Crosby, Columbo, and Vallee

1932
5.2| 0h7m| en| More Info
Released: 19 March 1932 Released
Producted By: Warner Bros. Cartoons
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

An American Indian boy and girl sing and dance in the forest along with the animals. Trouble begins when a fire threatens baby birds in their nest.

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Reviews

Interesteg What makes it different from others?
KnotStronger This is a must-see and one of the best documentaries - and films - of this year.
Gurlyndrobb While it doesn't offer any answers, it both thrills and makes you think.
pointyfilippa The movie runs out of plot and jokes well before the end of a two-hour running time, long for a light comedy.
Edgar Allan Pooh . . . this prophetic (but, like always, unheeded) Warner Bros. warning to Gary Cooper's co-star and Carole Lombard's fiancée, crooner Ruggiero Eugenio "Russ" Di Rodolfo Columbo, baritone violinist songwriter of "You Call It Madness, But I Call It Love" and "Prisoner of Love." Warner Bros.' psychic Looney Tuners begin their animated short CROSBY, COLUMBO AND VALLEE with a chanting circle of sinister Native Americans threatening "When it comes to pale face enemies, (we) know only three--Crosby, Columbo, and Vallee . . . they made a million Injun women wish that they were free (now I know what's become of Sally)." Less than two years later 26-year-old Russ Columbo, who'd starred with Cooper in THE TEXAN, who had another hit movie just coming out, who was about to announce his engagement to Lombard, and who was on the cusp of Mega-stardom like Selena, got gunned down by his "best friend"--shot through his brain--with an antique dueling pistol "by accident." As soon as I saw the "smoking gun" of CROSBY, COLUMBO AND VALLE I smelled a rat, being keenly aware of how the String Theory Principle of Quantum Physics proves that Looney Tunes have dictated virtually every significant event in America History since the early 1930s. Sure enough, when I had our resident genealogical researcher look into Columbo killer Lansing Vanwoert Brown, Junior's background, he discovered that not only was Brown one sixty-fourth Cherokee, but that crooner Columbo had fathered a child by Brown's Lakota Sioux Sweetie (Sallee Begay) and eventual common-law wife. As a result of this kerfuffle, Clark Gable wound up with Ms. Lombard, and America lost 37 hit songs never-to-be-written by he who would have gone down in history as "The Spanish Elvis."
Dawalk-1 I, too, first came across watching this Merrie Melody short via Youtube a while back earlier this year. I love it and it's since become another of my favorites. Indeed enjoyable, entertaining and recommendable because it features the music of and makes references toward at least two-thirds of the eponymous cartoon's singers played/heard in it. Their music is from a time back when music was still at an all-time high commercially and I'm sure that there were more good mainstream songs than not. For those who are new to this, take a chance on it if y'all think y'all are ready, willing and able to get into the musical sub-genres from the past decades and have eclectic taste. Y'all may never know and just might find yourselves getting into the samplings of the vocal and traditional pop stylings like I did. Crosby, Columbo, and Vallee were real talent, not like the majority of what we hear today above the ground. My favorite parts are the performances of this number, the dog impersonating Rudy Vallee and the young Native brave coming to the aid of the birds when the little flames spread. A good lesson in quality music for those who've heard of none of these three crooners. This should put a smile on everyone's face, it certainly made me happy while watching it.
theowinthrop This is an amusing old cartoon I saw twenty or so years ago. An Indian tribe has a problem - the woman all love Bing Crosby, Rudy Vallee, and Ross Columbo (three of the four leading crooners of the 1920s into the 1940s, with Al Jolson probably being the fourth). Now, some seventy seven years later, the cartoon probably raises questions among the young watching it: they might recall Crosby, who had a great movie career (with or without his pal Bob Hope) copped by an Oscar, as well as a leading singing career - best known for "White Christmas". They can possibly be aware of Rudy Vallee due to his performances in some film, culminating in his repeating his stage triumph as "J. P. Biggley" in HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING, but it is hard for me to believe they would recall his megaphone antics with songs like, "There is a tavern in the town" or "The Wippenproof Song". By the end of the 1930s, while still popular he was nowhere near Crosby in popularity.Columbo is the real problem. Most of his songs are long forgotten (except by his fans of course), and he is best recalled for his bizarre death (shot "accidentally" (?) by a very close male friend shortly after announcing his engagement to actress Carole Lombard). Whether it was murder of not, it is his taking off that most people recall. It's too bad, because he was a good singer, and quite handsome. He might have gone as far as Crosby.The little jingle tune in honor of the three (with the singer doing imitations of them in the course of the song) is what I most recall from this cartoon. It was not a great song, but it was lively. So was the animation, leading up to a forest fire, and the rescue of a nest of birds. It is a sweet cartoon - of a somewhat gentler time in our culture.
tavm Just watched this Harmon-Ising Merrie Melodies cartoon for producer Leon Schlesinger in association with Warner Bros. on YouTube. It's basically a musical one with American Indians (or Native Americans if you want to be PC) singing the title song as to what the public was crazy about music-wise during this period. Nice dancing movements abound and there are some amusing gags near the end concerning fire, trees, birds, and the way the fire gets put out. There are also uncanny impersonations of Crosby and Vallee. So on that note, this cartoon is worth a look. P.S. Since this was the early '30s, the familiar Warner Bros. cartoon characters like Porky Pig, Bugs Bunny, and Daffy Duck have yet to be created. If the animal character designs seem a little close to what the Walt Disney animation looked like at the time, that's because Hugh Harmon and Rudy Ising had originally worked for Uncle Walt in the '20s before leaving just as a certain mouse made Walt famous...

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