Broadway Bow Wow's
Broadway Bow Wow's
| 01 August 1954 (USA)
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The story of John, a show biz dog, and his partner/fiancee Mary. We see him about to jump off a bridge when he stops and explains why he is doing it.

Reviews
Stevecorp

Don't listen to the negative reviews

BoardChiri

Bad Acting and worse Bad Screenplay

Senteur

As somebody who had not heard any of this before, it became a curious phenomenon to sit and watch a film and slowly have the realities begin to click into place.

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Plustown

A lot of perfectly good film show their cards early, establish a unique premise and let the audience explore a topic at a leisurely pace, without much in terms of surprise. this film is not one of those films.

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Robert Reynolds

This short was made at the Walter Lantz studio during Tex Avery's brief stint as a director there and though he wasn't involved, his influence is seen throughout. As I want to discuss some of the details, this is a spoiler warning: This is a story told in flashback (for the most part) and is about two dogs, John and Mary, who start out at the bottom of the list in vaudeville (I suspect the idea of making them dogs was a deliberate joke, as the dog act on the vaudeville circuit was normally placed at the end of the show, to clear the theater out for the next performance) and gradually rise to the top and play the Palace, doing the same act throughout. John is then foolish enough to walk out on Mary for another woman, who's just using him until he's out of money. John then tries to go back to Mary, only to find she's a successful solo act. He tries a solo and bombs, tries again to contact Mary repeatedly, with no luck and decides to jump off a bridge, which is where we find him at the start of the short.Near the beginning, on the stage backdrop in a vaudeville house John and Mary perform in, one of the ads touts "Avery's Liver Tonic", which is appropriate, because Tex Avery's stylistic fingerprints are all through this short. The gags recall several shorts Avery made while he was at MGM, most specifically his Symphony In Slang. The narration even sounds the same! Now that I think of it, the principal female character in Symphony In Slang is named Mary, though I don't recall if the narrator is named John. It's a very funny cartoon.The ending of this short is mixed, for my tastes. I would have ended the short about ten or fifteen seconds sooner! I won't spoil the gag here.This short was released on one of the Columbia House Woody Woodpecker and Friends DVDs and is well worth watching. Most recommended.

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