It's also great that Jerry Beck provided some great commentary in the short, and identifying some of the animator's scenes there. The musical score by Frank Marsales was great, but the song from 42nd Street was even better. It looks great to watch when it was released on the Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 6 DVD set. I'd say that this cartoon was very fun to watch - there was great music, and it was just great entertainment. All of the babies then crowd onto Eddie Cantor who is seated, and smiles in which the curtains close- and that's all folks. Larry Martin did the scene of Cantor playing with his band, and Freleng animated the baby playing with the bed slats, and the kid banging on the bed pan. A group of babies are even dancing to the music, and messing around in the room. /1933 - Shuffle Off to Buffalo.mkv /1933 - Boskos Mechanical Man.mkv /1933 - The Dish Ran Away With the Spoon.mkv /1933 - Bosko the Musketeer.mkv /1933 - Were in the Money.mkv /1933 - Boskos Picture Show.mkv /1933 - Buddys Day Out.mkv /1933 - Ive Got to Sing a Torch Song.mkv /1933 - Buddys Beer Garden.mkv /1933 - Buddys Show Boat. The elf then pulls the curtain open and we see Eddie Cantor a group of elves playing music and Cantor is playing the piano to Shuffle Off to Buffalo. The milk feeding shot is by Norm Blackburn. The assembly line sequence is indeed similar to Baby Bottleneck but again - not as exciting, funny, or wild as the version Clampett did thirteen years later, but also - no POWERHOUSE!Īccording to Jerry Beck, Friz Freleng animated that scene of the baby being sprayed by talcum powder, and Tom McKimson did the elf that staples the baby's diaper, and that cries. After that the baby is then placed on the crib where there is another elf with a board and writes down results of the baby in a pad, and does that to every other baby. Harmon-Ising Merrie Melodies cartoon short produced in association. Then another assembly line shows a baby being fed milk in which it is being fed from a long tube where the baby sucks milk. Shuffle Off to Buffalo is another pretty entertaining Merrie Melodies cartoon short. Also, the baby had hair from the shot before, but in this shot the baby is bald (as Jerry did point out). Okay, that is rather wrong just to place a baby in water where it can't be supervised or can't even breathe. He grabs the crying baby and places it on a mechanical tub where the baby is washed. One of the other elves who staples the baby's diapers taogether - then hears a baby cry.
Then an elf puts some paper towel over the baby and is used as diapers. Spring’s over, but you’re still stopped up, sniffly, and sneezing. Another elf seems to powder the baby that causes it to cry. Spring’s over, but you’re still stopped up, sniffly, and sneezing. We see a baby who is inside a "rolling towel" in which an elf rolls the tower by using the machine to turn the baby around which makes it dry, and rinses the baby.
#Shuffle off to buffalo cartoon movie download full
At this point in time, they probably had no idea that their eventual star would be a witty rabbit.We then see a shot that is full of elves and there is a room with an assembly line to wash up babies and get them prepared for delivery. But this one should be of interest to people who want to know the entire history of Warner Bros. I certainly prefer that one more, as it has more of a plot. In 1946, Bob Clampett released a more famous cartoon about a baby-producing factory: "Baby Bottleneck" casts Daffy Duck and Porky Pig as owners of the factory who have an unfortunate experience one day. This song 'Shuffle Off to Buffalo', used in Merry Melodies' 'The Dish Ran Away With The Spoon' 1933 by Rudolph Ising & Hugh Harman, inspired from. By the end of the decade, they had dropped this policy.
The reason that "Shuffle Off to Buffalo" has a title song is that Merrie Melodies throughout most of the 1930s were named after songs owned by WB, and they would have the characters sing the song. One of the requests is written in Hebrew, and so the factory makes a baby that looks like an infant Elliott Gould. cartoons from the days before Bugs, Daffy and Porky - at this time, it was still Leon Schlesinger Productions leasing cartoons to WB - portrays a baby-making factory.