The Crunch Bird
The Crunch Bird (El pájaro crujiente) is an animated short by Joe Petrovich, Len Maxell, and Ted Petok.[1] It won the 1971 Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film.[2]
The Crunch Bird | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ted Petok |
Produced by | Ted Petok |
Starring | Len Maxwell |
Animation by | Joe Petrovich |
Production company | Maxwell-Petok-Petrovich Productions Regency Films |
Distributed by | Regency Films |
Release date | 1971 |
Running time | 2 min. |
Country | USA |
Language | English |
Joe Petrovich animated the cartoon. Len Maxwell provided the voices for the husband, wife, and pet shop owner. It was followed by the sequel Crunch Bird II in 1975.[3]
With a running time of only two minutes thirty two seconds, it is the shortest animated short film ever to receive an Academy Award.[4]
It was also one of the first animation outside New York or California (Michigan) to win an Oscar (Oregon's Closed Mondays from 1974 and Louisiana's The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore from 2010).[5]
The Crunch Bird appeared on the 1982 TV series Jokebook. The short was censored in it as one line was changed from "Crunch Bird, my ass!" to "Crunch Bird, my butt!"[6]
Plot
A Narrator tells of a woman searching for a birthday gift for her husband Murray, who has few interests and is largely occupied by his job. At a pet store, the proprietor offers a "Crunch Bird." The Crunch Bird devours anything to which its master directs it. To demonstrate, the proprietor commands, "Crunch Bird! The chair!" and the bird reduces a wooden straight chair to sawdust within seconds. The woman is impressed by the bird's talent, buys it, and takes it home.
Murray, exhausted from a hard day at his job, comes home. His wife shows him his birthday present, the Crunch Bird. Crabbily, the husband replies, "Crunch Bird, my ass!" The bird swoops toward Murray, and mercifully, the film cuts to black and the credits roll before we see what follows. . . .[7] [8]
See also
- List of American films of 1971
- Detroit, Michigan
- Culture of Michigan
References
- Ted Petok (1917-2010)-Cartoon Brew
- Short Film Winners: 1972 Oscars
- Crunch Bird II (1975)-IMDB
- "Cartoons Considered For An Academy Award 1971 -". cartoonresearch.com.
- The Dog Days of Summer, Detroit – and “The Crunch Bird” (1971)-Cartoon Research
- https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x4p35q5
- BCDB.com
- Letterboxd
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: The Crunch Bird |
- The Crunch Bird on IMDb
- Official Website
- The short film The Crunch Bird is available for free download at the Internet Archive