Fall Out Fall In

Fall Out Fall In is a Walt Disney cartoon starring Donald Duck. It was released on April 23, 1943 by RKO Radio Pictures.[1] The film's title incorporates two military commands: "fall in," meaning to create an organized formation of soldiers, and "fall out," to dissolve that formation.

Fall Out Fall In
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJack King
Produced byWalt Disney
Music byPaul J. Smith
Production
company
Distributed byRKO Radio Pictures
Release date
April 23, 1943 (U.S.)
Running time
8 minutes
LanguageEnglish

Synopsis

Donald, an Army private, is on an all-day march with his unit. He keeps up his enthusiasm for the first few miles and starts to mark them off on the pack of the soldier in front of him, but fatigue and unforgiving weather conditions - first rain, then snow, then heat - soon take their toll on him. By the time the unit commander calls a halt for the day, the tally marks cover not only the soldier's pack, but the backs of his arms, legs, and helmet as well. An exhausted and famished Donald quickly dumps out a mountain of gear from his pack, but he is not allowed to eat until he has set up his tent. It takes him only seconds to do this, but the tent soon collapses and he ends up struggling long into the night to set it up again. He dumps a bucket of water over the sagging canvas, causing it to shrink and rip in half.

As Donald tries to get some sleep, the peculiar snoring patterns of his fellow soldiers - bugler, drummer, machine gunner, mortar artilleryman - keep waking him up. The moment he passes out from exhaustion, the bugler plays reveille to wake everyone up for the new day. He hurriedly crams all his gear into his pack, now comically bulging out in all directions, but inadvertently lashes it to a tree as he is tying down the cover. When the unit moves out, he stumbles after the other soldiers, uprooting the tree and dragging it along with his pack.

Voice cast

gollark: Please do *not* invent your own cryptography for any serious purposes.
gollark: Anyway, you could just write code for doing so for a 1D array, and then code for filling 10 N-1-dimensional arrays and merging them into a N-dimensional array
gollark: *Why* are you making a 5D array in the first place?
gollark: Also, IPv4 addresses are not very cheap.
gollark: I believe you'd need your ISP to allow BGP things which they probably don't.

References

  1. Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. pp. 74–76. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  2. Hischak, Thomas S. (2011). Disney Voice Actors: A Biographical Dictionary. McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0786462711.
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