Goo Goo Goliath (1954) Poster

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7/10
A baby switching cartoon with a drunken stork and a giant baby
TheLittleSongbird13 June 2013
Not one of my favourite cartoons ever, but good fun nonetheless. It does get predictable by the end despite a very interesting concept, a couple of the gags not featuring the stork are on the dry side and the pacing in the middle could have been crisper. However, the animation is colourful and cleanly detailed, the sight of the giant toys is an incredible sight to behold visually. The music is lively, lushly orchestrated and characterful with clever arrangements of pre-existing tunes. The narration is sharply satirical, and the subtext with the father's terror at having a new baby in his life is one that anybody would identify with. Most of the gags are very amusing, though not much is hilarious. The best moments come from the stork, though the moment with the giant father using a jeweller's eye(manacle?) to change nappies is also memorable. The characters are good enough, only the stork has staying star power though nobody is useless to the story which is a good thing. The voice acting from Mel Blanc, Bea Beanderet(who does a fine job with the least to do of the three) and Norman Nesbitt is terrific. All in all, good fun. 7/10 Bethany Cox
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7/10
dork stork
lee_eisenberg13 November 2008
I've always wondered what's up with the image of the drunken stork. Whatever it is, the besotted wading bird of the family Ciconiidae delivers a giant baby to a normal-sized couple, and...well, whatever your problems raising a baby are, they can't be this bad! I'm sure that "Goo Goo Goliath" was mostly a place holder (every director got to direct one or two miscellaneous cartoons each year). While not what I consider hilarious, it's easily enjoyable. Of course, you gotta pity storks. The mythical deliverers of new babies get depicted in cartoons as irresponsible alcoholics.

Anyway, worth seeing.
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7/10
This story revolves around a fiendish, alcoholic . . .
pixrox12 August 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . stork, who gets his jollies from creating havoc and heartbreak. Tasked with the simple job of baby delivery, this boozy miscreant goes out of his way to fowl everything up whenever possible. At the beginning of GOO GOO GOLIATH, for instance, the plastered parcel placement professional has clear instructions to drop off the Giant family's tyke at the top of the Beanstalk. Instead, the wasted water foul dumps the humongous tot at John and Ethel's, who happen to be a normal-sized couple. To rub in salt to injury, the pie-eyed stork "remedies" his fowl up by transporting John's real infant to the marsupial cage at a zoo! What a drunk!
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10/10
memorable baby-switch story
CatTales17 January 2002
While the drunken stork is an amusing thread running through this story of baby-swapping, there are many other memorable moments: the giant baby playing with life-size trucks, or the satire of those 1950's cautionary films with the scene of an empty yard and the narrator saying "a gatedoor carelessly left ajar, and an innocent baby wanders away..." (obviously a closed gate wouldn't have impeded the giant baby), or the giant father using a jeweler's eyepiece to see as he changes the diapers on his extremely tiny baby. Perhaps not as inventive as the classic Mars/Earth baby-swap, "Rocket-bye Baby" but still worthy.
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3/10
Unusual but unappealing
phantom_tollbooth22 April 2009
Friz Freleng's domestic comedy 'Goo Goo Goliath' takes as its starting point the idea of babies delivered to the wrong parents. Although this idea had been touched on before in cartoons such as Bob Clampett's 'Baby Bottleneck', 'Goo Goo Goliath' adds the amusing touch that the mix up is due to the drunkenness of a stork who is perpetually toasted by new parents. This concept is the best thing about this rather weak cartoon and Freleng would reprise it in the Bugs Bunny cartoon 'Apes of Wrath'. 'Goo Goo Goliath' is also similar to Chuck Jones's equally odd and misfiring 'Rocket-Bye Baby' which emerged two years after 'Goo Goo Goliath'. The idea of a giant baby delivered to a normal sized couple has very limited comic potential and 'Goo Goo Goliath' struggles to make the concept work. It's not helped by the unattractive, angular style in which the cartoon is presented. Ultimately, the jokes run dry almost immediately and there is little to recommend this unusual but unappealing cartoon.
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Only one good thing...
Op_Prime26 May 2000
The Stork. The Stork is only source of humor in this otherwise not funny and dry short. It's rather predictable and does not offer any real amusement. The Stork really makes you laugh but other than him, I really would not waste my time watching this.
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4/10
Very different for Warner Bros.
Horst_In_Translation12 April 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Goo Goo Goliath" is a 7-minute cartoon from over 60 years ago that is certainly nowhere near Warner Bros' most known works. But with such a gigantic quantity, you cannot find quality everywhere and this is unfortunately true here. Freleng, Foster, Blanc and Benederet usually stand for quality, but not even they can make this one work. It is especially the background animation that looks lackluster here and very much inferior to what Warner Bros did during that time, or even a decade ago. One reason why this cartoon is not known today anymore is probably because it does not feature any of their most known characters. And in the middle section, it almost feels as if they were trying to channel Disney's "how to" videos starring Goofy, in this case "how to be a dad". "Goo Goo Goliath" is rarely funny or creative, I give it a thumbs down.
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5/10
Nothing is funnier to the Average American . . .
oscaralbert24 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
. . . than the thought of having their babies swapped at birth with those of Random Strangers, Warner Bros. decided in the 1900s. Many of Warner's live-action features and animated shorts proved a barrel of laughs circling around this jocular theme. GOO GOO GOLIATH is just one of the Looney Tunes designed to instruct U.S. Citizens that Life is just a craps shoot, anyway; a dice game in which the odds of getting a particular outcome are about 100 million to one (the typical ratio of tadpoles to eggs when folks make Whoopee). Since those odds roughly covered the entire population as the Baby Boom got into full swing, it was logical to think that anyone's grandchild could be a Barack Obama just as easily as a Donald Trump. GOO GOO GOLIATH suggests that American procreation is akin to playing the slots (some sort of song might be associated with all of this, which goes "Put another nickel in, in the Nickelodeon . . . "). The moral of this story is that having U.S. babies is just like buying a box of chocolates: You just need to grin and bear it, rather than complaining about what the stork dragged in at the drop of a diaper.
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