Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Happy 87th Birthday to Looney Tunes and Bosko

87 years ago today the very first Looney Tunes cartoon Sinkin in the Bathtub was released. This also marked the first appearance of Bosko on cinema screens. While it is true that he had appeared in 1929's Bosko the Talk-ink Kid before, that was just a pilot film and only shown to distributors for the cartoons. Sinking in the Bathtub marks his real birthday. So to celebrate the greatest cartoon series ever made, and the birthday of the first Looney Tunes star, today we are going to look at three Bosko cartoons.

The first we will look at is the second Bosko cartoon and second Looney Tune all together, 1930's Congo Jazz. In Sinkin in the Bathtub Bosko clearly had a stereotypical black voice (provided by animator Max Maxwell), However with this film he was made to sound more like Disney's star character Mickey Mouse with a high pitched voice (now provided by Johnny Murray). A lot of stereotypical black dialogue was originally written for this cartoon but never used. This is not were the similarities to Disney end as this cartoon bares a strong rebalance to the 1929 Mickey Mouse cartoon Jungle Rythym. Despite all this it remains a very entertaining picture so directed by Hugh Harmon and Rudolph Ising here is Congo Jazz.
Hugh Harmon and Rudolph Ising were the creators of Bosko and they also co-directed is earliest films. However when Looney Tunes sister series Merrie Melodies was created, Ising took over directing that series while Hugh Harmon directed the Looney Tunes (all the Bosko films) mostly by himself. This next cartoon took place after that happened and is also one of Bosko's best films. This cartoon shows Bosko in a much more violently funny cartoon. That shows a brief glimpse of what Looney Tunes would later become, despite the still obvious Disney influence. This cartoon bears a passing rebalance to another Disney cartoon, this time Walt's 1927 Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoon, Great Guns (for which Harmon was an animator on). So from 1931 here is Bosko the Doughboy.
                                           Last but not least is another one of Bosko's best outings. This cartoon featured another addition to make Bosko resemble more and more Mickey Mouse. That was Bruno the dog, obviously inspired by Pluto. This was Bruno second appearance in a Looney Tunes as he had previously appeared in Bosko's Fox Hunt (released the previous year). This film features some sentimentality, which would figure more into Harmon's MGM work. It is also a film of great energy and a joy to watch. So from 1932 and directed by Hugh Harmon, here is Big Hearted Bosko.
                                                                 



While these films were quite successful Hugh Harmon (and to a lesser extent Rudolph Ising) was not happy about the budgets they were made on. He simply wanted more money to make these cartoons. However Leon Schlesinger refused to raise the films budget. After this both Hugh Harmon and Rudolph Ising left Warner Brothers in mid-1933. However learning from their former boss, Walt Disney, losing the rights to Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, Harmon and Ising made sure they owned the rights to the character of Bosko.  Because of this the Looney Tunes series no longer had any star characters (which would lead to the creation of the beloved characters we associate with Looney Tunes today) When at MGM Harmon and Ising created a series called Happy Harmonies. Though this series focused mostly on one shot characters and stories, a few Bosko cartoons were made for it.

-Michael J. Ruhland

Resources Used
Hollywood Cartoons: American Animation in its Golden Age by Michael Barrier
Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated Cartoons by Leonard Maltin 




                                                 

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