Meet John Doughboy
Porky introduces a newsreel of wartime spot gags, including a spoof of the RKO Pictures logo, and caricatures of Jack Benny and Rochester.
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- Cast:
- Mel Blanc , Billy Bletcher , Robert C. Bruce , Robert Clampett
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Reviews
Pretty Good
Boring
Not sure how, but this is easily one of the best movies all summer. Multiple levels of funny, never takes itself seriously, super colorful, and creative.
This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
Love animation, it was a big part of my life as a child, particularly Disney, Looney Tunes, Hanna and Barbera and Tom and Jerry, and still love it whether it's film, television or cartoons. Actually appreciate it even more now through young adult eyes, thanks to broader knowledge and taste and more interest in animation styles and various studios and directors.Have a lot of appreciation and admiration for Bob Clampett, with a visual and humour style so distinctive and easily recognisable. His early work was very variable but when on top form and in his prime the best of his work was great and even more. 'Meet John Doughboy' is not one of Clampett's best. It is a very good cartoon though, even if there are funnier, wittier and fresher cartoons from him, and saw Clampett's unique style all over it and being at ease with the material. Admittedly, 'Meet John Doughboy' may be slight and while Porky's more substantial role is appreciated he is not always as interesting as the supporting characters and caricatures.While most of the cartoon is very amusing and well done, not all the gags work, either because the timing is not as sharp or because some of the material goes over the head due to unfamiliarity. 'Meet John Doughboy's' caricatures are far from forgettable and provide a lot of fun, familiarity with those being caricatured is in order though. Mel Blanc as always does a fantastic job with the voice work, showing an unparalleled ability to bring individuality to multiple characters. The animation is as always high in atmosphere, with lots of smooth movement, imaginative detail in the gags and rich and meticulous detail in the backgrounds. Carl Stalling's music score is as ever high in energy, liveliness, character, lushness and whimsy, and not only is dynamic and fits effortlessly with the action but enhances everything.What's more, 'Meet John Doughboy' is entertaining, with some amusing wildness, wit and bite starting to show at this point in the dialogue. Plus there are some beautifully timed and animated and imaginative sight gags, that contain some surprises and a lively pace.In conclusion, well done and entertaining if not perfect. 7/10 Bethany Cox
. . . without wearing any pants in MEET JOHN DOUGHBOY?! This can hardly be considered respectful of any military tradition (since at least the time of Mel Gibson in BRAVEHEART). And since when can coastal artillery shoot "10 million shells a second"? The weight of that many shells in the same spot all at once likely would collapse any ocean overlook into the sea. Further, how accurate could targeting be at that rate of fire? And how would the artillery men know if the first five million shells utterly destroyed the target(s), allowing them to reserve the other half of their per-second ammo supply for later threats, reaction times being what they are? On the other hand, robotizing the Statue of Liberty to spray incoming enemy planes with bug bomb is such an ahead-of-its-time idea, it even may have helped Tom Cruise as #49 save his own bacon in OBLIVION so that #52 would not waltz in and steal his woman. The racist Jack Benny bit with some sort of CHITTY CHITTY BANG BANG flivver as a secret weapon is less a question mark than just a wrong-headed and now archaic allusion.
This comes on the 2-Disc Special Edition DVD of The Maltese Falcon, as part of its Warner Night at the Movies portion. I'm not sure seeing this before an escapist film(an excellent one, don't get me wrong) was a great thing... I would think being reminded of the situation right right before the opening credits of the picture would keep you from enjoying it. Anyway, this has Looney Tunes' Porky Pig(who looks almost like we know him to) presenting updates and such on the war, apparently not very long before the US entered it. How to deal with something that serious and unpleasant? Turn it into a bunch of gags, most of them visual. I gotta admit, however, that they are very funny. There's a bit of black comedy among it, and not everyone would find this entire thing to be in good taste. This has a spoof of a commercial from back then. Honestly, I was surprised they used a Napoleon quote, I wouldn't think they'd follow anything of his. There is some recognizable music used. The animation is well-done, with effective use of lighting and angles. This is entirely worth the 7 minute investment of time. There is disturbing content and a little racism in this. I recommend this to anyone who can imagine laughing at this. 7/10
As usual for Bob Clampett in this period, another fine comedy newsreel with an armed forces theme -- with the war going on in Europe and a draft in this country, it was a natural theme and the beginning of the flag waving period. The credited writer is Dave Monahan, the best of Termite Terrace's writers for 'fake newsreel' cartoons and the jokes have not aged badly.Clampett was one of the two geniuses directing at Schlesinger's cartoon factory in this period -- Chuck Jones' peak period would start next year and Friz Freleng, although rarely a groundbreaker, just turned out excellent cartoons. But Clampett and Tex Avery were madcaps, Avery slightly better at gag construction but Clampett for his speedy and outrageous animation Don't miss ANY chance to see any of his cartoons.