MINI-MATINEE at the BIJOU

BILLBOARD

 

To watch a Bijou Mini-Matinee - click on the MM Title to enter the Bijou Theater on YouTube

 

                    
Grab some popcorn, pop open the soda pop - and join us in the theater that never closes.  Mini-Matinee at the Bijou on YouTube presents films shown on the original Matinee at the Bijou PBS series, along with new and often rare cartoons, short subjects, serial cliffhangers, trailers, theater ads and extra added attractions - along with an occasional film tribute.

 

Admission is free and the billboard changes every Wednesday.  Fans of the original Matinee at the Bijou series will enjoy our original opening sequence and the song “At the Bijou” performed by Rudy Vallee.

 

Film quality varies on the YouTube presentations. The upcoming Matinee at the Bijou sequel series is being produced in High Definition from high quality film sources.

 

MM 1 - MINI-MATINEE at the BIJOU DEBUT  

 


LET'S SING WITH POPEYE (1934)
Follow the bouncing ball and sing-a-long with Popeye the Sailor Man in this brilliant Max Fleischer animated gem.


PASS THE BISCUITS MIRANDY (1942)
Zany Spike Jones & His City Slickers play silly hillbilly’s who serve up a madcap musical meal. One of four “Soundies” (early music videos) made by Spike and gang.


DAFFY DUCK & THE DINOSAUR (1939) Casper Caveman (a caricature of Jack Benny) fancies Daffy Duck as dinner in Chuck Jones' pre-hysterical Technicolor masterpiece. Several great WB cartoon directors worked with the sometimes difficult but always talented Mr. Duck. This was Chuck Jones' first romp with the daffy star.

LET'S GO TO THE MOVIES (1948) Fascinating short subject produced in cooperation with the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, (the folks who bring us Oscar®), traces the history of the movies from the first flicker of film thru the 1940s.

 

LET’S ALL GO TO THE LOBBY (1953) Famous 1953 snack bar theater ad designed to encourage audiences to visit the snack bar.

 

MM 2 - A FESTIVAL OF POP CULTURE  

Join us as we attend a premiere of Mae West’s I’m No Angel, and Opening Night at the opera with Cubby Bear, with appearances along the way by Jimmy Durante, Peg Leg Pedro, and dashing Commando Cody, Sky Marshal of the Universe.

OPENING NIGHT (1933)
Cubby Bear sneaks into the opera house only to become the orchestra leader conducting for a sexy diva opera star. Even Miss Piggy would blush at the antics of this oversexed cartoon pig. A pre-Hays code Van Beuren classic.

GIVE A MAN A JOB (1931)
Jimmy “Shnozzola” Durante jokes and sings “Give a Man a Job” in this short film promoting FDR’s New Deal jobs program on behalf of the National Recovery Administration. Moe Howard (Three Stooges) is featured briefly

RADAR MEN FROM THE MOON Trailer (1952)
Trailer for Republic Pictures serial featuring Commando Cody, Sky
Marshal of the Universe VS Retik; Dictator of the Moon.

PEG LEG PEDRO (1938)
Extravagant Technicolor cartoon spoof of pirate movies is a riotous cartoon produced by Jam Handy Productions for Chevrolet to introduce a spacious new 1938 Chevy model.


HOLLYWOOD ON PARADE (1932)

Mae West appears at Graumman’s Chinese Theater premiere of I’m No Angel and big stars turn out for a Hollywood costume party in this 1932 Hollywood newsreel. Stars in attendance include Buster Crabbe, Gary Cooper, Fay Wray, Fredric March, Paulette Goddard, Jackie Cooper, Gloria Swanson, Jack Dempsey, Jack Oakie, Walter Huston, George Raft, Charlie Chaplin, The Marx Brothers, and many others too humorous to mention.

COCA COLA SNACK BAR THEATER AD
This vintage theater ad was designed to tempt the audience to visit the snack bar and buy a Coke. Watch for a different theater ad at the end of each Mini-Matinee.

MM-3 BIJOU HALLOWEEN SPOOKTACULAR

Hollywood has always had a vested interest in All Hallow's Eve. During the first half of the 20th century, studios produced Halloween themed cartoons and short subjects to complement their feature presentations. Here’s the billboard for this week’s show:

BELA LUGOSI Trailers
Two campy Bela Lugosi trailers from 1941. In Spooks Run Wild it's scary Bela VS the Eastside Kids (formerly the Dead End Kids, later to become the Bowery Boys). The Invisible Ghost features a more seriously sinister Lugosi.

MAGIC MUMMY (1933)
Let’s not play Cat and Mouse with Tom and Jerry. Originally Tom and Jerry cartoon characters were two men; tall Tom and short Jerry. That was 1931-33. Later, when these vintage toons were sold to TV, the original Tom & Jerry names were changed to Dick and Larry. In Magic Mummy, seemingly gay cops, a crypt crawling with sophisticated skeletons, and a Mummy doing a Betty Boop vocal impersonation all add up to silly and surreal fun.

DEVILED HAMS (1936)
A sizzling musical short set in Hades, with vaudeville crooner Gus Van holding court as ruler of the nether world. Those on trial must prove themselves thru their music. Dancers Toy and Wing do some otherworldly “toe” dancing to big band jazz. Erskine Hawkins and his band blend with Gus Van’s warbling to heat up the satirically sinful shenanigans.

WINKY THE WATCHMAN (1945)
Blending real world characters with stylish animation, this colorful cartoon delivers a spirited lesson in preventing tooth decay. The saintly “Good’uns” tackle tooth decay by battling the devilish “Bad’uns.” Pioneer animator Hugh Harman is credited on this cartoon, apparently on behalf of a Tennessee dental association. Little is otherwise known about this delightful gem.

DR. PEPPER SNACK BAR AD
This vintage theater ad was designed to tempt audiences to visit the snack bar and buy Dr. Pepper. A different theater ad wraps up each Mini-Matinee.

MM-4 BIJOU TRIBUTE TO BETTY BOOP

Everyone’s favorite vamp, Betty Boop, returns to the Bijou this week in a double dose of Boop-oop-a-doop. In a rare treat, we present Betty in all her animated glory, followed by the real life Betty Boop, Mae Questel, in a terrific Paramount musical short subject, also starring Bijou favorite Rudy Vallee.

BETTY BOOP’S CRAZY INVENTIONS (1933) Betty Boop and her entourage, Bimbo & Koko the Clown, are hosting an invention convention. Mae Questel, the famous voice of Betty Boop, sings "Keep A Little Song Handy" a catchy number which is reprised in our Bijou short: "Musical Doctor".

MUSICAL DOCTOR (1932) Then pop-star Rudy Vallee and Mae Questel, the real life Betty Boop, star in this zany musical romp. Dr. Vallee provides a musical prescription for whatever ails his patients at his syncopated “musical hospital.” Betty runs around "Boop-oop-a-dooping" her patients, and Rudy, as mentioned above, croons "Keep A Little Song Handy" assisted by his band “The Connecticut Yankees”.

THE SELF-MADE MONGREL (1945) Colorful NOVELTOON features Dog Face, a wise-cracking mutt with a Brooklyn accent who appeared in only two cartoons. Dog Face is adopted into high society and has to contend not only with his new owner’s eccentricities, but also a look-a-like bungling burglar.

TO OUR PATRONS is a brief theater ad trumpeting a “Sneak Preview” of a new movie about to be shown to the audience. Sneak previews were a way Hollywood studios could test a movie before a real audience before its release to theaters in order to gauge audience reaction. Sometimes cuts would be made as a result of the “sneak.” Studios would also sometimes “sneak” a new movie prior to formal release to stir up advance word-of-mouth advertising.


FLASH GORDON CONQUERS THE UNIVERSE
A sneak preview of the exciting cliff-hanger from Chapter 4 of this action-packed 1940 Flash Gordon serial. Gone are the days when you could conquer the universe and still be considered one of the good guys. You can see Flash pursue his unbridled imperial ambitions on the Matinee at the Bijou sequel series on PBS, and all in futuristic 21st century high definition. Of course the bad part about conquering the universe is that everything afterward seems a bit anti-climatic. No doubt there are good parts as well...

MM-5 THE BIJOU GOES TO WAR

Before television came into America’s homes, people got their news primarily from newspapers, radio and the movies. Along with newsreels, short subjects and documentaries, the local Bijou was heavily influenced by the events that followed Pearl Harbor. This is the first in an occasional series of Mini-Matinees that focus on films produced by the Hollywood studios and U.S. Government during WWII.

PRIVATE SNAFU - SPIES (1944)
Private Snafu cartoons were produced strictly for military audiences as part of a series called the Army/Navy Screen Magazine, designed to educate and inform. This one was created by Theodore "Dr. Seuss" Geisel, Chuck Jones and Phil Eastman at Warner Brothers. Snafu learns the hard way that in wartime “loose lips sink ships”.

HOLLYWOOD CANTEEN (1944)
Dinah Shore hosts a visit to the famous Hollywood Canteen, where soldiers rubbed elbows with Tinsel Town celebrities. Here we meet stars like Lana Turner, Marlene Dietrich, Red Skelton, Hedy Lamarr, Eddie Cantor, Jimmy Durante, and others. Dinah sings a poignant version of “Night and Day”. This short is from the Army/Navy Screen Magazine series.

UNITED NEWS of 1944 (1945)
This is a newsreel chronicle of the crucial events of 1944, concluding with a message about the world’s prospects and challenges ahead in 1945. Included is the liberation of Paris and Brussels, events at Normandy, D-Day and the bombing of Japan.

RING OF STEEL (1942)
Spencer Tracy narrates this stirring and poetic portrayal of the American soldier down through history. The film was directed by Garson Kanin and produced for The Office for Emergency Management and shown in theaters as a recruitment tool. The concluding narrative: "I'm the fighting men at every outpost, from Alaska, to Hawaii, to the Philippines and beyond; from Panama, to Puerto Rico, to Iceland; and beyond."

BUGS BUNNY BOND RALLY (1942)
Bugs Bunny and compatriots Elmer Fudd and Porky Pig sing a rousing song called “Any Bonds Today” in an entertaining theatrical encouragement for the audience to buy war bonds. Bugs does an imitation of Al Jolson singing “Mammy.”

MM-6 SPOOFING THE MOVIE-MAKERS

BRIDE OF THE MONSTER Trailer (1955)
This is the original trailer for Edward D. Wood’s cult classic starring the ubiquitous Bela Lugosi and featuring wrestler Tor Johnson. The trailer promises IT'S A WORLD YOU CAN’T IMAGINE! The tagline for this low-budget Ed Wood vision was: “The Screen's Master of the WEIRD in his NEWEST and MOST DARING SHOCKER!” Indeed.

 

MAKING ‘EM MOVE (1931)
“I always wondered how they were made,” sighs a curvaceous visitor to an enamored guard at an animation studio. the guard takes us on a cartoon studio tour in this clever Van Beuren version of one of Aesop's fables. Note that the actors are all portrayed as “humans” while the animators and the audience for the “cartoon-within-a-cartoon” are all portrayed as “animals.”

 

SO YOU WANT TO BE IN PICTURES (1947)
Joe McDoakes steps out from behind the 8-ball to demonstrate a lesson in how NOT to break into the movies. George O’Hanlon (later the voice of George Jetson) appeared in 63 of these “Behind the Eight Ball” shorts from 1942 to 1956. Watch for a famous former president among several celebrity cameos. We’ll have more on this series of comedy shorts in a future post

THE WABBIT WHO CAME TO SUPPER (1942)
The gags come fast and furious when Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd spoof the classic 1942 Betty Davis/Monty Woolley WB movie The Man Who Came to Dinner. In this Technicolor cartoon romp, Elmer is set to inherit 3 million dollars, but only if he doesn’t harm Bugs - who goes all out to provoke Elmer into hostilities.

SNACK BAR THEATER AD
A vintage theater ad promoting four candy bars available at the snack bar: Big Time, Butter Nut, Milk Shake and Pay Day. The ad copy was crafted to tempt the sweet tooth: “All Topped With Hollywood’s Super-Rich Coating of the Kind You Like Best. They Taste Wonderful. They’re DEE-Licious! They’re Nutritious!”

 

MM-7 SALUTE TO THE BOUNCING BALL

THE GOLDEN STATE (1947)
Here is an enjoyable sample from the colorful 1940s Paramount Screen Song series. The cartoon starts out with a series of gags, all leading up to the inevitable invitation to “follow the bouncing ball” – only in this case it’s a “bouncing orange.” Some witty Hollywood satire leads to the song "California Here I Come."

IN MY MERRY OLDSMOBILE (1931)
This risqué pre-code gem looks like one of the most typical Song Cartoons directed by Dave Fleischer, except it’s not! As the title indicates, it’s a rare advertising film made for Olds Motor Works. Yet it was enjoyed by movie audiences as a regular sing-along. Pretty sneaky! Our hero rescues his lady fair from a villain, then takes her for a spin in his new car. Guess which?

I FEEL LIKE A FEATHER IN THE BREEZE (1936)
This “Famous Bouncing Ball” cartoon typifies the many Max Fleischer Screen Songs produced between 1929 and 1937. The formula is now familiar; cartoon gags abound at the swanky Roof Garden Night Club, setting the stage for the big number - but in this delightful variation, animated characters watch live-action performers take over once the song begins. In this case Jack Denny and His Orchestra lead the bouncing ball in an infectious song called “I Feel like A Feather in the Breeze.”

SHOWTIME PRESENTS JOY HODGES (1944)
The Army-Navy Screen Magazine series was a bi-weekly collection of short subjects produced for servicemen during WWII. A recurring segment called SHOWTIME would present popular performers of the day in often provocative musical numbers. This one features sexy and alluring Joy Hodges, accompanied by the ubiquitous bouncing ball, singing “I Can’t Give You Anything But Love.”

STARRING BING CROSBY (1943)
In another segment from the Army-Navy Screen Magazine series, Bing Crosby croons two great songs. “Accentuate The Positive” (without the bouncing ball) is followed by a comedy routine with comic Ukie Sharin, after which Bing sings “Don’t Fence Me In” accompanied by the bouncing ball

LET’S SING WITH POPEYE (1934)
A reprise of a bouncing ball cartoon from our very first Bijou Mini-Matinee #1

 

MM-8 GIANT CLAWS and SANTA CLAUS

CHRISTMAS NIGHT (1933)
In 1931 Otto Soglow created a comic strip character called The Little King for The New Yorker magazine. The character, who never speaks, was licensed by Van Beuren Studios for 10 animated cartoons that were produced during 1933-34. In this one, it’s Christmas Eve and The Little King shows his Christmas spirit when he invites two homeless hobos to a Christmas party at the castle. Santa supplies the toys while the boys take a bubble bath in this silly and surreal romp.

THE GIANT CLAW Trailer (1957)
This very campy trailer features many terrific action shots of one of the fakest-looking monsters ever manifested for the silver screen. A giant ugly and laughable prehistoric bird is eating people and planes, threatening New York and even the U.N. – while every weapon the U.S. military attempts has failed to foil the giant puppet.

HECTOR’S HECTIC LIFE (1948)
Hector’s life really becomes hectic when three little puppies are left on his doorstep in this colorful Paramount Noveltoon. The pups disrupt and destruct the warm Christmas household setting, until Hector intervenes and provides the happy ending.

THE GREEN ARCHER Serial Chapter (1940)
Here we present the opening to Chapter 4 of The Green Archer, followed by an excerpt leading up to the exciting cliffhanger ending. Columbia Pictures turned the book by Edgar Wallace into a 15-episode chapter play starring Victor Jory and Iris Meredith. According to IMDB, this is the 12th of 57 serials produced by Columbia Studios. One of the bad guys is impersonating the Green Archer, and both are running around a haunted Southern California castle full of gangsters. The confusion leads to some great comedic action and a terrifying cliffhanger ending.

