Noah's Lark
Noah's Lark
| 24 October 1929 (USA)
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Noah seems to have major problems with his animals when they all get restless and leave the ship to go to Coney Island and Luna Park to get away from him.

Reviews
BootDigest

Such a frustrating disappointment

ScoobyMint

Disappointment for a huge fan!

Livestonth

I am only giving this movie a 1 for the great cast, though I can't imagine what any of them were thinking. This movie was horrible

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StyleSk8r

At first rather annoying in its heavy emphasis on reenactments, this movie ultimately proves fascinating, simply because the complicated, highly dramatic tale it tells still almost defies belief.

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Hitchcoc

This is another example of little pieces made into a single event. The only thing these pieces have in common is that they involve primitively drawn animals, doing various things with or to one another. It is fast and joyful and frantic. Apparently, one of the very first Fleicher animations.

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tavm

This was the first of the Max Fleischer Talkartoons. In this one, Noah has his ark stop at Luna Park on Coney Island for his animals to take on the rides and other fun. Many gags abound in musical sequence throughout. I can't really remember them all but I found many of them quite amusing and pretty funny. The print on YouTube I watched was not in the best condition but it looked as good as it probably could have been since it's almost 80 years old now. I just remembered while the ship was still at sea a monkey played on the giraffe's neck like a xylophone so that's one gag I remembered. Like I said, this was a pretty entertaining cartoon from the Fleischer Studios. So on that note, I recommend Noah's Lark.

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boblipton

The Fleischer brothers had been turning out sound cartoons since 1924 with their 'screen song' series, but it was only in 1929 that they started to do full sound cartoons, most famously with 'Finding His Voice' but also with this piece. Here, we see an ark full of many different sorts of animal; spotting Coney Island, the captain announces shore leave and they all head out for some fun. There are a lot of gags, very advanced for the era, as was typical for Fleischer in this period, and some of them are very adult.Interestingly enough, I see many signs of the sort of cartooning that Ted Geisel would do under his pen name of Dr. Seuss. The captain looks like a Seuss character and two sequences are very much in his style: the sequence where the animals head ashore to the opening bars of "The Stars and Stripes Forever" and the sequence with the kootch dancer and the snakes.Although there is no sign that Geisel was associated with this film, he was already working as a cartoonist in this period. Perhaps some biographer will turn up a connection....

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