Baby Be Good
Baby Be Good | |
---|---|
Directed by | Dave Fleischer |
Produced by | Max Fleischer |
Starring | Mae Questel |
Music by | George Steiner (uncredited) |
Animation by | Edward Nolan Myron Waldman |
Color process | Black-and-white |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 8 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Baby Be Good is a 1935 Fleischer Studios animated short film starring Betty Boop.[1]
Synopsis
[edit]Betty Boop is putting her nephew, Junior, to bed, but he is not ready to sleep. He jumps on the bed, then uses a tube of toothpaste to put stripes on the cat. When Betty catches him, she tells him a fairy tale about a naughty boy. The boy in the story ties a can on a tail of a puppy resembling Pudgy the Puppy, scares a hen and prematurely frees her chick, shakes apples off a tree and cuts it down, throws bricks at a greenhouse, knocks clean laundry into the mud, and shaves the hair off a barber. When he teases a lion at a nearby circus by taking its bone out of its cage, the lion escapes its cage and the boy has to be rescued by a magic fairy (Betty Boop with fairy wings, wearing a star-covered black evening dress). The fairy rescues the little boy but makes him promise to undo all his mischief. This is done rather easily by the animators reversing the sequence of scenes from the first part of the story. Junior is not certain that he believes the story, but at last he is ready to go to sleep and undoes his mischief with the same reversal of sequences, and hides under the covers in fear, likely because of the lion. After that, Betty closes the door and winks at the audience to end the film.
References
[edit]- ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. pp. 54–56. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
External links
[edit]- Baby Be Good on Youtube
- Baby Be Good at IMDb
- "The Big Cartoon Database: Baby Be Good". bcdb.com. Archived from the original on January 18, 2013. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
- 1935 films
- 1930s English-language films
- Betty Boop cartoons
- 1930s American animated films
- 1935 animated short films
- Paramount Pictures short films
- Fleischer Studios short films
- Short films directed by Dave Fleischer
- American animated short films
- English-language short films
- American animated black-and-white films
- Betty Boop cartoon stubs