SANTA CLAUS QUIZ SHOW (1950s)
A promotional film designed to involve local audiences in chances to win prizes for Christmas, with invitations for merchants in the theater’s town to participate in the sponsorship of the contest. Santa asks questions on various history topics and we see film clips concerning the questions. Santa gives away everything but the answers.

MM-9 CHRISTMAS AT THE BIJOU

RUDOLPH THE RED-NOSED REINDEER (1948)
The Fleischer Studios were acquired by Paramount Pictures in 1941. Max Fleischer went to work for the Jam Handy Organization and in 1948 directed this classic cartoon gem for Montgomery Ward & Co. Paul Wing narrates the famous Christmas story of Rudolph and his shiny red proboscis. The song was subsequently recorded by Gene Autry in 1949, sold 2 million copies the first year and became the 2nd best-selling Christmas song of all time - after Bing Crosby’s White Christmas.


MERRY CHRISTMAS (1950)
“Far up in the snow lands, no one know’s where …” we visit St Nicholas at his Christmas work shop and meet three of his special elves busily preparing for the big night. The setting shifts to a family preparing for a traditional Christmas while singing "Come All Ye Faithful". The kids go to bed and we watch Santa arrive, depositing his goodies for the big family celebration the next morning

SNOW FOOLIN’ (1949)
The famous bouncing ball returns in this colorful Paramount Screen Song. The formula is familiar, a gallery of gags leading up to the introduction of the “bouncing ball” – in this case an egg – to dance above the words of a famous sing-a-long crowd-pleaser, “Jingle Bells.”


A CHRISTMAS DREAM (1946)
A little girl is gifted on Christmas with all she could wish for, but discards the common old rag doll she also received. While sleeping she dreams of the rag doll coming to life to create mayhem and delight all around the room, dancing on piano keys and bringing other toys to life. The girl awakens in more ways than one.

CHRISTMAS THEATER ADS (1950s)
A trio of vintage theater ads begins with the theater management and staff wishing our audience a very merry 1954 Christmas. Then Warner Bros. delivers “A Christmas Message from Virginia Mayo” inviting the audience to purchase Christmas seals to help fight Tuberculosis. Lastly, a 1959 theater ad wishing a “Merry Christmas Wish to All the World.”

MM-10 SANTA CLAUS FILM FESTIVAL

CHRISTMAS COMES BUT ONCE A YEAR (1936)
We begin with an enchanting Fleischer Color Classic relating the tale of tiny tots at an orphanage who experience a downer Christmas until Grampy dons a Santa suit and invents a joyous and inspired Christmas morning surprise

NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS (1946)
This is an imaginative cinematic interpretation of Clement Clarke Moore's classic Christmas poem "A Visit from St. Nicholas." The famous poem was first published anonymously in 1823 and has been endlessly adapted since. Here is a charming theatrical short subject version utilizing live actors mixed with animation in faithfully following the poet’s vision. Not-so-faithful is whatever Santa is packing under his jacket to make him look rotund...perhaps some kind of flotation device?

THE SHANTY WHERE SANTY CLAUS LIVES (1933)
Cartoon pioneers Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising produced a series of jazzy WB Merrie Melodies cartoons in the early 1930s. In this cheerful Christmas story, an orphan is invited by Santa Claus to fly away with him in his sled to a tuneful and toy-filled Christmas party at the North Pole Next week’s Bijou Mini-Matinee will spotlight more of Harman-Ising’s delightful creative output.

SANTA CLAUS’ STORY (1950s)
“Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus” exclaims Santa Claus to child Virginia. We could find very little on this novelty Christmas short subject, and invite our readers to share any knowledge they might have. It’s a curious little Christmas film wherein a rather bizarre Santa Claus tells two children the story of “Monkey Christmas” and relates how chimpanzees celebrate other holidays like Halloween. (Here at MATB we believe our mini-matinees should be educational as well as entertaining.)

CHRISTMAS THEATER ADS
A trio of theatrical Christmas-themed ads begins with “A Christmas Message from Rosemary Clooney,” wherein George Clooney’s soulful and glamorous aunt sings a song and makes a pitch for Christmas Seals. Another ad is a “Majestic Theater Box Office Ticket Sale” ad offering theater-goers a special book of tickets consisting of 4 Shows for $3.00 Imagine going to the movies for only 75 cents! Lastly, a theatrical ad announcing a Gala 1959 New Years Eve show and wishing everyone a Happy 1960.

 

MM-11 THE  BIJOU SWINGS

RED-HEADED BABY (1931)
First up is a sassy WB Merrie Melodies cartoon from Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising, who made last week’s Shanty Where Santy Claus Lives. The Oscar-winning “Harman-Ising” team created the original Oswald Rabbit and Bosko cartoons and will be the subject of an upcoming feature post. A lively song called Red-Headed Baby drives the action as toys come to life to sing and dance, while a Napoleon wooden-soldier battles a giant spider.

A FELLER WHO PLAYS IN THE BAND (1941)
Will Osborne and his Orchestra and singer Susan Miller perform the swinging title song while upsetting the sleep of the neighbor next door The musicians in this SOUNDIE short turn into a marching band when grumpy neighbor turns up. Answers the burning question - how many musicians with instruments can you stuff into one small closet?

A CORNY CONCERTO (1943)
Elmer Fudd conducts a pair of colorful animated classic concerts featuring a trio of WB cartoon stars. First, Porky Pig stalks Bugs Bunny to the tune of Tales from the Vienna Woods, and then a buzzard stalks a family of ducklings along The Blue Danube. All directed by Bob Clampett.

ARTIE SHAW’S CLASS IN SWING (1939)
A Paramount Headliner short, directed by Leslie Roush, is a musical lesson as Artie Shaw builds his band section by section - from the sound up. Along the way, Artie with clarinet delivers “Free Wheeling” and “Nightmare,” lovely Ellen Forest solos “I Have Eyes,” and the dynamic Buddy Rich shines on drums. When the band is fully formed the finale is a swinging rendition of “Shoot the Likker to Me John-Boy.”

HAPPY NEW YEAR THEATER ADS
A quartet of HAPPY NEW YEAR Theater Ads begins with a jazzy musical jolt as Little Boy Blue trumpets in 1960; then election headquarters awaits Baby New Year 1957; an old man rockets in 1960; and Father Time lights up 1956.


MM-12 SLIGHTLY STRANGE

 

LADY PLAY YOUR MANDOLIN (1931)
This is the very first in the WB Merrie Melodies early 1930s cartoon series, and another Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising gag-filled fantasy. This one is set in a cantina and revolves around all of the characters getting drunk. Even the horse gets untied to tie one on. Curious for a cartoon made prior to the repeal of prohibition. The Big Cartoon Database suggests It may have even been banned. The central character, Foxy, looks and sounds suspiciously like Mickey Mouse, and was created by Rudolf Ising, who, along with partner Harman, worked for Disney during the 1920s.

DESERT DEMONS (1932)
Educational Pictures “The Spice of the Program” released this documentary short subject focusing on desert life and the survival of the creepiest. Early naturalist photographers Nathan, Woodard and Fairbanks produced; snakes, spiders and reptiles star, while Gayne Whitman narrates.

JACK FROST (1934)
This classic Cinecolor fantasy was directed by Ub Iwerk’s, who animated Disney’s first Mickey Mouse cartoon “Steamboat Willie.” After leaving Disney in 1930, Iwerks went on to produce this and other animated gems for investor P.A. “Pat” Powers. The plot concerns a young Grizzly Bear threatened by Old Man Winter and rescued by Jack Frost.

THE WIZARD’S APPRENTICE (1930)
This surreal 1930 musical short subject was produced by Hugo Riesenfeld & William Cameron Menzies for Joseph M. Schenck Productions. Mickey Mouse’s struggle with the multiplying dancing brooms and water buckets in Walt Disney’s classic Fantasia surely was inspired by this dramatic film.

We wrap up this week’s Bijou mini-extravaganza with a vintage snack bar ad produced by Pepsi Cola and intended to entice theater patrons to visit the snack bar and order a Pepsi product.

MM - 13 WORLD WAR II and the HOME FRONT

 

This week we present another in our occasional series of short films produced by the Hollywood studios and the U.S. government during WWII. This time around we focus on the American home front.

THE HOME FRONT (1943)
Private Snafu is homesick and imagining how sweet life must be like on the home front. Snafu’s obsessing is interrupted by “Technical Fairy Foist Class” who conjures up a TV screen to show our anti-hero some of the important things being done stateside on behalf of the war effort. The Technical Fairy caricature is especially curious and amusing given the era in which this film was made, which was decades before “Don’t ask. Don’t tell.” This is another gem from the Army-Navy Screen Magazine series created strictly for viewing by soldiers in military theaters worldwide.

YOU, JOHN JONES! (1944)
James Cagney, Ann Sothern & Margaret O'Brien star in a starkly dramatic short subject about duty and patriotism on the American home front during WWII. Cagney plays an air raid warden who visualizes his daughter being the victim of warfare in various countries where war is raging. Cagney’s poignant prayer and O’Brien’s reciting of The Gettysburg Address are timely today and convey a potent message.

SO’S YOUR OLD MAN (1943)
Dramatization shows that age didn't matter when it came to helping out and serving on the home front. The film portrays how the "old man" could still volunteer for homeland security duty and serve as watchmen helping to protect our ports and other duties not restricted due to age.

ROOKIE REVUE (1941)
Zany Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies color cartoon spoofs military basic training techniques as we join raw WWII recruits being put through various drills before shipping out. Rapid fire gags abound and celebrity caricatures add to the fun.

WOMEN IN DEFENSE (1941)
Katharine Hepburn narrates this fascinating look at the many necessary jobs performed by American women during WWII. The narrative, written by Eleanor Roosevelt, extends beyond the stereotypical Rosy the Riveter and focuses on women working in industrial, scientific and volunteer servic
e activities.

MM-14 SERIAL CHEATS

In Friday’s post we talked about how the studios sometimes cheated in their cliffhanger endings. Today’s Bijou Mini-Matinee is an action-packed quartet of preposterous “serial cheats” all produced in 1936. We set the stage with an elaborate theatrical trailer on today’s Mini-Matinee...

ROBINSON CRUSOE OF CLIPPER ISLAND (1936)
Government undercover agent Mala, assisted by Rex the Wonder Horse, Buck the canine star and Polynesian princess Melani, matches wits with a death-ray toting villain. At the end of chapter 2, we see Mala speared into a pit of death – yet in the next chapter, something altogether different happens. It only goes to show that fate is not inexorable!

UNDERSEA KINGDOM (1936)
Cowboy star Crash Corrigan becomes a sci-fi super-hero for this insanely silly Republic serial set in the undersea kingdom of Atlantis. In Chapter 2, Crash is zapped by ruler Unga Khan’s henchman and we watch him fall down a steep elevator shaft to certain doom. Notice how things change in chapter 3.

ACE DRUMMOND (1936)
The Dragon is a jaded villain, lusting to make off with a mountain of Mongolian jade. Ace Drummond, comic-strip character turned serial G-Man, is out to stop him. Here in chapter 10 we see star John ‘Dusty’ King drop from a cliff in deadly free fall. Watch how brazenly the studio cheated at the outset of chapter 11.

THE VIGILANTES ARE COMING (1936) Part 1
Over-the-top plot pits our masked hero, The Eagle, against the Dictator of California and his Cossack cohorts struggling to make a Russian colony of old California. Chapter 4 ends with a gasp, from The Eagle as well as the audience, as we witness a huge millstone drop from a guillotine onto the chest of our hero. See for yourself just how far the studios sometimes went to lure audiences back next week.

THE VIGILANTES ARE COMING (1936) Part 2
Here we have two cheat endings in the same serial. Chapter 7 ends with our hero, The Eagle, apparently sliced to ribbons by 5 Russian swordsmen, only to escape into the next chapter before they get the chance in Chapter 8.


MM-15 JUNGLE QUEENS & JUNIOR G-MEN

 

SUPERMAN (1941)
This is the first in the Max & Dave Fleischer series of 17 Superman cartoons produced between 1941 and 1943 by Paramount. Its eye-popping color, incredible special effects and fast and furious action earned this masterpiece of animation an Oscar™ nomination. The back-story behind the Superman myth is established at the outset, setting the stage for his first big-screen cartoon adventure. Our hats off to VCI Entertainment for doing a magnificent job of assembling the entire Superman collection on one dual-layer DVD, all digitally restored and loaded with extras. And all for under $10.

JUNGLE QUEEN (1945) Trailer
Next up is a pair of 1940s serial trailers that today may seem strange or campy, but at the time thrilled audiences who would then line up at the box office week after week anxious to see what would come next. The studios knew exactly what they were doing in exploiting the chapter plays.

The Jungle Queen, in reality the Congo’s mild-mannered counterspy “destined to doom the Gestapo,” is played by a young and sultry Ruth Roman. Ms Roman made over 100 movies, but actually began her screen career with this 13-chapter serial, having appeared only briefly in a handful of movies beforehand. Prior to becoming the Jungle Queen she wrote the story for the 1944 Republic serial Zorro’s Black Whip (although she was uncredited).

JUNIOR G-MEN OF THE AIR (1942)
What celluloid could contain content more preposterous than that, you ask? The trailer for Universal’s 12-chapter serial Junior G-Men of the Air will promptly provide an answer. When the Axis attempts to destroy America’s oil fields, The Dead End Kids morph into teenage Junior G-Men in order to take on the nasty Hollywood Nazi’s.

Bijou favorite Lionel Atwill is over the top as your stereotypical Japanese spy antagonist, even if the eye makeup is a bit heavy. This action-packed wartime cliffhanger stars Billy Halop, Huntz Hall, Frankie Darro and other members of The Dead End Kids, who would also become known variously as The Little Tough Guys, The Eastside Kids and then go on to make 48 movies as the infamous Bowery Boys until advancing age, repetition and bad scripts brought the franchise to an end in 1958.

If our trailer for Junior G-Men of the Air leaves you craving for even more, we tempt you with the opening and thrilling cliffhanger from chapter 2 of Junior G-Men of the Air.

CANDID CANDIDATE (1937)
Next, a mature Betty Boop puts in a cameo appearance to encourage us to “vote for Grampy for mayor” in this timely and tuneful cartoon concoction. And if politics happens to be a passion, be sure to join us next week when we present a special billboard of short films, all with a political theme.

Finally we present two more outrageous serial trailers. The Phantom Empire (1935) is an extended trailer for the classic Mascot sci-fi saga starring singing-cowboy sensation Gene Autry. Followed by the trailer for The Phantom Creeps (1939), starring Bela Lugosi and featured during season five of the original 1980s PBS Matinee at the Bijou series.


MM-16 SALUTE TO SUPER TUESDAY

Today we feature a cinematic salute to Super Tuesday 2008 with a Bijou Mini-Matinee of short films populated with political themes that span the constituency spectrum. Everyone’s sure to find something of special interest in today’s eclectic election year line-up of selected short subjects.

POPEYE FOR PRESIDENT 1956
Popeye gets things rolling with a colorful and spinach-fueled campaign of his own. Yes, Popeye wants to be elected President. But so does his nemesis Bluto. It’s left to lovely Olive Oyl to cast the final ballot - but the boys must work to win her vote.

Hmmm. Who would you vote for in an election, given the choice of Bluto, Arnold Schwarzenegger or Jesse Ventura? Just a reminder that truth is still stranger than fiction and, no doubt, always will be.

