Am i the only one who thinks........Average?
I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.
View MoreThis is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
View MoreEach character in this movie — down to the smallest one — is an individual rather than a type, prone to spontaneous changes of mood and sometimes amusing outbursts of pettiness or ill humor.
View More" . . . ham and eggs, hot cakes, an ice cream soda, watermelon, hot biscuits, cornbread, sweet favors, and a roast turkey" are the necessary enticements for Widow Yoo Hoo to Make the Iceman Cometh into her Murphy Bed during this 1930s Warner Bros.' animated short, I ONLY HAVE EYES FOR YOU. While Ms. Yoo Hoo is a bit long in the tooth, her stuttering iceman with a prominent over-bite is no Spring Chicken himself. Though the iceman has a crush on an attractive Airhead blonde along his delivery route, the latter chick has set her cap for someone who can warble like a radio crooner, and eventually Professor Mockingbird fills her bill. Though most of Warner's shorts warn 21st Century America about its upcoming Calamities, Catastrophes, Cataclysms, and Apocalypti, I ONLY HAVE EYES FOR YOU is one of the few delivering the sort of personal message one might find in their horoscope. EYES is a Private Message to the "Yankee Clipper," Joe Dimaggio, to beware of that wife-stealing egghead playwright Arthur Miller. Unfortunately, "Say it ain't so, Joe" was a deaf to Warner's Cassandra-like caution regarding his spouse, actress Marilyn Monroe (who dumped Joe for Art), as were we Future People of the 21st Century to Warner's hundreds of warnings against White House Resident-Elect Rump.
View More"I Only Have Eyes for You" in one sense seems like a relic of the days when the Warner Bros. cartoons were just breaking out of the Disney mold but hadn't yet gotten all the way. It portrays an iceman having the hots for a woman who only likes crooners, so he hires a professional imitator to sing like them while the iceman can pretend to sing. Sure enough, the whole plan eventually blows up in their faces. If anything, the iceman was asking for it, given that he was using the imitator as a mere means (that is, using someone so as only to benefit oneself).I notice that one of the voice artists is Joe Dougherty, who provided Porky Pig's voice before Mel Blanc (and one can hear a Porky-style stutter in the iceman's voice). Mel of course joined the animation studio not long after this, and I would say that his arrival cemented their break away from the Disney mold.Worth seeing, if only once.
View MoreYes, I do enjoy I Only Have Eyes for You. In 1937, with more homes coming within reach of electricity, icemen were on their way out. The spinster bird whom he visited offered goodies but he declined, so he proceeded to the home of Katie Canary, whom he adored. She loved only radio crooners like Bing Crosby, and had the radio on, listening to him sing, "Let It Be Me". So, the iceman came upon Professor Mockingbird, professional imitator. He did several imitations, including the one that I most fondly remember, pretending to play "Put On Your Old Grey Bonnet" on calliope. Then he began to croon "I Only Have Eyes For You", and rode in back of ice truck, to fool Katie Canary, but caught cold so it all backfired. The radio was removed, and an electric refrigerator put in its place, so the iceman would not come to THAT house any more, and his girlfriend got this counterfeit crooner! He wound up marrying the unattractive spinster, enjoying her wonderful cooking.
View MoreIn this film, the lead male bird is an iceman and first stop is at an female bird's home. While she isn't good looking, she still wants him as an husband. Anyway, after an brief chase, he stops at his girlfriend's home and sees her next to the radio listening to Bing Crosby. Katie tells him that she only has eyes for an radio crooner. Felling hurt, he sees the answer to his problem: Professor Mockingbird an imitator. After the professor present his act, the "hero" hires him to sing for Katie. Although she only sees him, we know that it was just Professor Mockingbird in the back of the truck singing. At first it went well, till the professor caught an cold and it all backfire. Later, Katie trades the radio for the professor and an refrigerator. As for the hero, he ends up back to the other bird who asked for ice in the first place. Believe it or not, they got married or at least, we assume they did. Anyway, it wasn't bad but Tex Avery did better later on still though I recommend it for the crooner toon fans but overall, it was good.Final score: an 8 out of 10.
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