Circus Capers

Circus Capers is a 1930 animated short film made by The Van Beuren Corporation and distributed by Pathé.[1] The film, which featured the characters Milton & Rita,[1] is part of the early sound cartoon series entitled Aesop's Sound Fables,[1] though it is not based on an Aesop fable.

The title card of Circus Capers

Released on 28 September 1930,[2] it was one of the last cartoons to feature Milton & Rita before Van Beuren was sued by Disney to their similarity to Mickey and Minnie in 1931.[3]

Plot

The marching band.

The film begins with a circus parade, with a variety of dancing animals, and a trombone band. Once at the circus, the first slideshow is an obese lady in revealing clothing, which excites the crowd as they dash in after her when she goes into the circus hall. The acts inside the circus are extraordinary, with a horse leaping from a high platform, Milton commanding a pack of lions through the hole between both his hands, and the circus keeper dancing with a lion. However, in the 3rd act, the circus keeper is kicked off the stage by the lion. Milton laughs at him off-stage, until the circus keeper snarls back at him. The next act, involves Milton in a human cannonball. For retaliation for laughing at him, the circus keeper implements more gunpowder than necessary into Milton's cannon. This makes Milton fly out of the circus hall and into the sky. The circus keeper then runs off with Rita into a private wagon. However, Milton falls back into the same wagon as theirs, and discovers Rita kissing the circus-keeper. Saddened and shocked, Milton slowly walks out the wagon, before breaking down. Then, Milton sings Laugh, Clown, Laugh. This makes Rita reject the circus keeper and attempt to take back Milton. She is unsuccessful, as Milton rejects her by blowing a raspberry. Milton then breaks the 4th wall by winking at the camera, and the cartoon ends with the camera zooming into his nose.[1]

Milton & Rita

The cartoon features Milton and Rita, the main characters in the Aesop shorts made in 1930. Milton looked similar to Mickey and Rita looked similar to Minnie Mouse. However, Milton and Rita were only in a few Sound Fables. As due to their similarity, Van Beuren was sued by Disney in 1931.[4] The outcome of the lawsuit was that Van Beuren agreed to no longer use Milton and Rita in his Sound Fables.[5]

Reception

Circus Capers was well received by the cinema magazines at that time.[6][7] The Motion Picture News said that the film was "Enjoyable" and said that the film will be "fine in any spot where comedy is needed".[6] Whilst The Film Daily said that the film was a "Good Aesop Fable" and also said that the mix of funny emotions and dramatic stuff "gets the laughs".[7]

gollark: If it's PCIe I think there's actually a screw at the case end.
gollark: SATA disks are probably easier since you can just pull both cables out easily.
gollark: Ah.
gollark: What are you trying to do anyway? Remove the HDD?
gollark: Truly this is ancient technology.

References

  1. SignOffsGuy (11 July 2013), Van Beuren Aesop's Fables Cartoon - Circus Capers (1930), retrieved 9 June 2018
  2. Bradley, Edwin M. (27 April 2009). The First Hollywood Sound Shorts, 1926–1931. McFarland. ISBN 9781476606842.
  3. "Animation Anecdotes #232 |". cartoonresearch.com. Retrieved 9 June 2018.
  4. Motion Picture Daily, 15 April 1931
  5. Andrews, Craig L. (31 October 2002). Broken Toy: A Man's Dream, a Company's Mystery. Author House. ISBN 9781403303905.
  6. Motion Picture News, Inc (1930). Motion Picture News (Oct-Dec 1930). Media History Digital Library. New York, Motion Picture News, Inc.
  7. New York, Wid's Films and Film Folks (1930). The Film Daily (Jul-Dec 1930). Media History Digital Library. New York, Wid's Films and Film Folks, Inc.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.