POLLY TIX in WASHINGTON 1933
Shirley Temple stars as Polly Tix in this entry from the infamous Jack Hays Baby Burlesk series of 8 outrageous depression-era comedy shorts produced by Educational Pictures. The concept was to cast baby stars in adult roles – except they wear diapers. This one is over-the-top adult as our little Shirley portrays a call girl trying to bribe an honest politician. Imagine that! No, not the part about sweet Shirley as a call girl, it's the oxymoronic “honest politician” we can't get over.

THE TRUTH ABOUT TAXES 1939
Next we present two political campaign films, one from each side of the political spectrum. The Republican National Committee commissioned our first theatrical short which was produced to help Wendell Willkie win the presidency in the 1939 elections. It’s a Republican Party indictment of Roosevelt’s New Deal and challenges our nation’s spending programs at the time.

HELL-BENT FOR ELECTION 1944
Shifting to the other side of the aisle, the Democrats commissioned this UPA cartoon, directed by veteran animator Chuck Jones, created to help FDR win his third term. The film is a Democrat Party campaign tool urging the continuation of FDR’s wartime priorities as the best way to ensure a prosperous future. The war was almost over and America was turning her attention to the challenges she would face at home. You may find some of the issues facing the American voter in these two films startlingly familiar.

I NEED A NURSE 1941
In the previous films we touched on most of the major political issues of the day except for the politics of healthcare. Such a hot-button issue! Since our health care system today is so dysfunctional, we elected to wrap this week's Bijou Mini-Matinee on a high note, with a whimsical musical petition on behalf of one impertinent patient’s not-so-critical health care crisis. Michael Loring sings the title song surrounded by a bevy of beautiful nurses in this amusing "Soundies" novelty short.


MM-17 ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL

 

Today we feature selected short subjects populated by all sorts of fauna, from lovable barnyard critters to the kind who knock down electric lines and toss city buses-just because they can.

BARNYARD BUNK (1932)
The original Tom & Jerry (not the cat and mouse) portray a pair of Pied Pipers playing swinging saxophones while leading a chorus line of barnyard animals across the silver screen. The music is infectious. So, probably, are the many mice featured in this nonsensical musical treat from the Van Beuren Studios.

NOT SO DUMB (1937)
This fascinating live-action short is part of Skibo Production’s Treasure Chest series, written and narrated by A.L Alexander. We observe felines nurturing chicks and squirrels, a pig suckling a cow, a dog mixing it up with a groundhog, and a parrot dunking his own crackers. This is an unusual and very entertaining slice of animal nature in the raw, also from Van Beuren.

THE BARNYARD BRAT (1939)
Hunky & Spunky are a pair of mischievous mules created as a series-within-a-series for the Max & Dave Fleischer Color Classics series. In this one, momma mule Hunky must make amends for the chaos unleashed by her irascible son Spunky among the barnyard community.

THE GIANT GILA MONSTER / THE KILLER SHREWS Trailers (1959)
This pair of creature features, produced by an independent film production company based in Texas, proved to be a very popular double feature in 1959. Each attained its own cult following among aficionados of low budget films.

SNACK BAR ADS
We wrap up this week’s mini-matinee with a pair of vintage snack bar ads. Dancing elephants and other circus animals are on hand to round out our movie menagerie.


MM-18 A SALUTE TO MARY CARLISLE

 

Today’s Mini-Matinee is a heartfelt salute to one of Bijou’s favorite cinema sweethearts, Mary Carlisle. Come back for Friday’s feature post to learn more about this vivacious and talented screen star. Meanwhile, we present for your enjoyment scenes from five of Ms Carlisle’s movies. Three were featured in the original 1980s Matinee at the Bijou series on PBS.

KENTUCKY KERNELS (1935)
First up, Mary Carlisle and Bert Wheeler play shy lovebirds drawn closer together by an infectious song entitled “One Little Kiss.” Caution, listen to this little ditty more than once and you may not be able to get it out of your head. George Stevens directed a superb cast in this frothy RKO musical comedy. Bert Wheeler & Robert Woolsey had their roots in Vaudeville and their zany comedy style is in the Marx Bros tradition. Most everyone’s favorite little rascal, Spanky McFarland, has a terrific supporting role and is showcased briefly in this scene.

PALOOKA (1934)
Mary co-stars in this one with Stuart Erwin, who portrays boxing champ Joe Palooka. Marjorie Rambeau is Joe’s mom in scenes from the 1934 Reliance Pictures comedy, co-starring Jimmy Durante. Mayme Palooka doesn't want son Joe to follow in his boxing father's footsteps, and Mary helps keep Joe's secret until the big fight is broadcast on radio for all to hear. Palooka was featured in the very first season of the original Matinee at the Bijou.

ONE FRIGHTENED NIGHT (1935)
Shown in season four of the original Matinee at the Bijou series, Mary, in this clip, is terrorized while visiting a spooky old mansion on a dark and stormy night. Panels creak, bodies fall, phantoms creep, and anxious heir’s line up to grab crotchety old Charlie Grapewin’s will. All in all a fun-filled vintage B-movie murder mystery from Mascot Pictures.

GIRL O’ MY DREAMS (1934)
Mary heads the cast and sings in this campy 1930s Monogram comedy about college romance and sports, although this time it's a big track meet rather than football. Mary sparks a romantic triangle between Eddie Nugent and Lon Chaney, Jr., billed here as Creighton Chaney. Lon became Chaney's new screen name in 1935 after five years in minor roles, and six years before he would become forever remembered as The Wolf Man. Lon plays a singing jock in this one, and has a sweet duet with Mary. Sterling Holloway and Arthur Lake costar.

DEAD MEN WALK (1943)
In one of PRC's better creature features, Mary is the smitten vampire victim whose uncle, George Zucco, must face off with an evil twin who insists on embracing the dark side. Will Mary survive the forces of darkness? Will the tiny holes in Mary's neck heal in time for intermission? This was also seen in season four of the original Matinee at the Bijou series on PBS.

 

MM-19 BIJOU POP CULTURE

Today our Cinematic Time Machine takes us on a wild ride through two decades of vintage cinematic pop culture. An animated Sinbad the Sailor tackles cartoon pirates; Tarzan does some very realistic wrestling with the King of Beasts, Roy Rogers addresses his Rider’s Club members in the audience, and we enjoy a trio of 1950s vintage theatrical trailers promoting some popular 3D movies.

SINBAD THE SAILOR (1935)
First up is a comical ComiColor Ub Iwerks’ cartoon with a jazzy pirate song and a sophisticated musical score. Sinbad and his wise-cracking parrot sidekick take on a band of eccentric singing pirates pursuing ill-gotten treasure. It all leads to an abundance of sword fights, sight gags and funny dialogue. Be assured that plenty of buckles are swashed before the action is over!

ROY ROGERS’ RIDERS CLUB (circa 1948)
Many theater managers around the country actively promoted their weekend matinees to encourage regular attendance. Drawings for prizes and contests were among the attractions, often associated with messages delivered directly from the silver screen. Roy Rogers was a big favorite and many theaters promoted membership in the Roy Rogers’ Riders Club. In this short, Roy addresses his members and delivers his famous Roy Rogers’ Cowboy prayer. Reprinted here ~~~

Lord, I reckon I'm not much just by myself, I fail to do a lot of things I ought to do. But Lord, when trails are steep and passes high, Help me ride it straight the whole way through. And when in the falling dusk I get that final call, I do not care how many flowers they send, Above all else, the happiest trail would be For YOU to say to me, "Let's ride, My Friend" AMEN.

NEW ADVENTURES OF TARZAN (1935) Ch 9 Cliffhanger
This serial is considered by many as the best of the Tarzan chapter plays because of its close authenticity to the original Edgar Rice Burroughs’ characters and stories. Tarzan is presented here as in the books; a cultured English aristocrat who enjoys running around the jungles of Guatemala in a loincloth. And why not?

Burroughs himself is credited as co-producer and co-writer, and the 12 chapter serial was produced and distributed by “Burroughs-Tarzan Enterprises.”

Here you will see the exciting cliffhanger to Chapter 9, “Doom's Brink” where Tarzan is attacked by a terrifying lion. The audience would be expected to return to their relatively drab and humdrum existences for a week before being allowed to see the outcome.

After the titles for Chapter 10, we show you the exciting denouement (a french word which means, roughly, "a fight to the death between a bloodthirsty lion and a knife-wielding aristocrat in his underwear.") This gritty and exotic serial is being considered for one of the new Matinee at the Bijou seasons.

IT CAME FROM OUTER SPACE (1953)
In this Friday’s post we’ll be talking about the 1950s pop culture craze known as 3D. This is the original Universal theatrical trailer featuring actor Richard Carlson trying to sell audiences on the uniqueness and wonderment of the new 3D process. Clever animated images are used to bring home the point. In-your-face advertising for an in-your-face movie. The movie won a Golden Globe for Most Promising Newcomer for co-star Barbara Rush.

CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON (1954)
& THE MAD MAGICIAN (1954) Trailers
There was a limit as to how much gimmickry and added expense theater managers would tolerate, given all the competition for screen space long before the term “multiplex” entered the picture. Add to that the inevitable complaints from 3D causing headaches and eye strain, and its easy to understand why some theater managers passed on the 3D versions of popular attractions, but welcomed what became known as the “flat” version – the same movie without the glasses.

Here are two trailers promoting a pair of 1954 3D movie releases that would not have been shown in 3D in towns where these trailers were shown. Watch in the “Creature” trailer where they obviously edited out the words 3D or 3 DIMENSION and instead go seamlessly from the words "SHOCKING IN THE STARK REALISM" to "OF MOUNTING SUSPENSE. "

 

MM-20 ROBOTS and MECHANICAL MEN

The word "robot" entered our vocabulary (with the publication in 1920 of Rossum's Universal Robots by Karel Capek) very much at the same time movies were establishing their stronghold in our culture. Movies and mechanical creatures became fast friends, and Hollywood

's fascination with people of the android persuasion shows no signs of abating. Today’s Bijou Mini-Matinee consists of five entertaining short films starring or featuring robots.

THE IRON MAN (1930)
First up is The Iron Man, a rare Aesop’s Fable cartoon from Van Beuren, produced by Paul Terry. In the first half of this surreal and wildly imaginative cartoon, Farmer Alfalfa is harassed by a pair of plucky chickens, and then mesmerized by a multi-talented dancing robot. These early Aesop’s Fables ended with an on-screen quote from Aesop. This one concludes with “2600 years ago Aesop said: An oyster is a fish dressed up like a nut.” Makes as much sense as does the rest of this delightful romp. (Courtesy of Thunderbean Animation)

THE MECHANICAL MAN (1932)
Oswald Rabbit costars with a robot in this truly bizarre Walter Lantz cartoon. A peg-legged inventor with a peg-legged parrot needs a human heart for his robot. Oswald’s girlfriend is the intended victim trapped in house of animated horrors.

ALL’S FAIR AT THE FAIR (1938)
This delightful Fleischer Color Classic is loaded with robots, all smothering attention on county fair-goers Elmer and Mirandy. The country couple visits the pavilion of the future in 1938, when everything is mechanized. We see robots as barbers and beauticians, musicians and dancing partners.

THE ROBOT MONSTER (1953) Trailer
Considered one of the cheesiest low-budget sci-fi flicks ever made, this film actually received high marks for its 3D effects in the original release format. Alien invader “Ro-Man” is a rather lame and silly excuse for a supposed “monster” on the loose, but the plot is even lamer. Here is the original trailer shown with an alternate title “Monster from Mars” still attached at the end.

THE PHANTOM CREEPS (1939) Ch 6 Cliffhanger
Bela is back, and Iron Man’s got him. Well, Iron Man actually has the good guy, and not exactly in a love-crush. Here is the cliffhanger ending from Chapter Six, "The Iron Man", of the 12-chapter serial The Phantom Creeps, starring Bela Lugosi. First shown on the original Matinee at the Bijou series.



MM-21 MYSTERY OF “TARZAN ESCAPES

                                                                

This week’s Matinee should whet your interest in “Tarzan Escapes” (1936), the third of MGM’s sensational Tarzan series starring Johnny Weissmuller and Maureen O’Sullivan. The film was shot and finished in 1935 but not released. It was a mess! So it was re-written and re-filmed in 1936, but ran into new troubles -- it was now too good, too violent and too scary for kids. Censored prints were sent out instead, or were they? The original epic made the rounds in the 1954 reissue, but has not been seen since.

TARZAN ESCAPES TRAILERS
The first trailer was hastily put together for 1935 preview audiences. It does not show any actual scenes from the film, but does promise Giant Vampire Bats, which have since disappeared from all known prints. The second trailer is for the re-shot 1936 release.

TARZAN’S JUJU CAVE
Near
the end of the film, Tarzan, Jane and the safari flee hostile natives. Their only escape is through a forbidden juju cave in a mountain. You can view the set-up and what survives of the spooky swamp today, but the entire climax of the film is missing. What is it? Where is it?

THE LOST LIONS
Tarzan kills two lions in “Tarzan Escapes,” but the violent scene is missing from all surviving copies. Fortunately the lions were stock footage from “Tarzan the Ape Man,” so they could be officially edited back into the film. See what once happened when Jane told Tarzan, “Go get food for all of these people.”

A TRIO OF TARZAN TRAILERS
Johnny Weissmuller played Tarzan in a dozen movies. Six for MGM from 1932-42, six for RKO from 1943-48, and then he went on to play a different jungle character, this time with clothes on, in the Jungle Jim movie series which continued until 1955. Twenty three years in the jungle is a long time for anyone, athlete or not.

Here are trailers for the last three films in the Weissmuller MGM Tarzan series, each featuring Maureen O’Sullivan as Jane and Johnny Sheffield as boy. The trailers are: Tarzan Finds a Son (1939), Tarzan’s Secret Treasure (1941) and Tarzan’s New York Adventure (1942).


THREE’S A CROWD (1932)
We conclude our Bijou Mini-Matinee with a musical cartoon treat featuring a cameo appearance by an animated Tarzan, who swings in to rescue a damsel in distress. Book characters who come to life include Alice from Wonderland, The Three Musketeers, Rip Van Winkle, Uncle Tom, Dr. Jekyll, Nero and Cleopatra.

 

MM-22 A BIJOU MUSICALE

 

Classical music and classic movies are mixed with a myriad of musical instruments and styles in this week’s Bijou Mini-Matinee. And it all gets underway with a recently restored cartoon masterpiece.

MENDELSSOHN’S SPRING SONG (1931)
This is a colorful and surreal animated treasure. Director Cy Young orchestrates birds, butterflies, caterpillars and a frog to Mendelssohn’s Spring Song and to splendid effect. It was originally created as an experimental film to test a new two-strip color process called Brewster Color. This was to be the first in a new series, but the series did not continue. The classic film world is indebted to animator Steve Stanchfield for beautifully restoring and preserving this enchanting work of art on behalf of Thunderbean Animation.

MUSICAL CHARMERS (1936)
A classy Paramount Headliners short features Phil Spitalny and his “All-Girl Orchestra and Choir” who were popular in movies and on radio during the 1930s and 40s. One of the stars of the orchestra was “Evelyn & Her Magic Violin.” Evelyn is featured with Maxine in “Rendezvous with a Dream.” Also included is “I’ll Bet You Tell That to All the Girls,” Rochelle & Lola in a piano specialty “Goody Goody” and a dramatic rendition of “Song of India” as the finale.

