900s. Back then, radio supposedly was the dominant U.S. medium, and almost no one had satellite! In the absence of luminaries such as Howard Stern, the Looney Tune people who threw together FARM FROLICS crammed it full of impersonations and catch phrases with the shelf life of soap bubbles. It's like watching a Johnny Carson monologue from New Year's Eve, 999. Do you think that a week later, Here's Johnny or anyone else even remembered anything that happened in years with just three numbers? Whether it's HAMLET or FARM FROLICS, no one can make omelets without breaking any eggs.

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Michael_Elliott
1941/05/15

Farm Frolics (1941) *** (out of 4)Robert Clampett directed this narrative short, which takes us to the farm where we learn about the various animals and going-ons.There were quite a few of these types of shorts that were released during this period. Tex Avery was a master at them but other director's also did well within the sub-genre. This short benefits from the excellent animation that you've come to expect but there are also a few funny stories along the way. One prime example is the trusted old farmer's dog who gets the newspaper everyday but not for the reason you might expect. There's also a funny bit dealing with some baby pigs gathered around a clock as well as the "quiet" sounds of a mother ant. If you're a fan of these narrative shorts then this here is certainly one of the better ones.

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Lee Eisenberg
1941/05/16

One of the many early Merrie Melodies cartoons existing pretty much as an excuse for a series of narrated sight gags, Bob Clampett's "Farm Frolics" is noticeably tamer than "The Isle of Pingo Pongo" or "A Day at the Zoo", but still provides its fair share of laughs. It's pretty much the same kinds of jokes as Clampett's "Crazy Cruise" the following year. Granted, the jokes are fairly hokey. In my opinion, Tex Avery was the master of spot gags, and Bob Clampett reached his all-time apex with "The Great Piggy Bank Robbery".Still, you gotta imagine how this stuff must have seemed the first time that moviegoers ever watched it. I figure that they very likely cracked up (or at least guffawed). And you'll probably at least chuckle at the gags. Worth seeing. Just came out on DVD on the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 5.

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ccthemovieman-1
1941/05/17

Usually, when you see the date of a Looney Tune as being very early 1940s and you immediately hear the voice of narrator (usually Robert Bruce) you almost can be assured it won't be the normal wild, wacky and humorous cartoon you're expecting. They were very corny in the early '40s and most of the humor just isn't there as it was by the mid '40s and the end of World War II.There is no central character, such as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck or Porky Pig in these above- mentioned type of 'toons. They are usually are just a series of quick gags on a subject: fairy tales, different places in the world or - such as in this one - life on a farm. I would this one, however, better than the others I've seen. At least the gags had some humor, enough to at least produce a few smiles.The rural scenes are beautifully drawn and look great on this "restored" Golden Collection Volume Five DVD set. Also, some of the gags - if you know classic-era performers - aren't bad, such as a horse imitating Eddie Cantor or a dog reading Dick Tracy in the Sunday newspaper comic strips or the birds building a FHA-approved house.

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