Willie Whopper
"Say, did I ever tell ya this one?"
Willie Whopper was a short lived series of cartoons produced and directed by Ub Iwerks, running for 13 shorts from 1933 to 1934. The series was made as a replacement for Iwerks' previous series Flip the Frog, alongside his ComiColor Cartoons shorts.
The shorts all follow a simple formula--Willie, a young, eager boy, tells his friends about some outlandish adventure he went on recently, which serves as the story in question for the short--naturally, the stories turn out to be nothing but exaggerated lies (or, "whoppers", hence his name). Like other Iwerks cartoons, the shorts are rife with cartoony animation, as well as a stylized rubberhose art style, courtesy of designers such as Grim Natwick and Berny Wolf. Carl Stalling would also provide pleasant, if pedestrian scores for the shorts. The series was usually produced in black and white, although there were three entries which were filmed in color, and Iwerks still had his cels colored in spite of the black & white footage, to see if he could get different shades of gray in the photographing.
While the series was fairly well recieved when it was released, it came to an abrupt end when MGM dropped distribution of Ub's cartoons, instead choosing to distribute Harman and Ising's Happy Harmonies shorts. As such, Ub abandoned the character and shifted focus towards his ill-fated ComiColor Cartoons, with Willie becoming yet another one of many forgotten stars of the Golden Age of Animation.
Fortunately, some of his cartoons have fallen into the Public Domain, and as such are easy to find, giving his films a chance to see the light of day again.
1933
- Play Ball
- The Air Race/Spite Flight: The pilot for the series, but the original version was unreleased due to MGM demanding more exposition as to why Willie joined the air race.
- Stratos-Fear
- Davy Jones Locker: Filmed in color.
1934
- Hell's Fire (AKA Masquerade Holiday and Vulcan Entertains): The only surviving color print is missing footage, but a black and white print exists which has all of the original footage intact.
- Robin Hood, Jr.: Filmed in color.
- Insultin' the Sultan
- Reducing Creme
- Rasslin' Round
- Cave Man
- Jungle Jitters
- The Good Scout
- Viva Willie
- Art Evolution: Willie initially looked like a boy version of Betty Boop, but Ub didn't feel he was funny enough, and quickly altered his design to be fatter and lankier than before.
- Batman Can Breathe in Space: Willie demonstrates this in "Stratos-Fear" when he gets inflated with laughing gas and floats off into space.
- Catch Phrase: The quote that introduces this page popped up in many of the shorts.
- Dastardly Whiplash: Simon Ligree makes an appearance in "Hell's Fire".
- Deranged Animation: "Stratos Fear".
- Easter Egg: In "Air Race", one of the shops Willie crashes into has the name Iwerks.
- Fire and Brimstone Hell: Which is convieniently located under a volcano in "Hell's Fire".
- Flat Character: Willie himself is pretty non-descript in personality.
- Flipping the Bird: In a decidedly anti-clerical joke, "The Air Race" gives us an angry St. Peter, who is waiting on the cloud trying to hitch a ride with a plane rider, gets passed up, and angrily flips the bird at him--with four fingered hands.
- Fluffy Cloud Heaven: In "The Air Race", we get a glimpse of St. Peter at the gates of Heaven, trying to hitch a ride with the plane racers.
- Four-Fingered Hands: And they can still flip the bird with them, going by St. Peter's brief appearance.
- Meaningful Name: Whopper was a classic phrase for a lie.
- No Celebrities Were Harmed: Amelia Earhart makes an appearance in "The Air Race".
- Roger Rabbit Effect: In the climax of "The Air Race" has a brief segment of Willie's plane crashing into a real life smokestack. In fact, a scene similar to this was originally meant to be done in the original Mickey Mouse cartoon Plane Crazy, but was scrapped.
- Satan: A cartoony version of him appears in "Hell's Fire".
- Sentient Vehicle: The plane of the villain from "The Air Race".