NATURE’S SONGSTERS (1936)
A different choir of song bird performs in this Treasure Chest Production which captured the first pictures taken with actual sounds of birds, often territorial challenges, recorded in their native habitat. This early attempt required taking much heavy equipment into the field when compared with today’s sophisticated recording techniques and tools. Made in conjunction with the American Museum of Natural History and released by 20th Century Fox.

THE SWAN (1929)
This Walter Futter Novelty shows how black & white photography can project a color of its own, as two white swans glide along a morning pond in the company of seventeen graceful swans all scored to the orchestral music of Camille Saint-Saens “The Swan” from Carnival of the Animals. Saint-Saens finished the composition in 1886, but prohibited its performance until after his death in 1921. This is the first time the music was ever paired with the action of live swans.

ORGANLOGUE (1931)
Doc Melody is our Screen Organist conducting a “musical meal” of popular songs of the era. In the 1930s theater organs were very popular, but only practical for theaters that could afford them along with an organist. So smaller theaters arranged to have their organ music originate up on the silver screen along with the words to the songs so audiences could sing-a-long.

 

MM-23 EDGAR KENNEDY FAN FARE

Today we salute Edgar Kennedy, one of our favorite comedy character actors who was featured in many short subjects and movies shown on the original 1980s Matinee at the Bijou series on PBS. Enjoy the clips and come back on Friday for more on this very talented and funny man.

A STAR IS BORN (1937)
First up is a colorful 10 min clip from the original 1937 version of A Star is Born. Included are Edgar’s three scenes as the landlord and the very first person star-struck Esther Blodgett (Janet Gaynor) meets when she arrives in Hollywood. A very young Andy Devine is seen briefly in this vintage vignette.

LI'L ABNER (1940)
Edgar shines in a scene from the original live-action film version of Al Capp’s Li’l Abner comic strip. Abner thinks he’s died and gone to heaven, which looks suspiciously like Dogpatch (duh!). So naturally Abner is stunned to see Cornelius Cornpone (Edgar) walking in the forest. Just for fun we begin with the original title song, which was co-written by Milton Berle.

SIN OF HAROLD DIDDLEBOCK (1947)
Edgar mixes it up with Harold Lloyd and Jimmy Conlin in a very funny scene from The Sin of Harold Diddlebock (subsequently re-released as Mad Wednesday). Preston Sturges wrote and directed this witty comedy classic and here we present the pivotal scene where the bartender (Edgar) mixes up a particularly potent cocktail (the “Diddlebock”) for his non-drinking customer (Harold).

THE GREAT ALASKAN MYSTERY (1944)
Edgar got fourth billing in this 13-chapter Universal serial about Nazis with death rays. Here is the original trailer promising “A Thousand Polar Perils” and “Thundering Tons of Destruction.”

TILLIE'S PUNCTURED ROMANCE (1914)
Edgar played a dual role in this first full-length comedy feature film, which was also Charlie Chaplin’s first feature. Here are two brief clips edited together featuring Edgar (with a full head of hair) as the restaurant owner tolerating in the first clip the irascible Marie Dressler, followed by a scene with Chaplin and Mabel Normand.

 

MM-24 MUSICAL MAGIC & RISQUE COMEDY

 

In this week's matinee, memorable movie music mixes with outrageous physical comedy. First up, everyone’s favorite vamp, Betty Boop, gets the ball rolling with a delightful vintage cartoon.

BETTY BOOP and GRAMPY (1935)
Betty Boop is invited to a party at Grampy’s house and on the way gathers an entourage of zany cartoon characters who literally drop everything, including a piano, to join her. Betty (voice of Mae Questel) starts the show off with a lively ditty called On My Way to Grampy’s. When Betty and friends arrive and ask for more music, Grampy dons his thinking cap, the light bulb comes on, and he invents musical instruments on the spot. Tiger Rag is performed on the soundtrack by the Hoosier Hotshots, who hit all the right notes until the dancing builds to a crescendo and everyone collapses from joyous exhaustion.

AIN’T MISBEHAVIN’ (1941)
Jazz great Fats Waller is the personification of cool while performing his trademark rendition of Ain’t Misbehavin’ - accompanied by a chorus line of sexy singers and dancers. Waller accompanies himself on piano and adds spice to the famous Ain’t Misbehavin’ lyrics with some risqué commentary. No one performs this jazz standard as does the phenomenal Mr. Waller in this vintage Soundie.

DUCK SOUP (1933) Theatrical Trailer
This week we continue celebrating the genius of comedy actor Edgar Kennedy. Edgar was at his slow-burn-best as the lemonade stand salesman attempting to tolerate Harpo and Chico Marx in one of the funniest Marx Brothers sequences ever filmed. Here is the original theatrical trailer for Duck Soup.

HELP WANTED FEMALE (1930) Part 1
This hilarious Edgar Kennedy depression-era comedy short is loaded with sight gags, sexual innuendo and wild physical comedy routines. One scene in particular recalls W.C. Fields’ The Dentist, the famous risqué pre-code short wherein a female patient is examined with great disrespect. This short pre-dates Edgar’s famous “Average Man” series of over 100 comedy shorts, and demonstrates why audiences would come to embrace this talented comedy actor in over 400 films.

HELP WANTED FEMALE (1930) Part 2
Since YouTube has a 10 minute running time limitation, Help Wanted Female is being presented in two parts. The management of this theater apologizes for the low quality of the audio track on the print we received from the exchange, and we are feverishly working on a replacement print expected to arrive and be posted shortly.

 

MM-25 TO SPRING

Bijou is French for “little jewel” and first up is a richly animated gem from the creative collaboration of veteran cartoonists Hugh Harmon and Rudolf Ising created for their MGM Happy Harmonies series.

TO SPRING (1936)
At the end of spring, awakening gnomes must pump spring colors up from underground in this colorful Harman & Ising Happy Harmonies animated fantasy.

STAR REPORTER
Ted Husing hosts this Hollywood newsreel featuring Dorothy Lamour's original paramount screen test. Listen to the now politically incorrect lyrics as the lovely Dorothy sings "Love is Like A Cigarette." The Star Reporter series was one of several celebrity newsreels produced by the Hollywood studios during the 1930s and 40s. Others included The Voice of Hollywood, Hollywood on Parade, Screen Snapshots and Broadway Highlights.

THE THIN MAN Trailers (1934-36)
William Powell & Myrna Loy played Nick & Nora Charles in a series of A movies reminiscent of the many B movie mystery series from the 1930s and 40s, such as the Philo Vance mystery series. Here are original trailers for the first two movies in The popular Thin Man series from MGM.

PANTRY PANIC (1941)
The Bijou beckons a final farewell to Winter 2008 in this madcap cartoon. Walter Lantz showcased his Woody Woodpecker character for the fourth time in this colorful animated classic. The groundhog predicts a blizzard, but Woody decides not to go South with his pals. Starvation looms until a starving cat appears and triggers a contest to see who eats whom.
Although not credited, Mel Blanc actually provided the voice for Woody Woodpecker in woody’s 1940-41 cartoons. Grace Stafford (wife of Walter Lantz) later assumed the role from 1950 to 1990.

RADAR MEN FROM THE MOON Ch. 7 Cliffhanger
Commander Cody faces certain demise when a Moon Men Death Ray blows his airplane out of the sky in this thrilling cliffhanger from Chapter 7 of the classic Republic serial. Lone Ranger actor Clayton Moore is one of the bad guys.

 

MM-26 MENAGERIE AT THE BIJOU

 

Dogs, cats, rabbits, spiders, leopards and wolves share the bill with Dick Tracy, Walt Disney, and spiritualist Dunninger, in this week’s fanciful Bijou Mini-Matinee.

DOGGONE TIRED (1949)
First up is a frantic and very funny Tex Avery MGM Technicolor treat. In this cartoon classic, the rabbit overhears the hunter instructing his dog to get a good night’s sleep, so as to be fresh at dawn to capture the rabbit. Of course, the rabbit plots to keep the dog awake all night in an escalating barrage of sight gags.

RKO PATHE PARADE (1937)
Next, a Hollywood newsreel showcases a rare visit to the Walt Disney Studios in 1937 and a cameo by Walt himself. We observe Disney animator’s creating animation cells for a Pluto cartoon and Disney’s groundbreaking feature-length classic Snow White. A second report features “noted mentalist Dunninger, Chairman of the Universal Council for Psychic Research” in a segment on “Spirit Swindles.” Dunninger deftly debunks phony spiritualists purporting to conjure up dead relatives and friends of naïve customers.

HAPPY YOU AND MERRY ME (1936)
Next, Betty Boop is featured, but her puppy Pudgy actually stars, along with a sea of cats, in this delightful feline fantasy. The fun begins when a kitten enters Betty’s home and eats an entire box of chocolates, only to become ill. Betty dispatches Pudgy to the drugstore to fetch some catnip medicine, which breaks open on Pudgy’s way home - attracting a chorus line of cats all under the influence of the catnip.

DICK TRACY (1937) Ch. 1 Cliffhanger
Here is the thrilling Dick Tracy cliffhanger from Chapter 1 “The Spider Strikes” followed by the cliffhanger’s resolution at the beginning of Chapter 2 ”The Bridge of Terror.” Our hero, FBI agent Dick Tracy, is up against the dastardly organized crime organization known as “The Spider Ring,” led by the ringleader and madman known as “The Lame One.” In Chapter 1, the bad guys are out to destroy the Bay Bridge by sound waves emanating from a giant “flying wing.” The serial is based on the famous Dick Tracy comic strip character created by Chester Gould.

HORROR TRAILERS (1943)
We wrap up this week’s mini-matinee with a pair of campy horror trailers from 1943. First up is The Leopard Man starring Dennis O’Keefe and Margo, followed by Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man, where Bela Lugosi plays the Frankenstein monster and Lon Chaney, Jr. continues his trademark role as
the Wolf Man.

 

MM-27 PIONEERS IN ANIMATION

In the two decades prior to the sound era, the most distinguished artists in the animation field created incredible masterpieces that few audiences today have seen or heard of. These works are among America’s greatest art treasures, considered by some to rank with the works of Rembrandt, Cezanne, Matisse, and Picasso.

Today the Bijou breaks from our traditional menu of cartoons, shorts, serials, trailers and theater ads to serve up a festival of rare silent-era animation classics. Featured are five vastly entertaining and imaginative cartoons produced between 1922 and 1925 featuring the pioneering work of Max Fleischer and Walt Disney.

Animator and historian Ray Pointer has reconstructed and restored these animated treasures, adding lively period music and sound effects in a manner that would have accompanied the original presentations in theaters.

“BIG CHIEF” KO-KO (1924)
First up we celebrate an early masterpiece from the fertile imagination of pioneer animator Max Fleischer. A live-action Max is drawing Ko-Ko the Clown when a real Indian arrives to sell some drawings to Max. Ko-Ko becomes manic fearing he could be replaced and this could cost him his job. Read more about Max Fleischer here.

ALICE’S EGG PLANT (1925)
While Max was mixing it up with Ko-Ko, Walt Disney was producing his own live-action and animation creations known as the “Alice Comedies.” Alice’s Egg Plant is a very funny sample from the series shown here complete and uncensored. A live-action Alice, played by Margie Gay, interacts with Julius, her cartoon cat, who manages the hens at Alice’s Egg factory. Just as she gets an order for 5000 eggs from the Skinam and Soakem Poultry and Eggs Company, along comes Little Red Henski, a Communist Rooster determined to unionize the factory. The hens go on strike until Alice figures out how a Cock-Fight can save the day. You can read more about the Alice Comedies here.

PUSS AND BOOTS (1922)
While a cartoon Cock-Fight saved the day for Alice, Puss depends on a pair of magic Flapper Boots and a Bull Fight for this adventure to have a happy ending in this fanciful Laugh-O-Grams Fairy Tale. More on this early Walt Disney series is here.

A KICK FOR CINDERELLA (1924)
Magical dancing shoes play a major role in this whimsical, tune-filled version of the famous fairy tale. Jeff fantasizes himself in the Cinderella role and competes with Mutt for the Championship honors at the Charleston Exhibition. The only problem is, Mutt dances like a pro and Jeff can’t dance at all. That is until his Fairy Godsister arrives and waves her magic wand. Read more about Mutt & Jeff here.

FELIX ALL PUZZLED (1924)
Like Alice’s cat Julius, Felix mixes it up with the Russians when his master won’t feed him his milk until he solves a crossword puzzle. The puzzler is: What is a seven letter word found in Russia? So Felix decides to go to Russia to find the answer. The result is trouble. This is the only complete print of this delightful cartoon romp known to have survived. More on the silent Felix the Cat cartoons is here.

We asked Ray to comment about the music and sound effects he adds to the silent cartoons ~~~

I've been exposed to many styles of music, and have always had a "musical ear." Watching the cartoons, I had a mental picture of the visual rhythm, and thanks to musicians and collectors of rare old recordings as well and my own library, I had a lot of great Public Domain material to work with. A lot of the tunes are 1920s dance music, mostly Fox Trots or Charlestons. I would recall certain pieces, keeping them in mind for each cartoon. I would find the start frame, and by feel, find the beat of the action that fit the beat of the music. In some cases we helped it along with a subtle edit in order to maintain the continuity of rhythm.

But the placement of the music is only a mechanical process. There is also a sense for knowing what music is right for the situation. Music has a great deal to do with how we perceive the films we watch. The same applies to cartoons. The difference between whether the audience is going to remain interested or not is dependent upon how entertaining the music is, and how the music compliments the actions on the screen. Much of the music applied by others tends to be boring and sleep inducing. The use of music for comedy and cartoons is a special thing. The music should be humorous and enhancing of gags and not exist to simply "fill air." I have been fortunate that I have been able to select the right cues and edit them in a way that makes them seem originally scored for the cartoons. But for the most part, this is all instinctive.

As for the sound effects, I have collected them for 40 years. Many are authentic acoustical effects used in theaters, circuses, films, and cartoons. Some I have manufactured, or recreated. I made a particular effort to try to use sound effects that are most closely identified with certain brand cartoons or studios. This is particularly the case with the OUT OF THE INKWELL and AESOP'S FABLES cartoons, where I used the same or similar effects to those used on the soundtracks produced by Fleischer or Terrytoons of the 1930s. There's something that just seems right about hearing those authentic sounds that are so identified with their sound cartoons. Many times people have asked me where I found the sound re-releases of these cartoons. The fact is that I have created these soundtracks to make them sound authentic to the period. So when someone thinks they were from that era, this only indicates that my efforts were successful. That is most gratifying.

 

MM-28 FACES of WWII

 

Today’s Bijou Mini-Matinee is the next in our occasional series featuring motion pictures produced by the Hollywood studios and the U.S. Government during WWII. In this collection of short wartime films we salute the heroic men and women who put their lives on the line in far away battlefields to assure victory.

NEWSPARADE of 1945
First up we present a newsreel that dramatically covers the pivotal news stories of 1945. Footage and narrative includes the final battle in Europe, Allies in Berlin, the capture of Axis war criminals, the surrender of Germany, the death of FDR, Yanks in Tokyo and millions of G.I.s coming home.

WINGS FOR THIS MAN (1945)
Narrated by Ronald Reagan, this documentary tells the story of the black aviation squadron known as the "Tuskegee Airmen." We follow their training in Alabama and their valuable service in the skies over Europe. The film was part of the Army Air Forces Special Film Project and a product of the First Motion Picture Unit of the Army Air Forces. For the first time in these films minority soldiers were officially recognized for their contributions to the war, for their service and their sacrifices. At the time of its' release, this, and the film that follows, JAPANESE AMERICANS, were meant to boldly, and courageously address the problem of racism in our country, and acknowledge the dedicated service of these men and the families they left behind.

