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The Trial of Mr. Wolf

The Trial of Mr. Wolf (1941)

April. 26,1941
|
7
| Animation Comedy

The Big Bad Wolf is on trial for crimes committed against Little Red Riding Hood and her grandmother. When given a chance to speak in his defense, Mr. Wolf explains the supposed real story: He is the victim.

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Edgar Allan Pooh
1941/04/26

. . . anthropologists and zoologists agree that there were between 12 and 14 wolves here per human being. Most Pre-Columbian Peoples treated Wolves as Demigods (not unlike how the people of India respect Sacred Cows). But by 1941, humans outnumbered wolves by a 42,378 to 1 ratio in the U.S. To help rectify this scandalous state of affairs, Warner Bros. released this animated short--THE TRIAL OF MR. WOLF--that year to set the story straight. Red Riding is portrayed here as a sleazy, mercenary siren chick, luring Mr. Wolf to his Doom on behalf of Big Ranching. These Land Hogs have been getting away with appointing themselves as their own private Hitlers over 1,000 acres of your land and mine for every one acre for which they've actually bought and paid. Beginning with wolves, these Rich People Party Red-Staters have decimated our formerly Great West, clear-cutting the indigenous Wildlife, while leaving the Land Unfit for anything but the Factory Farm Reign of Terror against inbred "Domesticated" critters gobbling up 10 calories of feed for every single calorie of human food that they "produce." With THE TRIAL OF MR. WOLF, Warner predicts a Day of Reckoning is coming that will clip the wings of these Free-Ranging Ranchers!

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Lee Eisenberg
1941/04/27

OK, so a number of cartoons have used fairy tales as their basis, and Little Red Riding Hood is one of the prime examples. In the early '40s, Warner Bros. alone released several cartoons featuring renditions of the story. One example is Friz Freleng's "The Trial of Mr. Wolf", in which the story's lupine co-star tells his version of the events: Little Red and grandmother are a pair of homicidal maniacs bent on turning him into a fur coat. Of course, we the audience doubt Mr. Wolf's credibility the whole time.I suspect that this cartoon was a place holder in between the really great cartoons of that year (1941 saw Bugs Bunny's ascendancy to cartoon superstar in shorts such as "Elmer's Pet Rabbit", "Tortoise Beats Hare" and "Wabbit Twouble"). So we can forgive it if it doesn't quite reach the hilarity level achieved by Warner's more famous cartoons. Worth seeing for what it is. Available on the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 5 Disc 2.

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ccthemovieman-1
1941/04/28

Here is yet another take on "Little Red Riding Hood," this one from the wolf's side! By the way, I have yet to see a bad spoof of that famous fairy tale as that story seems to bring out the best in Looney Tunes writers.This also is hilarious right from the beginning at the court room. Check out the wolf's attire and his shills in the jury, or the Katharine Hepburn imitation by "Red." Even in 1941, some of these cartoons seemed geared more for adults to laugh than kids.This cartoon really gives a unique on the story as we see a not-so-innocent Little Red Riding Hood, portrayed as a brutal, ruthless accomplice to the furrier "Grandma," who wants to skin the poor old wolf for his hide! This is unbelievable! Read the quotes under "Fun Stuff" on the title page here and you get idea of what you'll see and hear in this wild cartoon, which I found hilarious - especially the bloodthirsty Granny near the end - with spectacular artwork.Whoever did the Hepburn imitation should be given credit, too, but it's not listed here. The voices, the artwork and the comedy all make this a huge winner, one of the best of the early Looney Tunes cartoons.

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Lupercali
1941/04/29

One of what seems an endless number of takes on the Little Red Riding Hood story from around this era, this one is cleverly presented in the form of a court trial with the Wolf as defendant. Part of the cartoon takes place in the courtroom, where the Wolf's untrustworthiness is obvious (early on he stands up and a hand grenade, knife and gun fall out of his coat). The other part consists of a film within a film based on the Wolf's recreation of the events, which has him lured to to Grandma's house - Grandma turns out to be a furrier and is after him for his coat. All of this works very well, but with quite a few Merrie Melodies I've seen from this period it rather falls in a heap with a sudden ending which seems hastily thought out and doesn't really tie in to the main theme of the cartoon satisfyingly. Still, good fun.

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