The Country Cousin (1936) Poster

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7/10
Disney's adaptation of Aesop's called The Country Cousin is still pretty entertaining to watch today
tavm17 September 2009
This Walt Disney Silly Symphony cartoon won the Academy Award for 1936. Adopted from an Aesop Fables tale, The Country Cousin has the title character-a mouse-visiting his city counterpart at his 66 1/2 address. Then they go to a big buffet table where the country mouse gets in lots of his hunger and thirst in quick succession...Quite amusing if not hilarious though I did heartily laugh quite a bit. In other words, nothing too slapsticky but plenty of gently visual gags that made this quite entertaining in the usual Disney manner. It's probably a little rushed at the end but overall, The Country Cousin is still worth a look for anyone who loves all things animation and Disney.
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6/10
Visually nice, but not terribly memorable
llltdesq7 February 2001
This Disney short is well-executed visually (as you might expect from Disney in the 1930s) but isn't really all that memorable or impressive for all that. I'm frankly somewhat puzzled at its nomination for an Academy Award and more puzzled that it won. Perhaps it was more impressive in 1936 than it is today. It isn't a bad cartoon-there just isn't anything exceptional about it that struck me other than the visuals. It runs from time to time on the Ink and Paint Club.
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8/10
Remarkable Animation for 1936
Hitchcoc27 March 2019
For those wondering why this would win an Academy Award, consider the year and the level of action animation. The dinner table scene is excellent, with all the possibilities. The mice are really excellent personalities, each with their own beings. Yes, the plot is simple. It's one of those portrayals of the grass always being greener. It's the classic Aesop's Fable of the Country Mouse and the City Mouse.
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Stop Being A Hick Stop
jlgrosbeck5 February 2002
So what if this is, as another reviewer noted, the stuff of a hundred Tom and Jerry cartoons to come? The character animation is the real attraction here, and it's excellent. This is some of the best drunken mouse animation I've ever seen, and that's saying something.

It's true, they've turned the actual storyline into a goofy succession of tabletop gags with a chaotic climax tacked on (much like the one to appear at the end of the Pink Elephants sequence in Dumbo), and so the short as a whole is somewhat less satisfying than it could be, but the individual sequences are all nice - I particularly liked the bit with the sliced bread, and the mirror routine straight out of Duck Soup. Monty just sort of disappears at the end, doesn't he? Oh well, so maybe it's not the most memorable thing ever, but it's still a polished piece of cartoonery, to be sure.
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7/10
Frankly, I prefer Disney's other mouse!
planktonrules3 September 2009
This film is the Oscar winner for Best Animated Short for 1937 and when seen today you might be tempted, like me, to marvel at it being the pick. It's not that this is a bad cartoon--it isn't. It's just that the story is awfully familiar and the animation style is more akin to a non-Disney production than a film by the greatest animation studio of the day. As for me, I'd much rather see a cartoon featuring the OTHER Disney mouse instead of this one.

The story is from Aesop and has been done a bazillion times before by various cartoon studios--probably because they didn't have to pay royalties and because the story has already written itself! A bumpkin mouse from 'Podunk' comes to visit his supposedly sophisticated cousin in the city. At first, the bumpkin in impressed by all the marvels of big city life. However, by the end of the film he comes to realize that cities suck and he's better off being happy with his lot in life.

The animation quality is good but not exactly inspired or a thing of great beauty. When I think about several other Silly Symphony cartoons from Disney (such as THE FLOWERS AND THE TREES or FERDINAND THE BULL), it comes up very short. In other words, it's awfully ordinary yet took the Oscar. While I am not a huge fan of Popeye, I have seen POPEYE THE SAILOR MEETS SINBAD THE SAILOR (also nominated this same year) and it was significantly prettier and better animated--with finer line drawings and an amazing 3-D sort of look to it. The other nominee was OLD MILL POND by Harmon-Ising but I just can't bring myself to watch any more of these ultra-cutesy cartoons, though I can just about guarantee it was insipid and that THE COUNTRY COUSIN was better!
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7/10
Not outstanding, but still a nice watch
TheLittleSongbird22 May 2012
In all honesty, I have seen better cartoons. The execution of the story while nicely paced is a little bland and occasionally goofy even and the climax has a chaotic and tacked on nature about it. However, while most of the gags are more amusing than hilarious, the sliced bread and Duck Soup-like mirror gags are very effective indeed. The animation is beautiful and fluid, with the character designs especially good, the music is energetic and action-enhancing as is typical of a lot of cartoons around that time and the characters are sweet and likable.

All in all, The Country Cousin is not an outstanding cartoon, but regardless it is still a nice watch. 7/10 Bethany Cox
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6/10
This brief cartoon features a mouse wearing a . . .
cricket3015 September 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . top hat, which I don't think is very accurate. I believe this small rodent might EAT a top hat, or perhaps chew it apart to create bedding, but it's highly unlikely to adopt it as attire. After all, no one says "If you give a mouse a top hat, he'll demand a cravat."
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10/10
Disney Meets Aesop
Ron Oliver16 October 2000
A Walt Disney SILLY SYMPHONY Cartoon Short.

Mouse Abner, THE COUNTRY COUSIN from Podunk, arrives in the big city to taste some of the high life enjoyed by his sophisticated cousin, Monty. Enjoying the viands of a banquet table - most especially the champagne - Abner is soon to encounter his first big city cat...