JAPANESE AMERICANS (1945)
This film chronicles the heroic service of Nisei Soldiers of the 442nd Infantry Regiment in the Italian Campaign. Racism was pervasive in the 1940s. Daily Civilian life was racially segregated and so were all Military Units. African-Americans fought in Black Units and Asian-Americans fought in Asian Units, and the White Guys fought in White Guy Units. Ugly racial incidents had occurred on military bases throughout the country. A study by the military called "What the Soldier Thinks" revealed the depth of prejudice held by the white soldier. The Services, themselves, were not officially desegregated until the end of the decade, when, in 1948, President Truman issued the Executive Order.

THE INFANTRY BLUES (1943)
Private Snafu is up to his old antics in this animated film from the Warner Bros. animation department. In this one, Snafu contemplates life in other branches of the military and imagines personally experiencing the challenges of each branch. A highlight of this cartoon series is the brilliant character voice work of Mel Blanc.
(Blogger Kevin Langley has more vintage animation model sheets on display here.)

WHO DIED? (1945)
This 5 minute short was sponsored by the War Finance Division of the US Treasury Department, and shown to millions of movie-going Americans along with the main attraction. The short film was written by Betty Smith, who two years earlier wrote the novel “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.” A 1945 version of "the fund-raiser," this film exploits the deaths of fictional American fighting men for the purpose of raising money and is an archetypal example of a propaganda theme widely used toward the end of the war. It asks America to remember the suffering and sacrifice of its fighting men...and, to send money! Who Died? is an effective reminder that numbers (casualty figures) represent people and each life that is lost is important. There’s a time capsule feel to this brief film, yet it still raises a lump in the throat.


 

MM-29  CINEMA VARIETAL

 

Last week’s Bijou Mini-Matinee focused on wartime propaganda films, so this week we balance the solemnity with five cinematic attractions decidedly upbeat and entertaining. You can’t top Tex Avery for cartoon laughs, or a celebrity-filled Hollywood on Parade for a glimpse of the “Golden Age.” To that we add animation mixed with real-life big band music to syncopate a sensational Max Fleischer bouncing-ball sing-a-long short. Cliffhanging serials take center stage to tie it all together in two action-packed serial trailers followed by a chilling cliffhanger from "Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe. "

JERKY TURKEY (1945)
The laughs come fast as the masterful MGM animation team presents Tex Avery’s twisted version of Thanksgiving Day at Plymouth Rock. After the narrator establishes some wacky anachronistic history, the camera follows a Pilgrim as he tracks down a plucky turkey that acts and sounds suspiciously like Jimmy Durante. A madcap chase leads to “dinner at Joe’s.”

RED RYDER & ZORRO TRAILERS
Next we present the trailers for a pair of action-packed Republic serials; each featuring plots centering on high-level corruption in the building of the nation’s railroads, and each directed by the dynamic team of John English and William Whitney.

THE ADVENTURES OF RED RYDER (1940)
Red Ryder was adapted for the screen from a famous comic strip and features actor Don “Red” Barry as the weekly hero. The serial proved a success and was followed by a string of Red Ryder B-movies. A corrupt banker is the bad guy in this 12-chapter horse opera, as he bullies the ranchers off their properties so he can take title of the land for its cross-country railroad right-of-way value. Red escapes certain death numerous times before the day is saved.

ZORRO RIDES AGAIN (1937)
Control of the California-Yucatan Railroad is the prize and precisely why it is under siege by a gang of frontier terrorists hoping to force its sale. Corrupt profiteer “Marsden” and his henchman “Lobo” are the surly antagonists, and the great-grandson of the original Zorro (John Carroll) is the whip lashing protagonist. In this one, the masked-man on horseback is up against enemies with airplanes, bombs and machine guns at their disposal, along with such other anachronistic Zorro challenges as trains and New York skyscrapers.

HOLLYWOOD ON PARADE (1933)
Cliff Edwards sings about the Hollywood on Parade theme song to kick off a fanciful Paramount Hollywood on Parade newsreel featuring appearances by Jean Harlow, Cary Grant, William Powell Carol Lombard, Joan and Constance Bennett, Wheeler & Woolsey and Lupe Velez, among others.

FLASH GORDON CONQUERS THE UNIVERSE (1940)
The exciting cliffhanging conclusion from Chapter 3 “Walking Bombs” is shown, along with the resolution at the beginning of Chapter 4. Sinister Ming is at his most Merciless when he dispatches an army of iron men rigged as “walking bombs” to destroy Flash and his entourage, who are encamped in the frozen planetary wasteland known as Frigia. Witness Flash get blown up on camera, only to pull himself together to struggle on in Chapter 4 “The Destroying Ray.”

SCREEN SONG (1936)
Max Fleischer produced and Brother Dave directed this Max Fleischer Screen Song featuring Vincent Lopez and his orchestra accompanied by the “Famous Bouncing Ball.” An uncredited soloist is featured singing “I Don’t Want to Make History” in the live-action centerpiece. The wrap-around cartoon sequences makes liberal use of puns to parody theatrical newsreel reports at the New News Theatre.

 

 

 

MM #30 - Short Subjects That Sell

Commercial advertising or "commercials" have been around almost forever. The Egyptians used papyrus to create sales messages as well as wall posters. The printing press moved the images from walls and rocks to the handbill, books and newspapers. Then motion pictures introduced commercials to the movie screen and eventually television and computer screens. Last Friday we looked at how a tobacco company in 1935 created an entire cartoon designed to promote cigarette smoking to the youngest and most impressionable of audience members. For today's Bijou Mini-Matinee we present five more examples of short subjects that sell products or deliver messages. Subjects include a 1930s breakfast cereal commercial, the soft selling of cars as product placements in cartoons, a comedy icon starring in a highway safety film, a 1948 environmental message from the Forest Service, and a wildly enthusiastic promotion of unfettered American capitalism.

BREAKFAST PALS (1939)
First up is a colorful commercial produced by the Kellogg's company to influence audience members to buy Rice Krispies. After a sleep-over, Bobby is complaining to friend Billy about his morning cereal being mushy, not like what his Breakfast Pals - Snap, Crackle & Pop - serve him and his dad every morning. Bobby demonstrates how this works when he whistles and in from the window comes S. C. & P. Things start popping when Toughy and his Bedlam Pals, Mushy & Soggy, pop up out of the Brand X cereal box to rumble with the Breakfast Pals. This was shown in movie theaters in 1939 along with the shorts and feature. Imagine sitting through this before watching Gone with the Wind. At least they weren't selling cigarettes in this cartoon commercial that runs a minute and a half.

A COACH FOR CINDERELLA (1936)
The Chevrolet Division of General Motors commissioned this soft sell theatrical advertising short from the Jam Handy Organization. It was the first industrial film produced in Technicolor and received widespread praise from audiences and critics alike. It holds up nicely today and presents a charming and whimsical take on the classic Cinderella story, which Disney wouldn't tackle until 1950. Cinderella must get to the ball, of course, so she needs the dress and the wheels. Elves and forest critters make the dress from woodland materials, caterpillars roll into circles and become the automobile tires, fireflies become the spark plugs and mice power the motor. The transportation won't turn out to be a coach, of course, but rather the latest deluxe model Chevrolet, which magically appears when the coach goes in the "Modernizer" and comes out the finished "product." Audiences had a good time and got their happy ending and Chevrolet sold a lot of cars.

THE OTHER FELLOW (1937)
Bijou favorite Edgar Kennedy plays multiple roles in this rarely seen highway safety film, another example from the Jam Handy Organization. This one was also produced by the Chevrolet Motor Division of GM. Edgar plays a reckless, ill-tempered driver who takes the audience on a ride to demonstrate how it's not always the "other fellow" who doesn't know how to drive. Among the characters we see briefly, all played by Edgar, are the farmer driver, the sport driver, the truck driver, the newlywed driver and a careless driver. Edgar does a little singing from "I'm Sitting on Top of the World" and does a great "slow burn."

THE ADVENTURES OF JUNIOR RAINDROP (1948)
The Forest Service division of the U.S. Department of Agriculture produced this animated and live-action environmental theatrical short concerning watershed management. Junior Raindrop leaves Papa Cloud to visit Mother Earth. Along the way, Junior becomes a juvenile delinquent and gets mixed up with some hoodlum raindrops plotting to gang up and create a flash flood. The H2O Gang escalates the chaos and the next thing you know they're flooding the landscape and the countryside. Live action segments supplement the animation. The message is to preserve the trees, avoid over-grazing and soil erosion, protect vegetation and maintain the natural ecology as a general rule - and to spread the word about good watershed management.

MEET KING JOE (1949)
"Meet Joe, the king of the workers of the world." Thus begins this controversial animated propaganda short created to unabashedly promote American capitalism and industry. Narrator to Joe: "It must be the American way of doing things that makes you the luckiest guy in the world." The short was produced by John Sutherland Productions as part of Harding College's "Fun and Facts about America" film series. The narrator continues: "Joe's the king, because he can buy more with his wages than any other worker on the globe." The message and the statistics presented here from the world of 1949 are ironic, given the advent of globalization, the current condition of the American work force and the declining value of the dollar. The narrator informs us that Americans own 72% of the cars in the world, 54% of the world's telephones, 92% of the bathtubs, and "practically all the refrigerators in existence." The condescending attitude taken by the narrator with respect to the King Joe "worker" character is reminiscent of that between the narrator and Private Snafu from the wartime propaganda cartoons (who Joe happens to resemble). The film was reportedly financed by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and created by the chairman of General Motors.

KOOL PENGUINS (1935)
This uncool and disgraceful cartoon was featured in last Friday's feature post. Read the complete story and watch the cartoon here

MM #31 - A Pop Culture Potpourri


The Mummy Strikes and Lucky Strikes and Betty Boop gets naked. A comedy duo tackles a trio of terror and our Bijou Mini-Matinee of pop culture potpourri is off and running. This week we've programmed an eclectic mix of short subject treats designed simply to amuse and entertain.

THE MUMMY STRIKES (1943)
We begin with an exquisite and stylish Max Fleischer Superman cartoon in Technicolor. This one involves an ancient Egyptian Mummy's curse and the murdered dead body of a distinguished scientist discovered in a tomb of Mummies. Lois Lane follows Clark Kent into the Egyptian tomb, attempting to scoop Clark as he investigates a frame-up for the murder, which involves the slain scientist's assistant. The ancient Mummies who guard the tomb are awakened, of course, and have a few bones to pick with the intruders. Only Superman can handle this much bad Karma and produce the predictable Happy Ending.

ABBOTT & COSTELLO TRAILER TRIO
Next up, enjoy a trio of trailers from the Abbott & Costello "Meet the Monsters" series of comedy-horror films from Universal. The first trailer features a live-action mummy from 1955 on the loose and terrorizing A&C in "Abbott & Costello Meet the Mummy." This one was produced late in the comedy duos career, but still delivered plenty of laughs. Then enjoy the original trailer for "Abbott & Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" from 1953, which featured Boris Karloff as the mad man with the split personality. This is followed by the trailer for what critics considered A&C's best ever effort "Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein" from 1948, which featured Lon Chaney as the wolf Man, Bela Lugosi as Count Dracula, but Glenn Strange rather than Karloff as the Frankenstein Monster.

IS MY PALM READ (1933)
Next, everyone's favorite vamp Betty Boop takes the spotlight, and shares it with Bimbo and KoKo the Clown. All are featured in this provocative Max and Dave Fleischer concoction that must have raised some eyebrows when an infant version of Betty Boop appears naked and strikes some curious poses for the camera. It is surprising that the Hays Office didn't strike the entire Baby Boop sequence. Bimbo plays a fortune teller, and KoKo is his doorman. Betty shows up for a reading and the crystal ball reveals more than a prognostication.

LUCKY STRIKE MEANS FINE TOBACCO (1950)
This past week the Bijou Blog has been showcasing short films created for the purpose of selling commercial products or ideas. Here is yet another film made to promote cigarette smoking. This one was produced by the Jam Handy Organization on behalf of the American Tobacco Company's Lucky Strike brand of deadly carcinogens. In 1950, Lucky Strike's big radio shows were "Your Hit Parade," starring then "American Idol" Frank Sinatra and "Kay Kyser's Kollege of Musical Knowledge," starring a young Kay Kyser. Such radio shows were often underwritten by sponsors seeking to identify their products with soft sell celebrity identification. Sinatra may have allegedly preferred Camels, but here he sings a cool version of "Stardust" on behalf of Lucky Strike - accompanied by full orchestra and chorus. We've chosen to edit out the three minute "commercial" that was central to this short and that slyly suggested how important was Lucky Strike's selection and processing of "fine tobacco" acquired from their successful bidding at the "tobacco auction."

If you really want to see the uncut version, which includes the tobacco selection and processing sequence, you can view it here.

ALL'S FAIR AT THE FAIR (1938)
Lastly, we join "Elmer and Mirandy," rural visitors to a 1930's cartoon version of the World's Fair, which features then-new technologies and innovations in this futuristic fantasy from the Fleischer Color Classics series. Join us again this coming Friday when we screen a forgotten and long lost "Buck Rogers" short subject that was presented at the 1933 Chicago World's Fair. This cartoon, and the complete Fleischer Superman cartoon series are available here.

MM #32 - Everything Old is New Again


It may be a tired old cliché today, but the Hollywood studios have a history of being richly rewarded for revisiting past successful formulas. The newest Indiana Jones blockbuster is the fourth in the series of popular screen adventures, and, like the Star Wars series, were inspired by the classic cliffhanging serials such as those featured on Matinee at the Bijou. Cartoons and short subjects were no exception and remaking and re-imagining what once worked proved often to be profitable.

The original Tom & Jerry characters were inspired by the original Mutt & Jeff silent-era cartoons. The cartoon incarnation of Mutt & Jeff was adapted from a successful comic strip series. The theatrical "screen magazine" short subjects like Voice of Hollywood, The Star Reporter and the Hollywood on Parade series all featured stories about celebrities, the world of movies, and the promotion of upcoming studio releases. Since 1981 television has continued the tradition with Entertainment Tonight and its many proliferating clones.

Today's Bijou Mini-Matinee and Friday's feature post are designed to introduce the uninitiated to the surreal world of the original Tom & Jerry. But this isn't the cat and mouse that modern audiences have come to know and love. This Tom & Jerry series first flickered on movie screens in 1931 in the persona of two human characters; one tall, the other short. Friday's post will feature their story, but today you can enjoy three of the best in the series - along with a short and trailer further demonstrating how the Hollywood studios were pioneers not only in filmmaking, but also in recycling.

WOT A NIGHT (1931)
This is the first in the original Tom & Jerry cartoon series and one of their most bizarre and imaginative. Tom & Jerry are cab drivers who arrive at a train depot to pick up two strange bearded fares and endure a flash flood to deliver them to a haunted castle. Upon arrival Tom & Jerry are stiffed for the cab fare and lured onto the premises only to become trapped inside. This leads to multiple encounters with a variety of apparitions and performing skeletons, including one skeleton doing a Spanish dance and another toweling off in the bathtub.

PENCIL MANIA (1932)
One of Tom & Jerry's most silly and surreal cartoons. Jerry has acquired a magic pencil and uses it to annoy Tom by transforming existing objects and drawing new objects that come to life only to undergo metamorphosis. A sequence where Jerry draws a tomato, potato and banana sets the scene for a surreal interpretation of the song "Yes, We Have No Bananas." This sequence segues into an old fashioned melodrama with T & J attempting to thwart the villain and rescue the hero and heroine. In a bizarre twist, Jerry's magic pencil saves the day for the villain when the hero is on the railroad tracks and run over by a train. Tom promptly dispatches the villain, and Jerry then dispatches Tom's new dream date.

