Uncensored Animation from the Van Beuren Studio
 
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Uncensored Animation from the Van Beuren Studio

 Unrated |  DVD
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Producers: Chris Buchman, Rex Schneider, Thunderbean Animation Steve Stanchfield
  • Format: NTSC, Black & White, Animated
  • Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Rated: Unrated
  • Studio: Thunderbean Animation
  • Run Time: 108 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B001TB0FWW
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #71,067 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)

Editorial Reviews

The New York based Van Beuren Studio, located across the street from the more famous Fleischer studios, produced some of the strangest, wildest and fun cartoons of the 1930's. These films often featured storylines that reflected New York duringt eh great depression, including adult themes/storylines, outlandish gags involving sex and violence as well as various ethnic stereotypes. The enforcement of the production code in 1934 rapidly cleaned up the output of the film industry, including the films from Fleischer and Van Beuren. Thunderbean is proud to present this collection of 14 films, transferred from 16mm and 35mm Nitrate prints, with titles restored (or recreated on a few). Titles include: A Close Call 29 Laundry Blues 30 Circus Capers 30 The Office Boy 30 Red riding Hood 31 Jungle Jam 31 Nursery Scandal 32 Panicky Pup 33 Doughnuts 33 Rough On Rats 33 Galloping Fanny 33 Sultan Pepper 34 The Rasslin' Match 33/34 The Lion Tamer 34

 

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28 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Vintage Van Beuren Pre-Code Hi-Jinks, February 18, 2009
This review is from: Uncensored Animation from the Van Beuren Studio (DVD)
This collection compiles a bunch of "pre-code" cartoons from one of the most minor of the major animation studios of the 'twenties and 'thirties.

Here are some comments on my favorites from the bunch.

Laundry Blues (1930) One of the hallmarks of this set of cartoons is their liberal use of cartoon stereotypes; here this concept is pushed beyond the breaking point. Sure, we're treated to scores of "chinamen" animals singing and working in a Chinese laundry. When an English butler shows up to serve tea even he has a shaved head, long braided pony tail and slanty eyes. Then things get really skewed when a Jewish Chinaman shows up to get his beard laundered. Of course the cartoon concludes with a Chinatown tong war. Just for laughs, you understand.

The Office Boy (1930) Walt Disney admitted that he was trying to copy the Aesop Fables cartoons when he was coming up in the nineteen-twenties. Here, Van Beuren returns the favor by plagiarizing Mickey Mouse. (Disney eventually sued Van Beuren for their troubles. Ah, mentors!) Ersatz Mickey is the titular office boy, whose main jobs are playing the harmonica, flirting with the secretary and keeping people away from his boss's office. See, Mr. Dunkwasser likes to screw off even more than his office boy, what with the toy trains, and the putting practice. He puts the moves on Ersatz Minnie, though, so Ersatz Mickey allows Mrs. Dunkwasser to catch him in the act.

Red Riding Hood (1931) Another Minnie Mouse wannabe plays R. R. Hood who is on her way to Grandma's house. Granny, it appears, is on death's doorstep until she ODs on "Jazz Tonic" medicine, which transforms her into a hot, cigarette-smoking hootchie mama. The big bad wolf makes the scene and exclaims, "Some Grandma!" Wolfie and Grandma decide to elope, but their plans are ruined when Red alerts Mrs. Big Bad about her husband's bigamist ways. This is one of my favorites in the set.

Panicky Pup (1933) What starts out as a "fun on the farm" cartoon turns very dark when a dog throws a cat down the well. (He keeps a check-list of all the different way he has murdered cats. Aw, cute!) He freaks out, Fleischer-style (e.g. "Swing You Sinners") but all ends reasonably well when the cat is pulled from his watery grave.

Doughnuts (1933) Yay! It's a new-to-me Tom and Jerry cartoon. They are pretty much in the background as they try to sell doughnuts at a prohibition-era bakers' convention. Hey, gang, look! The stereotypes are back. A pair of bearded, derby-wearing, hooked-nose Jews tries to sell matzos at "fire sale" prices. A pair of gay guys is pushing cream puffs. The big attraction is the pretzel tent where 3.2 beer is being served. Tom and Jerry eventually win the day when a drunken sailor inadvertently spikes their doughnuts with a gallon of rot-gut.

Rough On Rats (1933) A trio of cute li'l kittens cavort in an old full-service mom-and-pop grocery store. Things go horribly wrong when they cross paths with a big ol' rat that lives in the crawl space. Ratty grabs one of the kittens and ties him to a spinning deli-slicer! (All the better to cut your head off with, my dear.) The other kittens affect a rescue and then beat the rat to death.

The Rasslin' Match (1933) and The Lion Tamer (1934) are a couple of curios. These are two cartoons that Van Beuren produced featuring the adventures of the wildly popular radio characters Amos and Andy. On the commentary track animation historian Jerry Beck puts forth that RKO had Gosden and Correll under contract and that making these two cartoons might have been a way to use it up. Chuck Jones made a famous statement that TV cartoons were nothing more than illustrated radio. Well, the roots of that idea were sewn 35 or forty years earlier with these two cartoons!

As usual, Steve & company have put a lot of care into stitching together the best possible versions of these cartoons. There are a couple of guest commentary tracks and an essay on the Van Beuren studio. As this is a "pre-release" copy it is possible there might be more bonus features on the finalized version.

All in all, this is a fun collection of rarely-seen cartoons from a mostly-forgotten animation studio. Thanks, again, Thunderbean!
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Buy this disc., June 21, 2009
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Harmless Gryphon (Nowhere worth mentioning) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Uncensored Animation from the Van Beuren Studio (DVD)
Thunderbean has done good again by finding odd and off-the-wall animation and presenting it. While this stuff isn't going to set the censors off, it's good fun, a little risque for the time, and stuff you probably have not seen before.

The menu presentation is superb. Transfers are as good as they can get considering the material is probably in terrible shape, and the package is presented nicely labeled and in a standard case.

If you like old, odd, or unusual animation, buy this disc. Now!
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