The Fella with the Fiddle (1937) Poster

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7/10
Fiddling greed
TheLittleSongbird21 May 2018
Love animation, it was a big part of my life as a child, particularly Disney, Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry, and still love it whether it's film, television or cartoons.

'The Fella with the Fiddle' is not one of Friz Freleng's best cartoons by any stretch, in an uneven "still evolving" period of his long career, and he was yet to be in his full prime and not yet found his style properly. For a relatively early effort, 'The Fella with the Fiddle' is solid and above average but not a Freleng classic, he would do much better later. It is never what one would call hilarious (but is never unfunny), Freleng's later efforts show more evenness and confidence in directing and the story is flimsy and fairly tame up to the end.

It starts off slightly bland and with not the same amount of energy there would be later.

However, the characters are fun and the chemistry lifts 'The Fella with the Fiddle' in a way that's entertaining if not quite inventive.

The cartoon is amusing more often than not, is a good parable on greed, goes at a lively pace and the end is deliciously wild.

Animation is excellent, it's fluid in movement, crisp in shading, vibrant in colour and very meticulous in detail. Carl Stalling's music is lovely on the ears, lushly orchestrated, full of lively energy and characterful in rhythm, not only adding to the action but also enhancing it.

Voice acting from Mel Blanc and Billy Bletcher, both going full throttle, is terrific.

Overall, good cartoon if not a Freleng classic. 7/10 Bethany Cox
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7/10
con men lurk everywhere
lee_eisenberg24 July 2007
Back when Warner Bros. animation was still in its relatively early stages - at this point, Porky Pig was still their top star - they made this cartoon about a mouse pretending to be a blind pauper. He stands on the sidewalk playing his fiddle, and people toss him money. But when he goes home, it gets revealed that he's a millionaire - possibly a billionaire. When the tax collector comes to check things out, the mouse simply hides his wealth. Ah, but everything takes a little bit of a different turn once a cat gets hungry for him.

One might interpret "The Fella with the Fiddle" as a parable of greed, or as a cautionary tale about con artists (nowadays of course, he would probably send out an e-mail claiming to be Nigerian). Either way, it's far from the best Merrie Melodies cartoon, but OK in a pinch. Available on YouTube.
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10/10
Cute mouse cartoon by Friz Freleng
cartoonnewsCP11 August 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Story about a grandfather who tells his children the story of greedy mouse, when the kids fight for a coin for ice cream.

When the kids fight over a coin for ice cream, J. Field Mouse tells his grandchildren the story of a mouse whose greed and dishonesty became his undoing. Feigning blindness and playing the fiddle, he collects enough money to live an opulent lifestyle. His home, marked by a shabby exterior, turns out to be a mansion where he lives it up with his riches. All the fiddler's luxury is in jeopardy when the tax assessor knocks on the door. The fiddler hurriedly presses a series of buttons to hide his opulence and make his home look like a hovel. He succeeds in confusing the tax assessor to the point that he flees in frustration, but an eavesdropping cat plays on the fiddler's greed and lures him into his jaws by placing a gold coin there. And that, says J. Field Mouse to his grandchildren, was the end of the greedy mouse. One of the grandchildren asked if the greedy mouse got eaten. The grandfather said, "Yes, he ate him all up,". But one of his grandchildren notices a gold (cat's?) tooth hanging on display and realizes that things weren't quite what they seem.

This was Mel Blanc's first cartoon with WB.
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8/10
"Now I'll tell you a story about a mouse who was greedy . . . "
oscaralbert9 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
" . . . and came to a bad end," Grandpa Rodent says to the Pack of Little Vermin surrounding him as THE FELLA WITH THE FIDDLE begins. The plot of this Warner Bros. warning to We Americans of the (Then) Far Future centers around tax evasion. Everyone knows that the kids of the 1930s had no interest in IRS evaders, so clearly the main message of FIDDLE is NOT for its contemporaries, but for Us of the Here and Now. The most notorious tax evader in American history, as well as the most prolific contract-breaker and scammer of "business partners" is Putin's puppet, Don Juan Rump. (He even had to shell out billions and billions to settle damage claims for the bogus "Rump University"!) Of course, Rump won't release his fraudulent tax returns because they show he owes his Red Commie Loan Shark KGB Chief Vlad "Crazy Cat" Putin $10 billion plus. Warner shows us that the greedy Rump, played by the Fake Blind Fiddler Gold Coin Hoarder here, will soon be eaten by Putin for lunch, which is literally how the Big Black Cat devours the fiddler here (perhaps Putin will have Rump fatally "pranked," like the North Korean honcho rubbed on the face with fast-acting poison in the airport recently). Or maybe Putin will want to display the prowess of Russia's equivalent to America's S.E.A.L. Team 6, and send the KGB commandos to shoot out Rump's eyes before using his bloated corpse as shark chum Bin Laden-style in New York Harbor. As Warner's continual use of Quantum Physics' String Theory continually proves, anything's possible.
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