A SPANISH TWIST (1931)
In this one we encounter Tom & Jerry lost at sea on a raft and battling an amusing and mischievous octopus. Cast ashore in Spain, they become overly infatuated with a dancing Spanish waitress at a cafe' who incorporates "bump and grind" into her interpretation of La Paloma. The irate café boss unleashes a pair of bull bouncers on the boys, only the boys defeat the bulls. As punishment, Tom & Jerry must now fight "The Bull" in an arena where bulls multiply as quickly as T & J can dispatch them. The finale arrives when a postman arrives with a telegram from Uncle Sam announcing that the 18th Amendment had been repealed. With prohibition now over, T & J are seen swiftly rafting back to the good old U.S.A.

THE CLOWN (1952) Trailer
Red Skelton is perfect in the title role in this father and son melodrama. Red plays an ex-star of the Ziegfeld Follies who is wasting away his life and relationship to drinking and gambling. Actor Tim Considine is introduced in the trailer as "Timmie" Considine (8 years before he became one of TV's My Three Sons) and plays the devoted son whose endurance and endearment fuel the plot and forecast the weepy ending. Sound familiar? The Clown was inspired by MGM's The Champ (1931), where the father is a champion boxer before succumbing to the same bad habits. The original starred Wallace Beery, who won the Best Actor Oscar that year for his performance, and Jackie Cooper, memorable as the son. The Champ was remade in 1979 with Jon Voight and Ricky Schroeder in the key roles. In The Clown, Tim Considine's name is "Dink" - as was Jackie Cooper's in The Champ.

VOICE OF HOLLYWOOD (1931)
Latin screen star Don Alvarado (La Cucaracha) is host of radio station S.T.A.R. in this early celebrity screen magazine. Don uses a telephone and microphone to manage remote introductions to celebrities Betty Compson, Tom Mix, Ruth Roland, John Boles, Louise Fazenda and others. Then he reads "Movie Club Request" letters, ostensibly from audience members, with special requests to see their favorite stars. The first request is to see Mickey Daniels and Mary Kornman from Hal Roach's original Our Gang series, and they do a comedy routine. Mickey was in the very first short, filmed in 1922 and simply called "Our Gang." He continued in the series until 1937. Mary Kornman joined the cast in the fourth Our Gang comedy called One Terrible Day and also continued until 1937 when she and Mickey appeared in the series for the last time in Reunion in Rhythm. Then there is a request for a song from actress Lupe Velez, who accommodates by performing a love song that just happens to promote her latest MGM studio release Cuban Love Song, which also featured Louise Fazenda.

BUCK ROGERS (1933/34)
"Buck Rogers in the 25th Century: An Interplanetary Battle with the Tiger Men of Mars" is a preposterous 10 minute short that premiered at the Chicago World's Fair in 1933/34 - but was never shown theatrically. This preposterous short was the feature of last Friday's blog, which follows immediately below. Buck (Anthony) Rogers began life in 1928 in a Novella published in Amazing Stories magazine and in 1929 became the first science fiction comic strip. In 1932 Buck Rogers was the first sci-fi radio show and endured until 1947. This short was Buck's first celluloid manifestation and was followed in 1939 by a Universal 12-chapter cliffhanging serial starring Buster Crabbe as Buck. Buck Rogers was twice produced as a TV series and as a TV movie, and has been optioned by Millennium Films to be developed as a big screen blockbuster for release in 2011. Indeed, everything old becomes new again.

 

MM #33 - John Wayne: Singing Cowboy?


Should the subject of "singing cowboys" surface, most would quickly think of Roy Rogers or Gene Autry. You have to be fond of vintage westerns or old enough to have been around during the thirties to early fifties to name other famous cowboy crooners, like Tex Ritter, Rex Allen and Jimmy Wakely. But few know that John Wayne has the distinction of being one of the screen's first singing cowboys.

In Friday's feature post we're going to share more about the singing cowboy phenomenon. Meanwhile, today's Bijou Mini-Matinee salutes the singing cowboys of the silver screen with a variety of film clips and novelty shorts.

RIDERS OF DESTINY (1933)
This was the first of sixteen B-westerns produced by Lone Star Productions and released by Monogram Pictures to star John Wayne. What were they thinking? Since Wayne wasn't a singer, his voice had to be dubbed. They billed him as "Singin' Sandy" but used a singer whose voice was incongruous with Wayne's own voice. The result was dreadful. Here is the title sequence followed by two clips of John Wayne warbling woefully, first on horseback accompanying himself on guitar from the film's opening sequence, followed by a love ballad called "Desert Breeze" sung by Wayne to his sweetheart. While he would go on to sing in a couple more westerns in the Lone Star series, the idea was not a good fit and the sight of John Wayne singing was not supported by audiences.

BELLS OF SAN ANGELO (1947)
Roy Rogers was a big hit in his first movie for Republic Pictures in 1938 called Under Western Stars. One of the songs he sang in the picture, "Dust," was nominated for an Oscar. Roy sang and played himself in nearly seventy B-westerns from 1938 to 1951. Shown here are the opening titles, followed by a fun musical sequence from 1947's Bells of San Angelo, starring Roy Rogers and Dale Evans. Roy sings "A Cowboys Dream of Heaven," followed by "Singing Cowgirl" Dale Evans singing a sweet and sassy rebuke to Roy called "I Love the West."

TWILIGHT ON THE TRAIL (1937)
Louise Massey and the Westerners sing while the audience follows-the-bouncing-ball in this sing-a-long from Max Fleischer's Screen Song series. Louise' brother Allen Massey participates in the animated sequence before and after the song. Allen tells tall tales about his cowboy prowess, which are demonstrated in cartoon form. Louise Massey and the Westerners were a major country music act during the 1930s in concert and on the radio. They appeared in this short subject and the same year appeared with singing cowboy star Tex Ritter in Where the Buffalo Roam.

THE TALENTED TRAMPS (1949)
Billy Gray and Robert Larry perform with The Sons of Texas in this country music novelty short. The sheriff insists a group arriving in town prove that they are musicians - by performing for him. Billy Gray sings "She's Mine all Mine" followed by Robert Larry singing "I'm Sending You a Letter."

FIGHTING MAD (1939)
A "Singing Mountie" called Renfrew of the Royal Mounted was a concept almost as preposterous as the idea of John Wayne as a singing cowboy. Monogram nonetheless cranked out eight of these entertaining musical comedy adventures from 1937 to 1940. The kids in matinee audiences reportedly vocalized their discontent whenever the Mountie started to sing. Here Renfrew star James Newell sings two of the songs featured in the film: "Trails End" and "The Lady's in Distress." The latter includes these lyrics - "It's in the line of duty, for a Mountie to get his man, but in the line of beauty, he gets the girl too, if he can."



MM #34 - Singing Cowboy Round-Up


John Wayne's "Singing Sandy" character was not the screen's first singing cowboy after all. The Duke's role in "Riders of Destiny" (1933) was the "first" of what Monogram planned as a continuing series of B-western horse operas to be produced by Lone Star Productions. When Wayne's badly dubbed singing was poorly received by audiences, the Lone Star series continued - but songs were rarely performed in the sequels that followed.

So just who was the screen's first singing cowboy? Ranger Doug's book Singing in the Saddle provides a wealth of info on this curious phenomenon of cinema history. If measured by the earliest film made, it appears the distinction belongs to Ken Maynard. In 1923, with only a horseman's skills, Maynard began acting and stunting in the movies. He acted in 30 silent films before making his first talkie, "The Wagon Master," in the summer of 1929. Country music was a vital part of the popular culture at the time, and likely the reason Maynard was assigned the challenge of singing in his movies. His third sound film, "Parade of the West," was released in January 1930 featuring three country music songs.

Today's Bijou Mini-Matinee is a round-up of film clips and trailers from five of America's most popular singing cowboys of the era: Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, Tex Ritter, Ken Maynard and Bob Steele.

OKLAHOMA CYCLONE (1930)
Bob Steele came close to being the screen's first singing cowboy. Steele began making westerns in 1920 as a 13-year-old tenderfoot in a series of silent shorts called "The Adventures of Bill and Bob." Bill was Bob's real life twin brother, and the series was directed by the boys' father, Robert North Bradbury, Sr. In the summer of 1930, Steele made his first talking picture (and 38th movie) called "Near the Rainbow's End." The picture featured two songs performed as duets by Bob Steele and Perry Murdock: "Ragtime Cowboy Joe" and "Ro-Ro-Rolling Along." Likely the decision to make Steele a "singing" cowboy was influenced by the continuing success of the Maynard musical westerns. There are contrary reports as to whether he did his own singing, or his voice was dubbed by brother Bill. Steele sang in only five of the two dozen films he starred in from 1930 to 1934, and dropped the singing for his many oater operas made thereafter.

Here we present the opening titles and a select sequence from Steele's second talking picture, "Oklahoma Cyclone." The plot has our singing hero on the trail of his missing father and posing as an outlaw in the process. Today's audiences may remember Bob Steele from the mid-1960s when he was featured regularly on the F-Troop TV series. He played Trooper Duffy.

DOWN THE WYOMING TRAIL (1939)
While John Wayne, Ken Maynard and Bob Steele may have been born to the saddle, but not to the song, Tex Ritter actually had an established career as a country singer long before his talent was translated to the silver screen. Ritter started out by singing cowboy songs on the radio in 1928 and wisely propelled his talents into a prominent career in radio and even occasional live roles on the Broadway stage. This all resulted in major recording contracts for Ritter in 1933 - three years before he made his first singing cowboy movie, "Song of the Gringo," in 1936.

In these clips from "Down the Wyoming Trail," Tex sings "In Elk Valley" under the opening credits and then spends Christmas Eve in jail crooning "It Makes No Difference Now" to the sheriff. The final clip typifies a trick often used by the singing cowboy -- to see just how far he can tease the villain with ironic lyrics in his song before the villain figures out the song is about him. This one is called "And He Looks So Peaceful Now."

Tex Ritter, of course, was the father of the late comedic actor John Ritter. Notice in these scenes how much father and son resembled each other in appearance and screen presence. Ritter the younger learned much from his gifted father.

IN OLD SANTA FE (1934)
This film doubled as a starring role for Ken Maynard and a screen test for Gene Autry - a new singing talent being groomed by Mascot Pictures at the time. Autry soon surpassed Maynard in popularity and studio support, and in 1935 replaced Maynard as the star of a new 12 chapter serial the studio was producing called "The Phantom Empire." Ken Maynard's brother was another B-western star named Kermit Maynard, who appeared in 280 films between 1927 and 1962.

Here is the first reel from this Mascot chestnut showcasing in one sequence the complete Ken Maynard screen persona: his famous Palomino horse "Tarzan," black hat, pistols, guitar and grumpy old sidekick Cactus (George "pre-Gabby" Hayes). Notice how smoothly the song and song's refrain are integrated into the plot's development as Maynard sings "As Long As I Got My Dog."

GENE AUTRY TRAILERS
Enjoy a trio of Gene Autry singing cowboy trailers, including "Melody Ranch" (1940) co-starring Ann Miller and Jimmy Durante; "The Big Sombrero" (1949), a film with Autry singing seven songs, including "In My Adobe Hacienda" and "Oh My Darlin' Clementine." In "Sioux City Sue" (1946), Autry sings the title song and "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You."

ROY ROGERS TRAILERS
This trio of Roy Roger's singing cowboy trailers features "King of the Cowboys" (1943), where Roy sings in the saddle while smashing Nazi saboteurs. Songs include "I'm an Old Cow Hand," "The Gay Ranchero," "Prairie Moon," and others. "Bells of Rosarita" (1948), one of Roy's best musicals featuring the title song, "When the Circus Comes to Town" and "I'm Going to Build a Big Fence Around Texas." Then in "Roll on Texas Moon" (1946) Roy wrangles four song hits into a phony range war between cattlemen and sheepmen.
Great thanks to our colleague Greg Luce for providing the film clips and trailers for this week's show. The complete films are available now at Sinister Cinema.

 

 

 

Mini-Matinee #35 - Personalities on Parade

This week we present a parade of pop culture screen personalities from the 1930s and 40s. Included for your amusement are Porky Pig, Daffy Duck, Busby Berkeley, Dick Powell, Gloria Stuart, John Wayne, Joe Louis and the Cabin Kids. Even Bugs Bunny drops in for a daffy cameo.



PORKY PIG’S FEAT (1943)
Daffy Duck’s histrionics are wildly on display in this loopy Looney Tunes cartoon produced by Leon Schlesinger and directed by Frank Tashlin. Porky and Daffy can’t foot their bill at the Broken Arms Hotel, and the hotel manager is simply not going to let them leave until they do. This is the set up for a gag fest centering on how Porky and Daffy will manage to escape. Out of desperation, Daffy finally phones Bugs for advice, triggering a cameo appearance by the wild hare himself. As usual, Mel Blanc voices all of the characters: Porky, Daffy, Bugs, the Hotel Manager and Daffy’s gambling partner.


GOLD DIGGERS OF 1935 - Trailer
A luxury hotel is again the setting and paying the bills the challenge in what passes for a plot in this, one of Busby Berkeley’s finest musicals. Stars are Dick Powell, Gloria Stuart, Adolphe Menjou, Alice Brady, Glenda Farrell and Hugh Herbert. This follow-up to 42nd Street, Footlight Parade and Gold Diggers of 1933 marks the first time Busby Berkeley was permitted to direct not only the big musical production numbers, but the entire picture. The film won the Oscar for Best Original Song “Lullaby of Broadway” by Harry Warren and Al Dubin. NY Times critic Andre Sennwald noted: “Busby Berkeley, the master of scenic prestidigitation, continues to dazzle the eye and stun the imagination.”

LIFE OF THE PARTY (1935)
Musical short subjects, like musical movie extravaganzas, often rely on the slimmest of plots to succeed. This Educational Pictures comedy short, is essentially a variety show featuring a billboard of musical acts. The Cabin Kids began appearing on screen in 1935 as a “musical ensemble” in features, Our Gang comedy shorts and a series of musical shorts in which they headlined. This “Song Hit Story” features performances by The Cabin Kids, The Pope Sisters and The Six Mountain Melodeers. Scheduled entertainment for a posh dinner party is delayed, so the help and a hillbilly orchestra put on impromptu performances. The five Cabin Kids perform “Sweet Sue,” “This Little Piggy” and “Workin’ For the Lord.” Earle W. Hammons founded Educational Films Corporation of America in 1919 for the purpose of producing educational films for schools. When that didn’t work out, Hammons segued into comedy and musical theatrical shorts instead, but retained the original company name.

SHADOW OF THE EAGLE (1932) Trailer
This extra long trailer was created to promote a “New Mascot Serial in 12 chapters” and boasts “The Greatest Cast Ever Assembled in a Serial” with a litany of names that few have ever heard of before – other than John Wayne. In this one, hero Wayne plays a pilot on the trail of the mysterious and elusive villain known as the “Eagle” after the owner of a traveling fairground goes missing. John Wayne appeared in three cliffhanging serials in 1932 and 1933: Shadow of the Eagle, The Hurricane Express and The Three Musketeers. The first two were re-released theatrically in 1949.

