tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4364805792882783170.post1045897014020234745..comments2023-11-03T09:20:52.837-04:00Comments on Disney Film Project: The ShindigRyanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05126059549015204825noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4364805792882783170.post-92093076550332770332010-01-08T01:38:42.849-05:002010-01-08T01:38:42.849-05:00Amateur Dominas
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amateurs sexAmateur Dominas<br /><br /><a href="http://private-amateure.titten18.com/" rel="nofollow">Privat Amateur Sex</a><br /><br />amateurs sexAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4364805792882783170.post-56729363772436374152009-07-13T17:33:41.266-04:002009-07-13T17:33:41.266-04:001930 was the year of the debut of Betty Boop whose...1930 was the year of the debut of Betty Boop whose cartoons had a ton of risqué jokes. The Disney artists must have seen these (and saw what a laugh they must have got) so I wonder if that was the inspiration the risqué gags on display here? Well if they're doing it...<br /><br />--Actually, on checking the dates, I think The Shindig may have been released too early to have been inspired by any cartoons featuring Betty Boop. It could be the Disney artists had seen other risqué jokes in cartoons or maybe they simply had some slightly rude gag ideas they wanted to use regardless of what anyone else was doing.Machttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17701967442508380462noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4364805792882783170.post-61012999139468970782009-07-13T14:36:05.337-04:002009-07-13T14:36:05.337-04:00I don't think there was anything to the "...I don't think there was anything to the "Barn Dance" reference, either, but it was just a thought. I do think there is some evidence of a "subversive" mode moving into the animation in some of these shorts.<br /><br />Whether it's intentional or not, you see a lot of things that make you scratch your head - the Mickey bear in Arctic Antics, Clarabelle's erotic adventures here.<br /><br />It's interesting about the reuse of animation, it just seems more obvious here than in many of the other shorts.Ryanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05126059549015204825noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4364805792882783170.post-44992189145029655292009-07-10T21:33:51.151-04:002009-07-10T21:33:51.151-04:00According to the Encyclopedia of Disney Animated s...According to the Encyclopedia of Disney Animated shorts, the scene of Clarabelle reading without her skirt on was censored at one point - whether it was because she didn't have her skirt or because of what she was reading, I'm not entirely sure. One interesting note is that according to the Ub Iwerks bio-documentary, <i>The Hand Behind the Mouse</i>, it was due to pressure from the censors that the cows started wearing skirts in the first place. Apparently, even udders were considered risqué in the 1930s...B. D.noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4364805792882783170.post-62139548689972957392009-07-10T13:24:52.270-04:002009-07-10T13:24:52.270-04:00I don't think the sign "To the Barn Dance...I don't think the sign "To the Barn Dance" was a reference to the earlier short. I think it was just a quick way of letting the audience know what kind of party the excited characters are headed to, but who knows, you could be onto something! However, I do think the reuse of animation is just a simple short-cut to get the cartoon completed quicker and cheaper rather than a protest at having to do a similar cartoon again.<br /><br />There are some risqué gags in this one, though. Clarabelle's seen reading erotic fiction in the "nude", as you mentioned, and also Mickey snaps Minnie's underwear (and gets a slap the second time)!<br /><br />This cartoon does build up a great party atmosphere, especially towards the end. Also Clarabelle and Horace are completely humanised in this one, standing on two legs the whole time.Machttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17701967442508380462noreply@blogger.com