Very disappointed :(
Surprisingly incoherent and boring
Save your money for something good and enjoyable
This is a tender, generous movie that likes its characters and presents them as real people, full of flaws and strengths.
View More. . . Our Leader Trump's warnings about Mexico. SENORELLA AND THE GLASS HUARACHE is the last in a long line of cautionary tales from an Animation Division with an unmatched Gift of Prophecy. Beginning in the Early 1930s, these mostly unsung prognosticators used their cartoons to accurately predict and warn America of its approaching Cataclysms, Catastrophes, and Apocalypti, including World War Two, the Kennedy Assassination, Space Shuttle Challenger's explosion, and 9-11. But as with Cassandra in the Olden Days, most Americans took Warner's warnings with a grain of salt, dismissing them and traipsing blithely into the Buzzsaw of their Doom. SENORELLA is depicted here as a seductive hooker in a red dress, no doubt harboring numerous STD's, including body lice. (Warner may be basing her on John Wayne's second wife--a documented Mexican "Working Girl"--who gave "Il Duce" a quick-acting form of Syphillis which transformed him practically overnight from a Robin Hood-like Champion of the Union Man into a Goose-Stepping Fascist Snitch.) SENORELLA hangs out with cockroaches and pigs, waiting for her opportunity to enter America under false pretenses like Mrs. Wayne II. Since Leader Trump has spent many years personally conducting undercover investigations of the SENORELLA Problem that doomed John Wayne and so many others, this animated short can be seen as Trump's very first endorsement.
View MoreFrom the viewpoint of a long-term animation fan, I did enjoy Senorella and the Glass Huarache. While it didn't wow me, it was interesting and did give me some pleasure. This said, I wouldn't go as far as say that Senorella and the Glass Huarache was great. The story, while the spoof and the concept are very interesting, could have done with some tighter pacing, and does feel routine and predictable. There are also some amusing moments, but nothing really hilarious or what I consider fresh. On the plus side, I did like the animation. It wasn't amazing, with some stiffness here and there, but the stylised style-with use of very thick lines-of it did look colourful complete with backgrounds that don't look too rushed or sparse(like the later Speedy Gonzales cartoons) and decent character designs. Bill Lava's music is another strong asset, the style working much better than it did in the Speedy and Roadrunner-Coyote cartoons, it is very catchy and gives a lot of energy to Senorella and the Glass Huarache. The characters are at least engaging, Senorella is wonderfully vivacious. True, they are stereotypes, but not overdone or offensive ones. Mel Blanc as ever excels in the vocals. All in all, amusing if not hilarious. 7/10 Bethany Cox
View MoreWritten by John Dunn and featuring a very good south-of-the-border music score by Bill Lava, "Senorella and the Glass Huarache" is a fairly adequate Warner Bros. cartoon that spoofs the famous story of Cinderella. Two silhouetted Mexicans (voiced by Mel Blanc and Tom Holland) discuss the story of poor Senorella as we segue into flashbacks of her amazing transformation from rags to riches. The animation is rather stiff, but, as we shall see, this stiffness is an integral part of the humor of this cartoon.My favorite moments from "Senorella and the Glass Huarache" include the following. Senorella is quite amusing as she shakes her hips to a growling trumpet accompaniment. Also funny is a meek little chihuahua as it suddenly growls in Senorella's face. After a bull rams Don Miguel into a wall, Miguel punches the bull away from him! But the funniest moment of all involves Don Miguel's son Jose dancing with Senorella; the stiff animation, combined with the bland facial expressions of the couple, are what make me laugh at this sequence."Senorella and the Glass Huarache" is not the Warner Bros. animation department's finest hour, but it doesn't matter; I very much enjoy this cartoon and what it has to offer. One thing that arouses my curiosity, though: I wonder if audiences from the mid-1960s were ready to see tattoos on women's arms in animated cartoons. Considering that the sixties were a strange time frame, probably so.
View MoreIn the last Warner Bros. cartoon made before the studio closed its animation unit, a man tells his friend the story of Senorella, a Mexican version of Cinderella. Obviously, fairy tales are some of the easiest stories to work with, and the Warner Bros. animation unit had been doing it from very early on. I should note, however, that the animation looks kind of metallic here and the narration starts sounding like an echo.Otherwise, "Senorella and the Glass Huarache" is worth at least checking out. As for possible stereotyping of Mexicans, it's nothing that we haven't seen in a Speedy Gonzales cartoon. Now available on the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 5. And if you ask me, considering that around the time that this came out was also about that time that the studio retired Bugs Bunny, they shouldn't have attempted anything after that (except for the compilation films).Back when Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising made the first Bosko cartoon for Leon Schlesinger Productions in 1930 (which released its cartoons through WB), they probably had no idea that their studio would branch out into things like this.
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