MOVIETONE NEWS (1937)
Lowell Thomas is the familiar voice of Movietone News and in this newsreel Thomas dramatically narrates three prominent events from 1937. The first is a “World Events” report on a European crisis triggered by the bombing by Spanish planes of the German pocket battleship “Deutschland.” Then the horrifying explosion of the Zeppelin Hindenburg is captured on film following the airship’s 21st successful Atlantic crossing and the fateful attempt to land in Lakehurst, New Jersey in 1937. “Encasing seven million cubic feet of highly flammable hydrogen” says Thomas, the Hindenburg dissolved in flames in “a nightmare of 20 seconds.” Lastly, sports reporter Ed Thorgersen covers the aftermath of Joe Louis’ KO victory over James Braddock in Chicago. Reports Thorgersen: "the onetime Alabama cotton picker Joe Louis, today at the age of 23, the heavyweight champion of the world.”

To enter the Bijou Mini-Matinee Theater on YouTube, click here.

 

Mini-Matinee #36 - Bijou Celebrates Popeye

Popeye made his first screen appearance in 1933, three years after Betty Boop's cartoon debut. However, other than on 1950's television, the vintage black & white Popeye cartoons have rarely been accessible to audiences for nearly fifty years. Kudos to Warner Home Video for creatively packaging and releasing all of the theatrical Popeyes in an ongoing series. The second DVD volume covering 1938-1940 Popeyes hit the streets yesterday, June 17. To celebrate, today's Bijou Mini-Matinee is an all-cartoon salute to Popeye the Sailor.

POPEYE'S 20TH ANNIVERSARY (1954)
First up is a 1950s Technicolor Popeye cartoon. Hollywood is honoring our hero for 20 years of movie-making at a star-studded testimonial dinner hosted by Bob Hope. Bluto and Olive Oyl are in attendance, as are caricatures of Jimmy Durante, Bing Crosby, Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. Rather than give a speech, shy Popeye has a projector and shows clips from two of his famous productions: Tops in the Big Top and Rodeo Romance. Watching Popeye whomp him twice is more than Bluto can bear, which leads to an inevitable third helping of spinach and a third whomping by Popeye.

I'M IN THE ARMY NOW (1936)
Next we shift from 1950s Technicolor into glorious 1930s black & white to enjoy an earlier incarnation of the Popeye persona. In this one, Olive Oyl is out walking with Bluto and Popeye when they pass a recruiting station. Olive swoons and exclaims how much she loves a man in uniform. Taking the cue, the boys rush in to enlist. However, the recruiter says he can only take one of them, setting off a bragging competition where Popeye and Bluto each show photos to the recruiter demonstrating their strength and bravery. Each photo morphs into a film clip from earlier Popeye cartoons.

 SINDBAD (1952)
Popeye, along with three look-alike nephews, visits a nautical history museum. They come across a statue of Sindbad, the world’s greatest sailor, who coincidentally resembles Popeye’s nemesis Bluto. This sets the stage for a cartoon-within-a-cartoon retelling of the classic Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor saga from 1936, showcasing excerpts from the Technicolor two-reel Popeye featurette of the same name.

I NEVER CHANGES MY ALTITUDE (1937)
Popeye is heart-broken when he arrives at the airport to discover a “Dear John” letter from Olive Oyl. She has shut down her airport café business to fly off with aviator Bluto. Olive’s passion for pilot Bluto diminishes when he insists she paint the aircraft's tail while he's flying the plane. Popeye sees this, is outraged, and hops into a plane to challenge Bluto in a series of daring aerial dogfights. Bluto manages to demolish Popeye’s plane but not his spirit nor access to a handy can of spinach.

 AND BATTERY (1956)
In this Technicolor tale, Bluto is suing Popeye for assault and battery in a courtroom where hamburger-happy Wimpy is the presiding judge. Bluto arrives bandaged and in a wheel chair to protest Popeye’s incessant and brutal beatings “for doinnuttin’.” This sets the stage for a series of clips from earlier color Popeye cartoons.

POPEYE FOR PRESIDENT (1956)
Our next Popeye cartoon is a reprise that was originally included in Bijou Mini-Matinee #16 titled “Politics at the Bijou." Popeye and Bluto run for President and Olive Oyl’s vote will decide the winner in this Technicolor romp. This begs the question, was Popeye a Democrat or a Republican?

LET’S SING WITH POPEYE (1934)
Follow the bouncing ball and sing-a-long with Popeye the Sailor Man. Max Fleischer produced this animated gem, which was included in our very first Bijou Mini-Matinee #1, and includes all the lyrics to the famous song.

 

 

Mini-Matinee # 37 - Selected Short Subjects

For movie-goers prior to 1960, the feature attraction or double bill was the draw, but the smorgasbord of selected short subjects included on the menu was often more fun. Today’s Bijou Mini-Matinee is a mix of merriment and mayhem showcasing two vintage cartoons, an entertaining screen magazine short subject, a thrilling cliffhanging serial chapter, topped off with a trio of 1950s B-movie sci-fi trailers. So grab the popcorn and pop open the soda pop, it’s time for another Mini-Matinee at the Bijou.

SIMPLE SIMON (1935)
First up is a fanciful ComiColor cartoon produced by Ub Iwerks and based on the lyrical Mother Goose nursery rhyme. Goofy Simple Simon and his Goose join the parade of Mother Goose characters, including Humpty Dumpty, Hansel & Gretel, Little Bo Sheep, and others. In this colorful fantasy, Simon wants only to enjoy the Fair, but must instead contend with the furious Pie Man for not buying his pie, man. The animation is rich and the music is lively. Here are the complete Simple Simon lyrics.

BROADWAY HIGHLIGHTS (1933)
Ted Husing narrates another trip down the Great White Way, with behind-the-scenes visits to famous places and events. The first stop in this screen magazine is CBS Radio Playhouse to witness a rehearsal of Laugh with Ken Murray, featuring a comedy routine with Eve Arden, and we swing to some music from the Russ Morgan Band. Then it’s on to the New York Winter Garden Theater to witness a tribute to the Schuberts on the 25th anniversary of the theater. On hand for the festivities are a young Milton Berle, Bert Lahr, Phil Baker and other luminaries of the 1930s theater world.Then we cross the George Washington Bridge to one of Broadway’s most popular summer night spots, Ben Martin’s Riviera. Highlights of the floor show include chorus girls, an incredible acrobatic dancer and some sensational moves from Spanish dancers Estelle & LeRoy.

SILVERY MOON (1935)
A romantic pair of cool cats are out swooning while “sailing along … on moonlight Bay.” Their imaginations transport them to the moon and a musical excursion thru Candy Land to the Candy Palace. Overindulgence is the message in this delightful early 30s Aesop’s Fable. The fanciful dream begins when a highly stylized fairy with butterfly wings waves her magic wand to bid them into Candy Land –- and ends when they are chased off the moon by an animated bottle of Caster Oil. More delightful Aesop's Fables cartoons are available at Thunderbean Animation.

THE THREE MUSKETEERS
(1933) Alexander Dumas’ classic The Three Musketeers was adapted and updated for serial fans by Nat Levine’s Mascot Pictures. Heroic American pilot John Wayne aligns with a trio of French Foreign Legion members to route Arab gun runners. Here is the exciting cliffhanger ending from Chapter 3, followed by the opening credits to Chapter 4 - and the resolution of the cliffhanger. Surely even John Wayne cannot survive the murderous machinations of El Shaitan (rhymes with Satan) and his Devil’s Circle. This was the last in a trio of screen serials made by a very young John Wayne. The others are Shadow of the Eagle and Hurricane Express. Lon Chaney, Jr. is featured, but credited here with his original screen name, Creighton Chaney. He changed it to Lon Chaney, Jr. two years later.

SCI-FI TRAILER TRIO (1950s)
You’ll Be Paralyzed with Fear! Ten Thousand Times More Terrifying Than Your Maddest Nightmares! Raw Panic the Screen Never Dared Reveal! Trailers are often more fun than seeing the movie. Here is a trio of terrific 1950s B-movie sci-fi trailers, beginning with the original trailer for Teenagers from Outer Space (1959). Warner Bros. bought this radically low-budget howler for the bottom half of a double bill topped by the release of the sequel to Godzilla. Next up is the trailer for what appears to be a fun - but lost or missing - sci-fi jewel called The Cyclops (1957) Director/writer Bert I. Gordon first scared audiences in June 1957 with The Beginning of the End, about an army of giant grasshoppers. Gordon followed this with The Cyclops the same summer. The plot involves a gigantic 25-foot tall, radiation-poisoned, one-eyed irritable man with issues he demands be addressed. This was followed in 1958 by Gordon’s Amazing Colossal Man and War of the Colossal Beast. Lastly, Richard Denning heads the cast in Target Earth (1957) where an army of alien robots threatens mankind. After hiring the actors, the low production budget funded only one robot costume for the whole movie. The promised army of robots had to be the same robot in each robot scene.

 

Mini-Matinee #38 - Superheroes on Celluloid
 

“Not All Superheroes Wear Tights” is VCI Entertainment’s tagline promoting their new super-DVD release of the Dick Tracy Returns serial. Currently there continues a wave of new theatrical releases featuring the noblest of heroes and the darkest of villains - with the newest Batman saga waiting in the wings.

Friday’s post will feature one of the most creative and exciting cliffhangers ever made. Meanwhile, today’s Bijou Mini-Matinee includes a rich array of matinee superheroes. Whether or not they wear tights is beside the point, as long as they get the job done. We also salute VCI Entertainment this week for continuing to produce and distribute top quality home video versions of these classic and timeless serial treasures.

DICK TRACY (1937) Chapter 7
First up is the exciting cliffhanger from Chapter 7 of the original 15 chapter Dick Tracy serial. As we pick up the action, the Spider’s gang has captured Dick Tracy and The Spider is about to arrive in person in his “Flying Wing.” The obligatory fight ensues leading to Tracy’s escape into the mystery mine and a certain deadly demise. This is followed by the opening credits to Chapter 8 - Battle in the Clouds, where we enjoy the cliffhanger resolution and learn if Dick Tracy survives.

 (1942)
Superman tackles both fire and ice today in a double dose of super heroics. First up is Volcano, one of the most colorful episodes in the Fleischer/Paramount series. Naive Lois wants a close-up look at the awakening Mt. Monokoa volcano, and doesn’t want her reporter instincts restrained by the protective Clark Kent. So she hides Clark’s press pass, keeping him away from the action until the danger reaches the boiling point. This indeed looks like a job for Superman.

THE PHANTOM EMPIRE (1933)
Back in the 1980s, when The Phantom Empire first premiered on the original Matinee at the Bijou series on PBS, a good film print of the serial was not known to exist. At long last, VCI Entertainment has produced and is distributing a beautiful copy of this campy sci-fi western adventure. Here is the cliffhanger from Chapter 10 – The Rebellion, where Gene Autry must ally with Queen Tika if he and his entourage are to escape destruction of the underground city of Murania. When the queen demands Gene agree, he asks: “But how do I know I can trust you?” Queen Tika responds: “I am of royal blood; my ancestors have been Kings in Murania for 100,000 years. My word is good.” Yes, but what good is Queen Tika’s word when Gene is about to be torched by a robot in the exciting cliffhanger?

THE ARCTIC GIANT (1942)
Superman, having tamed the fire in Volcano, now faces the mammoth challenge of thwarting a gigantic prehistoric monster, quickly thawing from the frigid arctic ice. This and 16 other classic Superman cartoons are available in a lavish DVD release with loads of extras from VCI Entertainment.

 GREEN ARCHER (1940)
Here is an exciting cliffhanger from chapter 5 - The Fatal Spark, of The Green Archer serial. Veteran actor Victor Jory got to play the hero in this serial set in a castle with hidden passageways and trap doors. There are actually two Green Archers at work here, one on the side of lawlessness and the other on the side of justice and happy endings. This is available from Restored Serials.

 

 

Mini-Matinee #39 - The Great Escape

The 1930s was a decade characterized by struggle and uncertainty in America. Just when it seemed we were coming out of the Great Depression, Germany, Italy and Japan were greedily carving up the map of the world. Our entry into a new global conflict looked more inevitable every day.

For many millions of Americans during this era, a day spent at the local movie matinee was an escape from problems as immediate as the rent and as ominous as the headlines. As we say in At the Bijou, our theme song for the original Matinee at the Bijou series on PBS: “Il Duce and The Fuhrer couldn’t have been obscurer on The Planet Mongo or The Melody Ranch.”

Today’s Bijou Mini-Matinee consists of some of our favorite escapes compiled from prior mini-matinees. Of course, in our 21st century world, governments are honest and exist to serve their citizens; modern inventions and labor saving devices make our lives as close to worry-free as they can be. Still, pretend along with us that FDR is in White House and life has not yet become Utopia in these United States. Escape along with us to The Bijou. Come on, the house lights are going down...

DAFFY DUCK AND THE DINOSAUR (1939)
First up, Casper Caveman (a caricature of Jack Benny) fancies Daffy Duck as dinner in Chuck Jones' prehysterical Technicolor masterpiece. Several great WB cartoon directors worked with the sometimes difficult but always talented Mr. Duck. This was Chuck Jones' first romp with the daffy star.

A TRIO OF TARZAN TRAILERS (1939-42)
Johnny Weissmuller played Tarzan in a dozen movies. Six for MGM from 1932-42, six for RKO from 1943-48, and then he went on to play a different jungle character, this time with clothes on, in the Jungle Jim movie series which continued until 1955. Twenty three years in the jungle is a long time for anyone, athlete or not.

Here are trailers for the last three films in the Weissmuller MGM Tarzan series, each featuring Maureen O’Sullivan as Jane and Johnny Sheffield as boy. The trailers are: Tarzan Finds a Son (1939), Tarzan’s Secret Treasure (1941) and Tarzan’s New York Adventure (1942).

STAR REPORTER (1936)
Ted Husing hosts this Hollywood newsreel featuring Dorothy Lamour's original paramount screen test. Listen to the now politically incorrect lyrics as the lovely Dorothy sings Love is Like a Cigarette. The Star Reporter series was one of several celebrity newsreels produced by the Hollywood studios during the 1930s and 40s. Others included The Voice of Hollywood, Hollywood on Parade, Screen Snapshots and Broadway Highlights.

MENDELSSOHN’S SPRING SONG (1931)
This is a colorful and surreal animated treasure. Director Cy Young orchestrates birds, butterflies, caterpillars and a frog to Mendelssohn’s "Spring Song" and to splendid effect. It was originally created as an experimental film to test a new two-strip color process called Brewster Color. This was to be the first in a new series, but the series did not continue. The classic film world is indebted to animator Steve Stanchfield for beautifully restoring and preserving this enchanting work of art on behalf of Thunderbean Animation.

DEVILED HAMS (1936)
A sizzling musical short set in Hades, with vaudeville crooner Gus Van holding court as ruler of the nether world. Those on trial must prove themselves thru their music. Dancers Toy and Wing do some otherworldly “toe” dancing to big band jazz. Erskine Hawkins and his band blend with Gus Van’s warbling to heat up the satirically sinful shenanigans.

DICK TRACY RETURNS (1938)
Now, with thanks to our friends at VCI Entertainment - here is the thrilling cliffhanger from Chapter 3 of Dick Tracy Returns (1938). The chapter is aptly titled “Handcuffed to Doom.” How is it possible that Dick Tracy and Steve get out of this impossible predicament? Here’s a hint - think “law enforcement standard issue.”

DICK TRACY RETURNS (1938)
Here is the exciting resolution to Chapter 4 “Four Seconds to Live.”

 

 

 

Mini-Matinee #40 - Beach Blanket Babalon

The Bijou Mini-Matinee series went on hiatus for the summer of 2008, but first gathered from our weekly Bijou Mini-Matinee series a dozen of our favorite and most popular cartoons, shorts, serials and trailers. To enter the Bijou Mini-Matinee Theater on YouTube, click the link on the top right under the marquee, or simply click here.

