The Office Boy (1930) Poster

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4/10
Mediocrity in the office
TheLittleSongbird13 January 2018
Van Beuren cartoons are extremely variable, especially in the number of gags and whether the absurdist humour shines through enough (sometimes it does, other times it doesn't), but are strangely interesting. Although they are often poorly animated with barely existent stories and less than compelling lead characters, they are also often outstandingly scored, there can be some fun support characters and some are well-timed and amusing.

'The Office Boy' is another mediocre 1930 Aesop's Fables/Van Beuren cartoon that is most interesting for having characters that blatantly look like Mickey and Minnie Mouse, except vastly inferior in drawing and blander in personality. Not one of the worst by all means from that year, it is much better than 'Dixie Days' and 'Laundry Blues', but there's also far better, such as 'The Haunted Ship', 'Gypped in Egypt' and 'Circus Capers'.

It does contain pretty much all of the faults of Van Beuren's worst, or all the faults of many Van Beuren cartoons, while having a few good points. Van Beuren have actually done quite a number of watchable or more cartoons, a few pretty good even though imperfect. So it's not as if they are all being hated on.

Best asset about 'The Office Boy' is the music score, pretty much the best thing consistently of Van Beuren's output. Sometimes even the only good thing. It is so beautifully and cleverly orchestrated, is great fun to listen to and full of lively energy, doing so well with enhancing the action.

There is some nice energy, some neat incorporation of sound effects and parts where synchronisation isn't sloppy. Sadly that is pretty much all that 'The Office Boy' has going for it.

On the other hand, the animation is not good, in fact it is downright bad most of the time with erratically sloppy character designs in particular while the simplistic background detail and lack of fluidity and crispness are just as difficult to ignore.

Story is very slight to the point of non-existence and suffers from far too hectic pacing a vast majority of the time, something that affects the visuals a lot of the time because while there are moments of non-sloppy synchronisation most of it is out of sync. It feels aimless and also random and disjointed. If you are looking for sense too, look elsewhere.

Basically 'The Office Boy' is a stringing along of gags and music/dance structured in a way that's disorganised and random. Generally it is very low on laughs, actually none of it is remotely amusing. Nothing is inventive, never rising above the forgettable and there is not much absurdist about them. This is a reiteration of a lot of the average and less Aesops Fables/Van Beuren cartoons that have been reviewed by me, but this is due to them having the same strengths and drawbacks.

Overall, mediocre. 4/10 Bethany Cox
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Utterly fascinating!
JohnHowardReid29 July 2011
This blatant rip-off of Disney's Mickey Mouse is indeed a fascinating effort. Not only is it most agreeably quaint, but it's remarkably fast-paced. And even better still, it's visually well-stocked with a host of neat gags. The superbly integrated music score rates as an outstandingly entertaining bonus. If the intention was to up-stage Walt, the rather clever makers of this little black-and-white cartoon have succeeded brilliantly. I'm told that Disney attempted to buy as many copies as he could lay his hands on. Presumably, that's why the movie does not seem to be available on a DVD disc, although it was issued on a good quality Public Domain VHS tape way back in the 1990s.
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1/10
Incredibly inept
tterrace22 July 2016
One of a number of Mickey Mouse rip-off cartoons made at the time of the Disney's character's initial popularity explosion. Contrary to the reviewer from 2011, I found the art amateurish and unintentionally grotesque, the pacing purely haphazard, the gags perfunctory and crudely executed and the music largely the same percussive bops accompanying every conceivable type of action. There are many cheaply-made cartoons from this period - including others from Van Beuren - that are imaginative, even surreal, frequently hilarious and whose execution possesses a naive charm. This isn't one of them. Every aspect of it reeks of mediocrity at best. The only entertainment value comes from pondering the audacity of such a blatant attempted rip-off of the Mickey Mouse appearance.
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