DVD Review: Alice in Cartoonland

Alice in Cartoonland

By John Seal

December 26, 2007

One day, Ub, you'll be forgotten, and I'll produce Monkeys Go Home!

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Virginia Davis makes her only appearance on the disc in 1925's Alice in the Jungle, and it's immediately apparent that she was a much better physical actress than young Ms. Gay. Introduced riding atop the back of an (animated) elephant, Ms. Davis is a far more agile and mobile Alice, engaged on a big game hunt in this outing. She fails to bag the expected trophy, whilst Julius loses his tail to a crocodile and quite literally gets his ass kissed by a monkey barber! 1926's Alice's Balloon Race saw Gay return to the role — presumably parents and labor laws were averse to children filming on a full-time basis — and sees Alice and Julius vying for a $10,000 prize in the titular competition. Alice has very little to do in this film, which mostly features Julius doing battle with a variety of other creatures, and it's definitely one of the least interesting toons on the disc. Next on the menu is 1925's Alice Chops the Suey, in which Julius makes his entrance via an inkbottle and the animator's (Disney's?) on-screen hand. Alice also arrives in like fashion, cleverly shaking off ink to reveal herself in a Chinatown setting, where our duo are threatened by a politically incorrect gang of pigtailed rats in skullcaps. There's no chop suey in sight, and only the heavily armed rats get up to any chopping.

Alice the Whaler (1927) features Lois Hardwick in the lead role, and she proves to be a real child of the roaring '20s, complete with bobbed hair and faux-Charleston moves. Thankfully there's little whaling depicted here, as the story primarily revolves around a series of cookhouse mishaps, including a chicken that won't stay in the pot and a potato-peeling mouse (proto-Mickey?). Alice Rattled By Rats (1925) finds our heroine leaving on a road trip, with Julius left in charge of things — including elimination of the household rodent problem. Unfortunately, he takes an accidental bath in some Prohibition-era home brew, and a tight cat cannot run a tight ship! Also from 1925, Alice's Egg Plant features the sole series appearance of Anne Shirley, the only 'Alice' who would continue her film career as an adult (Shirley appeared in such classics as Three On a Match, The Devil and Daniel Webster, and Murder My Sweet before retiring in favor of married life in 1944). As for the film, it's one of the best on the disc, and revolves around the revolt of the local henhouse, whose occupants are required to fill a last minute order for 5,000 eggs. Providing commentary on labor issues and even factory farming—these chickens punch a time clock and go on strike — Alice's Egg Plant also features an egg-laying pig!




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The disc concludes with Alice the Jail Bird (1925), in which Alice and Julius ride atop a turtle, steal a pie from a high window ledge, and end up breaking rocks in the pen, and Alice Solves the Puzzle (1925), wherein our young protagonist matches wits with crossword maven Bootleg Pete, a peg-legged bear who also appears in Alice's Tin Pony. Extras on the disc consist of a trio of pleasant but inessential Weiss Brothers Krazy Kid Kartunes, none of which are anything special, and a brief but useful essay about the series. All these cartoons feature scattershot moments of utter brilliance, comic violence of the Itchy and Scratchy variety, risqué material, and the surreal atmosphere and anthropomorphized characters we associate with animation of the 1920s and 1930s. Anyone interested in the history of animation or the life of Walt Disney needs to own this disc—and if Virginia Davis makes an appearance at your local bijou, don't miss it!


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