Bell Hoppy (1954) Poster

(1954)

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8/10
Belling the Cat with Sylvester and Hippety Hopper
TheLittleSongbird22 July 2015
The short Sylvester and Hippety Hopper series, while admittedly being one of the most increasingly routine of the Looney Tunes cartoons series, was still pretty well-made and entertaining, though none of the cartoons are among my personal favourites. Bell Hoppy is not an exception, not exceptional, but well-made, funny, entertaining and interesting.

Anybody already familiar with the basic formula of the Sylvester-Hippety Hopper series (Sylvester thinking Hippety to be a big mouse instead of a baby kangaroo, sounds silly but actually the cartoons generally manage to make it work) will have a pretty good idea with how the action and some of the story in Bell Hoppy map out. Pretty much the only complaint actually I personally have with Bell Hoppy is its routine-ness, and that one or two parts felt a tad rushed.

However, while one shouldn't expect much original or surprising here in Bell Hoppy, that it has an interesting take on fable Belling the Cat prevents it from being completely tired and predictable. The cartoon is very well animated, with smooth drawing, detailed but charmingly simple background art and vibrant colours, Sylvester and Hippety are both well-drawn. Carl Stalling's music score as always is outstanding, it's orchestrated beautifully and very cleverly, it's filled with energetic style and lively rhythms, it adds so much to what's going on and matches every expression, gesture and action seamlessly.

Bell Hoppy also has a sharp and funny script, and while the sight gags are not the most inventive in the world they are just as funny as the dialogue and are crisply timed. Sylvester carries the laughs with no problem and is as interestingly cunning as usual. Hippety is also very cute and is a similarly fun character, not feeling at all like a plot device like Tweety in some of his later cartoons, and a good job is done not making him too irritating apart from for Sylvester. The gang of cats are suitably menacing and while violent it's not to the point of being sadistic. Mel Blanc as always is brilliant providing the voices.

Overall, while not a personal favourite Bell Hoppy makes for 6 minutes or so of good entertainment. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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7/10
"This calls for a special meetin' of the brotherhood!"
utgard1422 September 2015
Another fun Sylvester short featuring Hippety Hopper, the young kangaroo that Sylvester always mistakes for a large mouse. The plot to this one has the Loyal Order of Alley Cats Mousing and Chowder Club refusing to let Sylvester join unless he can put a bell around the neck of Hippety. Lots of funny gags and lines with an especially amusing ending. Wonderful animation in this one with well-drawn characters and backgrounds. Lovely Technicolor is always a plus. The music is bouncy and whimsical. Mel Blanc provides great voice work, as he always did, and gets to play more characters than usual. This short has lots of dialogue, too, which I'm sure pleased Mel. The Hippety cartoons were almost always funny and this one is no exception.
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8/10
Belling the Kangaroo!
wilhelmurg1 March 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This was the 73rd short Robert McKimson directed. Hipperty Hopper, a McKimson creation, only appeared in 14 cartoons during the Looney Tune's Golden Age, but he's one of those characters who have made such an impact culturally that we think of him as being in a lot more. This is an interesting variation on the "Belling the Cat" fable, only in this one the cats are the ones "belling" a mutual enemy, and Sylvester is too stupid to make up an excuse, thus turning the myth from one about executing a plan to one about wanting acceptance at any cost (including getting beat up by a kangaroo). This is one of those cartoons that didn't get much play on television, probably due to the violence.
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7/10
The leader of the Loyal Order of Alley Cats: Mousing & Chowder Club claims that . . .
tadpole-596-91825613 June 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . "I'm so hungry, I could eat a mouse as big as a moose." Hold on a minute. Moose are pretty big. As far as I know, feline jaws cannot expand as was the case with the python in the swamps of Florida which infamously swallowed a whole deer. (A classic case of "Your eyes were bigger than your stomach.) Furthermore, a full-grown moose would probably run well above 10,000 calories. Though this might qualify as an afternoon snack for a morbidly obese human in the Sunshine State, it would probably constitute a caloric overdose for even the most overweight of fat cats. Therefore, this film is NOT particularly realistic.
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6/10
A kangaroo is not a mouse
Horst_In_Translation3 September 2015
Warning: Spoilers
How come that the entire cat society of the neighborhood cannot see that. Oh well, they probably have never seen a kangaroo before in their life. This is another Warner Bros cartoon from over 60 years ago that features Sylvester and the little kangaroo "mouse". All in all, it was an okay watch. There were no really outstanding moments I must say, but the comedy was solid and it was nice to see Sylvester not end on the losing side as these society members, especially the leader, seemed like the true antagonists in this movie. McKimson, Pierce and Blanc worked together on this one and it's one of their better, but not best, works in my opinion. All in all, recommended if you like old cartoons. Thumbs up.
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6/10
The rogue animators behind previous marsupial mayhem . . .
oscaralbert21 November 2015
Warning: Spoilers
. . . outdo themselves in their episodic efforts to annihilate American Civilization, devoting the bulk of this Warner Bros.' "Merrie Melodies" BELL HOPPY outing to promoting secret clubs and their violent initiation and hazing rituals. At a time when Youth Gangs, depicted in such classic feature films as THE BLACKBOARD JUNGLE and REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE, were running amok across the U.S., the last thing America's Pre-Teens needed to see were animated shorts illustrating if not glorifying such Bad Behavior. Yet the feline thugs peopling BELL HOPPY engage Sylvester to commit a "prank" against Hippety Hopper which surely constitutes felonious assault, with murder being the group's ultimate goal. Sylvester is portrayed as being an unquestioning dupe and patsy--an easily manipulated tool with absolutely no power to withstand peer pressure. He's also somewhat of a masochist, repeatedly enduring a gauntlet of hazing brutality from his alley cat Frenemies. If you want to raise your child to be a Bad Decision Maker hanging out with the Wrong Crowd, repeated viewings of BELL HOPPY will make for a good start down that gloomy path.
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