BETTY BOOP'S CRAZY INVENTIONS (1933)
First up, everybody's favorite vamp, Betty Boop, returns to the Bijou to kick off our summer retrospective. In this lively entry in the classic cartoon series, Betty and her entourage, Bimbo & Ko-ko the Clown, are hosting an invention convention. Mae Questel, the famous voice of Betty Boop and Olive Oyl, sings "Keep A Little Song Handy."

HOLLYWOOD ON PARADE (1932)
If Betty had competition with anyone in the 1930s, it would have been Mae West. In this Hollywood newsreel, Miss West appears at the Graumann's Chinese Theater premiere of I'm No Angel - and then the big stars of the era turn out for a Hollywood costume party. Stars in attendance include Buster Crabbe, Gary Cooper, Fay Wray, Fredric March, Paulette Goddard, Jackie Cooper, Gloria Swanson, Jack Dempsey, Jack Oakie, Walter Huston, George Raft, Charlie Chaplin, The Marx Brothers, and many others too humorous to mention.

GIVE A MAN A JOB (1931)
Next, Jimmy "Shnozzola" Durante jokes and sings "Give a Man a Job" in this short film promoting FDR's New Deal jobs program on behalf of the National Recovery Administration. Moe Howard (Three Stooges) is featured briefly

RED RYDER & ZORRO TRAILERS
Here are trailers for a pair of action-packed Republic serials; each featuring plots centering on high-level corruption in the building of the nation's railroads, and each directed by the dynamic team of John English and William Whitney. First, The Adventures of Red Ryder (1940) is based on a famous comic strip and features actor Don "Red" Barry as the weekly hero. Then in Zorro Rides Again (1937), hero Zorro (John Carroll) is the great grandson of the original Zorro and up against enemies with airplanes, trains, bombs and machine guns.

SO YOU WANT TO BE IN PICTURES (1947)
Joe McDoakes steps out from behind the 8-ball to demonstrate a lesson in how NOT to break into the movies. George O'Hanlon (later the voice of George Jetson) appeared in 63 of these Behind the Eight Ball shorts for Warner Bros. from 1942 to 1956. Watch for a famous former president among several celebrity cameos. We'll have more on this series of comedy shorts in a future post.

RADAR MEN FROM THE MOON Ch. 7 Cliffhanger
Commander Cody faces certain demise when a Moon Men Death Ray blows his airplane out of the sky in this thrilling cliffhanger from Chapter 7 of the classic Republic serial. Lone Ranger actor Clayton Moore is one of the bad guys.

THE WABBIT WHO CAME TO SUPPER (1942)
The gags come fast and furious when Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd spoof the classic 1942 Betty Davis/Monty Woolley WB movie The Man Who Came to Dinner. In this Technicolor cartoon romp, Elmer is set to inherit 3 million dollars, but only if he doesn't harm Bugs - who goes all out to provoke Elmer into hostilities.

UNITED NEWS of 1944 (1945)
This is a newsreel chronicle of the crucial events of 1944, concluding with a message about the world's prospects and challenges ahead in 1945. Included is the liberation of Paris and Brussels, events at Normandy, D-Day and the bombing of Japan.

THE GIANT CLAW Trailer (1957)
This very campy trailer features many terrific action shots of one of the fakest-looking monsters ever manifested for the silver screen. A giant ugly and laughable prehistoric bird is eating people and planes, threatening New York and even the U.N. - while every weapon the U.S. military attempts has failed to foil the giant puppet.

MUSICAL CHARMERS (1936)
A classy Paramount Headliners short features Phil Spitalny and his "All-Girl Orchestra and Choir" who were popular in movies and on radio during the 1930s and 40s. One of the stars of the orchestra was "Evelyn & Her Magic Violin." Evelyn is featured with Maxine in "Rendezvous with a Dream." Also included is "I'll Bet You Tell That to All the Girls," Rochelle & Lola in a piano specialty "Goody Goody" and a dramatic rendition of "Song of India" as the finale.

ROY ROGERS' RIDERS CLUB (circa 1948)
Many theater managers around the country actively promoted their weekend matinees to encourage regular attendance. Drawings for prizes and contests were among the attractions, often associated with messages delivered directly from the silver screen. Roy Rogers was a big favorite and many theaters promoted membership in the Roy Rogers' Riders Club. In this short, Roy addresses his members and delivers his famous Roy Rogers' Cowboy prayer.

DR. PEPPER SNACK BAR AD
This vintage theater ad was designed to tempt audiences to visit the snack bar and buy Dr. Pepper.


Mini-Matinee #41 - AESOP'S FILM FABLES

GYPPED IN EGYPT (1930)
Spooks, skeletons, sarcophagus-cum-pianoforte-playing mummies, dancing Egyptian hieroglyphics, and a quartet of singing, drunken turtles are featured players in this wild Aesop's Fables classic cartoon. The main characters here, Waffles the Cat & Don the Dog, would soon morph into the original Tom & Jerry human characters.
   

THE FARMERETTE (1932)
A buxom vamp not unlike Betty Boop, voiced by Bonnie Poe (one of Betty's voices), is hired by a failing farmer to turn business around in this Aesop's Fables cartoon. Her rendition of Sophie Tucker's famous hit 'Some of These Days' is a hoot and performed on the keyboard by maestro Gene Rodemich himself.

A ROMEO ROBIN (1930)
Dancing grotesqueries, surreal, nightmarish doings, a dash of black, brutal humor, a prancing gay goose, and a bizarre feline finale all combine in this wild Aesop's Fable cartoon.

HOT TAMALE (1930)
In the anything goes, why not, and to hell with the censor, category is this Aesop's Fable cartoon HOT TAMALE (1930) with one-a-minute gags for grown-up kiddies who like wooden horses almost as large as adobe huts, singing troubadors, and passion, pulsating, schmooching mice. A cartoon that other studios would love to have made but dared not to.

THE CAT'S CANARY (1932)
This delightful Aesops Fable was featured on the original PBS Matinee at the Bijou series. A cat (that looks very much like Felix) catches and eats a bird, which proves a gastronomical mistake leading to catastrophe when cat begins singing like a performance by five cool cats singing and dancing on a fence. bird. This attracts other birds, of course, leading to a hilarious

If you enjoyed these Aesop's Fables cartoons and would like to discover other rare cartoon treats, Thunderbean Animation has produced a variety of other great cartoon collections you can read about here.



Mini-Matinee #42 - A BIJOU HALLOWEEN SPOOKFEST

Frankenstein and Wolf Man were mere appetizers to the banquet of horror shorts that follow in our Bijou Halloween Mini-Matinee. Click here to enter the Bijou Mini-Matinee Theater on YouTube to enjoy the show.

NOW PLAYING:

THE MAD DOCTOR (1933)
It would be hard to find a better Halloween cartoon than this vintage Walt Disney Mickey Mouse classic. The influence of the early Universal horror films like Frankenstein is evident in this frantic and frightening animated adventure. The Mad Doctor might as well be Frankenstein considering what he tries to do to poor Pluto. Skeleton gags abound.

HORROR TRAILERS (1940s)
Boris Karloff, Lon Chaney, Jr. and Peter Lorre star in a trio of horror trailers from the 1940s. The Devil Commands (1041) trailer stars Boris Karloff as a different kind of mad scientist - one with a passion for dissecting the mind of his dead wife, rather than her body. Next, Lon Chaney, sans facial hair, stars in the trailer for 1944's Weird Woman, a supernatural thriller based on the popular "Inner Sanctum" radio series. Tyrant Peter Lorre creeps us out as a cruel torturer in charge of a penal colony in this trailer for Island of Doomed Men (1940)

DEVILED HAMS (1936)
A sizzling musical short set in Hades, with vaudeville crooner Gus Van holding court as Satan, ruler of the nether world. Those on trial must prove themselves thru their music. Dancers Toy and Wing do some out of this world "toe" dancing to big band jazz. Erskine Hawkins and his band blend with Gus Van's warbling to heat up the satirically sinful shenanigans. This is from Season Five of the original Matinee at the Bijou PBS series.

COBWEB HOTEL (1936)
The "hotel" is actually a spider's web in which a sadistic host spider entertains unsuspecting guest flies. This surprisingly violent and sadistic Fleischer Color Classic was featured during Season Four of the original Matinee at the Bijou series on PBS.

HAMMER HORROR TRAILERS (1959-60)
A trio of classic British horror trailers from the Hammer Films. First up is The Mummy (1959). Christopher Lee is Mummy Kharis, and Peter Cushing the British Archaeologist who exhumes the ill-tempered remains. Next, Christopher Lee returns, this time as Dracula in Horror of Dracula (1958) and Peter Cushing returns as Dr. Van Helsing. Hammer had to change the U.S. release title from Dracula to Horror of Dracula to avoid confusion with Realart's continuing re-release of the original Dracula and other famous 1930s Universal horror classics. Then Peter Cushing returns as Van Helsing in The Brides of Dracula (1960), Hammer's overtly sexy interpretation of the Dracula myth that may very well have influenced the work of Anne Rice.

 

MM-43 – Crushing the Axis

THE DUCTATORS (1942)
Hitler, Mussolini and Hirohito are all caricatured as ducks in this wild animated concoction directed by Norman McCabe. The Hitler duck emerges as the first bad egg hatched, and pandemonium ensues as the three "ductators" become embroiled with the "Dove of Peace." While not a Daffy Duck cartoon, Daffy does put in a brief cameo appearance. The Ductators was featured in the original Matinee at the Bijou series on PBS.

FOOD AND MAGIC (1943)
On the American homefront in 1943, rationing and price controls were very much a part of the war effort. This timely WWII propaganda short was produced by Gordon Hollingshead for the U.S. Office of War Information and distributed by Warner Bros. and the War Activities Committee of the Motion Picture Industry. Jack Carson stars as Mysto the Magician in a carnival act calculated to instruct and inspire audiences to conserve food by avoiding consumer waste. Carson tells us: "What was wasted last year would have fed our armed forces." The benefits of growing a victory garden are emphasized.

THIS IS THE ARMY (1943) & HOLLYWOOD CANTEEN (1944) Trailers
Warner Bros. biggest stars are featured in trailers for two patriotic wartime musicals. First up is Irving Berlin's This is the Army, which won the Oscar for Best Music Score in 1944 and features among many others; Ronald Reagan, George Murphy, Joan Leslie and Kate Smith (singing "God Bless America"). Warner Bros. followed a year later with Hollywood Canteen, boasting 62 Hollywood stars including Hollywood Canteen co-founders Bette Davis and John Garfield, along with Barbara Stanwyck, Jack Benny, Joan Crawford, Eddie Cantor, Roy Rogers and Trigger among the stellar cast.

THE FIFTH COLUMN MOUSE (1943)
Rodents reside blissfully in a comfortable abode until a scary cat invades their homeland. The domineering cat proposes peace by appeasement in this colorful and allegorical wartime Looney Tune. When the cat eventually orders a "mouse dinner," the mice must mobilize quickly to overcome the nefarious dictator.

REPORT FROM THE FRONT (1944)
Humphrey Bogart and his wife step off a plane having just returned from a trip overseas. Addressing the audience, Bogie tells us: "On our trip overseas my wife and I saw thousands of American boys in Africa and Italy, and you can be awfully proud of them. We did the best we could to entertain them, but there's an organization that's looking after them in every theater of the war, and that's the American Red Cross."

The critical work of the Red Cross is described as prelude to a pitch for contributions. Bogie's wardrobe and the setting in front of the plane are intentionally reminiscent of Casablanca, and this short was also produced by Gordon Hollingshead and distributed by Warner Bros. for the Office of War Information.

THE JUNGLE QUEEN (1945) & JUNIOR G-MEN (1942) Trailers
The Jungle Queen is code for a mild-mannered counterspy operating in the Congo and "Destined to Doom the Gestapo." Here is the trailer for this 13-chapter Universal wartime serial featuring a young and sultry Ruth Roman as the heroine. This is followed by the trailer for Junior G-Men of the Air. When the Axis attempts to destroy America's oil fields, the Dead End Kids and the Little Tough Guys join forces as teenage G-Men in order to take on the nasty Nazis. Billy Halop, Huntz Hall and Frankie Darro head the cast in this 12-chapter Universal wartime serial. The stereotypical Japanese antagonists are portrayed here by Bijou favorites Lionel Atwill (British) and Turhan Bey (Egyptian).

Click here to enter the Bijou Mini-Matinee Theater on YouTube and enjoy the show!

 

MM-44 – The Little King Film Festival


THE FATAL NOTE (1933)
The Fatal Note introduces The Little King in grand bubbly style befitting the dignified sovereign in an amusing state of undress. His whole persona at once spells merriment and innocent mischief. Its tale of an anarchist from the working class (where else?) bent on removing a monarch, is well-constructed and supported by an outstanding music score.

In this cartoon is born the novel concept of palace lackeys heralding the adventure on which the King is about to embark by declaring it to be 'By Order of the Queen'! However pleasing, the animators wisely elected to employ the concept with discretion, repeating it only once in The Little King series in On the Pan.

SULTAN PEPPER (1934)
The genesis of Sultan Pepper originated in several of Soglow's New Yorker strips. Here is The Little King enjoying the joys of what comes naturally; reciprocating with his doggie, fetching a stick, performing a cartwheel, rolling over, flirting with the Sultan's wives, lustfully scampering after them, and reproving a ribald tale whispered by one of the scanty-panties.

In all probability, the assassination of an unlucky damsel at supper is too cold-blooded to have generated the intended amusement even in 1934. The score introduces a medley transformed a year later into "I Wish I Had a Dog" for "Merry Kittens" an entry in the Rainbow Parade series.

MARCHING ALONG (1933)
In Marching Along, 'things are in a terrible shape'. It's the Depression. Nothing is worth anything, not even at Uncle Jake's Pawn Shop. A new plan is suddenly announced. It’s called the NRA (the National Recovery Act); and all ends happily. Ethnic caricatures with varying degrees of offensiveness impersonate the repossessors. Although the dialects were quite commonplace of the era. The NRA was signed into law by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt in June 1933; and animated cartoons in support of it soon followed.

BETTY BOOP AND THE LITTLE KING (1936)
The Little King returned for a final fling in 1936 through the courtesy of Max Fleischer in Betty Boop and the Little King. The animators fattened him up, but kept him in true Soglowesque form. Although in black & white, the cartoon has all the earmarks of having been designed in color. It is exquisitely lush in concept and benefits from several three-dimensional sets.

The little fellow's playfulness, and make-believe innocence remain intact, and prove to be a winning act alongside Ms. Boop. He bounces along delicately, his tiny feet gracefully tapping the cobblestone street as if it were made of porcelain. The ankle-garter he wears is a nice touch. Thereafter The Little King retired from the screen to play and dream, but remains forever faithful to our bidding.

PALS (1933)
Pals is one of many Van Beuren cartoons considerably better than it's supposed to be, excelling in story, continuity, moving perspective animation of the grand staircase, and its colorfully-descriptive musical score. Enjoyable listening anytime!

Here are the characteristics that endeared The Little King to audiences: his child-like curiosity, playful spirit, blissful innocence, a dash of cunning and affectionate nature. Socially-conscious, he makes no distinction between the classes and shares Christmas with "forgotten men" of "The Great Depression" who proudly support President Roosevelt's NRA.

Pals (aka Christmas Night) has been an annual holiday favorite for 75 years and here we proudly present this creative cinematic concoction as originally presented in theaters.

 


 

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