The Old Man of the Mountain (film)

The Old Man of the Mountain (film)

Infobox Hollywood cartoon
cartoon_name = The Old Man of the Mountain
series = Betty Boop


caption =
director = Dave Fleischer
story_artist =
animator = Bernard Wolf
Thomas Johnson
voice_actor = Mae Questel (uncredited)
Cab Calloway
musician = Cab Calloway and his orchestra
producer = Max Fleischer
studio = Fleischer Studios
distributor = Paramount Productions
release_date = August 4, 1933
color_process = Black-and-white
runtime = 7 mins
movie_language = English
imdb_id = 0024404

"The Old Man of the Mountain" is a 1933 animated short in the "Betty Boop" series, produced by Fleischer Studios. Featuring special guests Cab Calloway and His Orchestra, the short was originally released to theaters on August 4, 1933 by Paramount Productions. Calloway, who voices all of the characters in the cartoon save for Betty herself (voiced by Mae Questel) performs all of the music in the cartoon, including three of his own songs.

ynopsis

The short begins with a live-action introduction of Cab Calloway and his orchestra, who perform a short chorus of "Minnie the Moocher" before performing a vamp of the title song, "The Old Man of the Mountain".

As the cartoon proper begins, a lion on roller skates (made of rabbits) rushes from his guard post atop a mountain, racing into a nearby village crying "Look out! The Old Man of the Mountain!" The lions warning sparks a mass exodus of the other animals who pack up their things and start to flee as the lion continues to warn "Look out! The Old Man of the Mountain!"

In time, Betty Boop emerges from a guest house in order to find out what is going on. She confronts a passing owl, who in song describes the Old Man of the Mountain, a predatory hermit who threatens the livelihood of the villagers, particularly the women. Despite the owl's warnings, Betty is curious and declares, "well, I'm going to see that old man of the mountain", and starts a trek up the mountainside. She passes several people fleeing from the Old Man, including a woman pushing a carriage with her triplets--who look suspiciously like the Old Man of the Mountain.

When Betty gets to the top of the mountain, the Old Man of the Mountain emerges from behind a rock. Over twice as tall as Betty, the Old Man backs the girl into his cave and, as Betty fights off his advances, begins to sing with her a duet of (Calloway's) "You've Got to Hi-De-Hi." Betty loosens up and joins in, and the two begin to flirt with each other. After his first verse, the Old Man looms menacingly over Betty.

"Whatcha gonna do now?" Betty asks, frightened.

"Gonna do the best I can," the Old Man replies, launching into a jazzy dance routine. The Old Man and Betty continue to dance together, but when the song is over, the Old Man makes a lustful grab for Betty, who runs for her life back down the mountainside.

The Old Man makes chase, and grabs Betty just long enough to catch hold of her dress, which Betty jumps out of. As Betty finds refuge behind a large tree in her underwear, her dress comes to life and slaps the Old Man before running back to its owner. Betty climbs the tree to apparent safety, but as the Old Man comes over and attempts to coax her down with (Calloway's) "The Scat Song", he picks the tree up and bounces it on the ground, causing Betty to slide down.

Before he can have his way with her, however, the animals from the village rally to Betty's aid and surround the Old Man, tying him to a tree with his own arms and legs. They then proceed to beat him up, tickle and humiliate him, thus extracting revenge for all the times he has made their lives a misery, with Betty watching the side with glee.

According to film historian Christopher Lehman, the sexually suggestive nature of this film caused "some Americans at the time, especially Catholics" to complain to exhibitors, who subsequently pressured Paramount Studios (which distributed the Betty Boop series), which then pressured Fleischer Studios to tone down the Betty Boop character. According to Lehman, "In dispensing with the African American entertainers and their music after limiting the 'Betty Boop' series' sexual references, [Max] Fleischer thus acknowledged the widely assumed connection between raciness and blackness." After 1934, African American jazz music would no longer appear in Betty Boop cartoons, and she metamporphosized into a more conservative, mature, domestic character who often played a supporting role in her own cartoons. [Christopher P. Lehman, The Colored Cartoon: Black Representationin American Animated Short Films, 1907-1954 (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press) 32-36.]

Notes

"The Old Man of the Mountain" was the third and final of the Fleischer cartoons pairing Betty Boop and Cab Calloway; the others are "Minnie the Moocher" and "Snow-White". As in the other two cartoons, film footage of Cab Calloway was rotoscoped, or traced into animation, to provide the dance steps for the Old Man during his duet of "You've Got to Hi-De-Hi". As with many other "Boop" shorts, "The Old Man of the Mountain" is now in the public domain.

The dialogue between Betty and the Old Man ("Whatcha gonna do now?" "Gonna do the best I can!") is mirrored almost exactly in a scene between Santa Claus and Oogie Boogie in the 1993 film "The Nightmare Before Christmas". The scene also features music very similar to Calloway's "Minnie the Moocher" and dance steps close to Calloway's own.

References

[1] Christopher P. Lehman, The Colored Cartoon: Black Representation in American Animated Short Films, 1907-1954 (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press) 32-36.

External links

* [http://www.archive.org/details/bb_old_man_of_the_mountain Downloadable cartoon at archive.org] (public domain, MPEG4, 8.2MB)
* [http://www.heptune.com/oldmanbb.html "The Old Man of the Mountain" lyrics/libretto] at Heptune.com


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