With the delightful Abner the center of attention, this fun, fast-paced cartoon spoof of Aesop's Fable easily became the 1936 Academy Award recipient.

The SILLY SYMPHONIES, which Walt Disney produced for a ten year period beginning in 1929, are among the most fascinating of all animated series. Unlike the Mickey Mouse cartoons in which action was paramount, with the Symphonies the action was made to fit the music. There was little plot in the early Symphonies, which featured lively inanimate objects and anthropomorphic plants & animals, all moving frantically to the soundtrack. Gradually, however, the Symphonies became the school where Walt's animators learned to work with color and began to experiment with plot, characterization & photographic special effects. The pages of Fable & Fairy Tale, Myth & Mother Goose were all mined to provide story lines and even Hollywood's musicals & celebrities were effectively spoofed. It was from this rich soil that Disney's feature-length animation was to spring. In 1939, with SNOW WHITE successfully behind him and PINOCCHIO & FANTASIA on the near horizon, Walt phased out the SILLY SYMPHONIES; they had run their course & served their purpose.
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8/10
Oscar Winner for Best Animated Short Film
springfieldrental24 August 2023
Walt Disney's October 1936 "The Country Cousin" won the 9th Academy Awards Best Animated Short Film for the year. As part of Disney's 'Silly Symphony' series, the nine-minute film, directed by Wilfred Jackson, concerns the hick-from-the-sticks mouse Podunk, who pays a visit to his sophisticated cousin Abner living in the city. His lack of refinement is visible when Abner shows him a normal human food dining table display in the household he's living in. Like an uncivilized barbarian, Podunk attacks the food while finishing it off with Champagne. The mouse gets drunk and ends up in all sorts of trouble.

The entire narrative takes place without a word heard between the two mice. "The characters are developed through body language," notes film reviewer Dave Sindelar, "and with a bit of help from the musical score." Years later, Disneyland Records recreated an audio version of "The Country Cousins" with actor Sterling Holloway narrating a 30-minute story wrapped around the 1936 cartoon. The 1961 vinyl LP record was issued as part of a record label subsidiary Walt's older brother Roy convince him to establish in 1956.
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5/10
Tom and Jerry, only not
CuriosityKilledShawn6 November 2010
In this rather dull 9-minute cartoon a hick mouse visits his well-to-do cousin in the big city where they get up to all the usual mousy hi-jinks. Although this predates the first Tom and Jerry short by a number of years the set-up and scenes will seem overly familiar to you.

Based on Aesop's fable "The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse", there's nothing particularly memorable about this cartoon. The mice peak out of holes, scurry across tables, help themselves to food, agitating the house cat etc. It's fairly standard stuff, ending in the hick mouse being frightened out of town and dashing back to the country along the railroad tracks. It's amazing that this managed to win an Academy Award, I can't imagine how dull the other nominees were that year.
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4/10
Playing with your food
Squonk26 February 1999
In this Silly Symphony, a mouse from the country visits his cousin in the city. Most of the short is the two mice exploring the dinner table. The animation is fine, where this short suffers is in a lack of humor. Perhaps I've just seen this "dinner table adventure" in one too many Tom and Jerry shorts. Even though this came first, I just didn't find it that enjoyable.
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3/10
An annoying cousin.
OllieSuave-00710 June 2018
A well-to-do town mouse invites his hicktown cousin to visit him in the city, in attempts to show him the high-end life and the food luxuries. But, for some reason, all you get to hear from the city mouse are his annoying, irritating constant "shhhhhhs," aimed at the county mouse in hopes he won't disturb the owners and their pet cat.

It's a boring cartoon overall with a plotless story and predictable slapstick stuff - nothing too interesting or daring about this cartoon and it's really unbelievable it won an Oscar for best cartoon.

Grade D--
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4/10
Hasn't aged particularly well
Horst_In_Translation8 April 2019
Warning: Spoilers
"The Country Cousin" is an American cartoon from 1936 and at slightly under 9 minutes, it is a bit longer than they usually were. the director is Wilfred Jackson and maybe this bit of information is already enough for you to know that this is a work by Disney. It won Walt Disney one of his earlier Academy Awards and pulled through against opposition from Fleischer and Harman. It was not one of those years where all or almost all of the nominees were by Disney. But back to this one here. This is the story of two mice: the city mouse invites the country mouse to its home and havoc ensues quickly afterward. You get a lot you can expectg here like cheese and cats that of course are closely related to the subject of mice in cartoons, in many cartoons, not just this one. Add to that a bit of alcohol that gets the country mouse drunk and she stays that for almost the rest of the film and also gets the country mouse courageous enough to kick the cat in the butt. Other than that there is an edible "mirror" reflection scene that was among the better parts of this short film. But overall, it was too weak in my opinion. Sure a lot happened here, but it did not really explain precisely why the mouse would panick in the end and return to the country side. And how wasn't she drunk anymore? In general the character seem to possess at least human strengths here as the mouse survives a lot of alcohol in its system easily and the cat survives an electric shock. All in all, not a worthy Oscar winner in my opinion. Of course visually in terms of looks this is really strong, but lets not forget that this was the Golden Age of Animation and there were many many other animated shorts from this year and many many of them were superior. Finally, I think I remember having watched a Tom and Jerry cartoon from slightly afterwards and that one was better. This one here gets a thumbs-down from me. It does not really have a lot of wit and the situational and slapstick comedy did not make enough of an impression for me here to like this one.
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