Hell's Bells (1929) Poster

(1929)

User Reviews

Review this title
12 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Having a great time in Hell--wish you were here!
planktonrules17 August 2011
For anyone who thinks that films were very bland and avoided dark topics in the 'good old days', then try watching "Hell's Bells". I'll say it's a dark film! In fact, what can be darker than setting it in Hell! Yes, a children's cartoon in Hell--and many, many decades before the South Park movie!!

It's a cartoon from Disney marketed under the Silly Symphonies umbrella--a series of cartoons that featured lost of singing and dancing and not the familiar Disney characters like Mickey or Goofy. In this case, various demons and animals cavort about--having a pretty good time in jolly old Hell!

The cartoon is black & white (the norm for 1929) and has some very nice classical music. While audiences of today probably won't be bowled over by the film (aside from its locale), for the time it was quite the achievement. Worth seeing if you love old cartoons--for others it might be a bit of a chore.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Visually a very nice cartoon which has little in the way of a plot
llltdesq2 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Given that this is a short which was directed by Ub Iwerks and it's an early sound cartoon, it's hardly surprising that this is, first and foremost, a very visually oriented short. It has some excellent animation and some beautifully rendered creatures. Because I want to discuss the short a bit, this is a spoiler warning:

The basic conceit here is simple: a rather comical rendering of Hell, at least for the most part. The beginning is very striking, with sequences showing a dragon and the three-headed dog out of Greek mythology, Cerberus, which shows up on two occasions. They are vividly shown and one of the highlights of the short.

Then Satan and his imps start to throw a rather raucous celebration, which is a good showcase for the musical efforts of Carl Stallings, best known for his work for Warner Brothers on the Loony Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons. This is an enjoyable sequence, culminating in imps bringing Satan flaming hot "milk" from a dragon, which he drinks with gusto. As a "reward" for their efforts, Satan proceeds to feed one to one of the heads of Cerberus, with one head getting the imp, the second swallowing and the third licking its chops. Before he can feed a second imp to his hungry guard dog, the imp, perhaps not wishing to go the way of his comrade, suddenly recalls an urgent appointment elsewhere and takes off, with Satan in "hot" pursuit. The imp gets the last laugh by sending Satan tumbling off the end of a cliff.

This short is available on the More Silly Symphonies set fro the Disney Treasures series of DVD releases which saw release in December 2006 and it and the DVD set are highly recommended.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Musical Merriment Below-Ground
ackstasis1 December 2008
By the late 1930s, Disney had developed a reputation for polished, wholesome entertainment, and so I'm betting that they could never have released a cartoon about the fiery devils and imps that lurk in Hell. However, the late 1920s were a different matter, and short films like 'The Skeleton Dance (1929)' and 'Haunted House (1929)' exhibited distinct elements from the horror genre, though always with a comical campiness that usually went down well with the little ones. It's films such as these that demonstrate the innovation and forward-thinking that propelled Walt Disney into animation super-stardom. 'Hell's Bells (1929)' is a somewhat comical look at the creatures of Hell, where fire and brimstone burn the nostrils, and where devilish imps dance to classical music. The film opens with an assortment of bizarre fire-dwellers, including a winged-serpent, a three-headed dog, and an enormous spider that swings from its web and engulfs the entire camera (and, by implication, the audience) in its mouth.

Dancing is then provided in great abundance. Interestingly, 'Hell's Bells' utilises two musical pieces that I was able to identify from memory: the first, Charles Gounod's "Funeral March of a Marionette," is most recognisable as the main theme from "Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1955-1962); the second piece is Edvard Grieg's well-known "In the Hall of the Mountain King." This excellent soundtrack selection provides an enjoyable soundtrack for director Ub Iwerks' musical exploration of life below the Earth's core. Though there is little story to speak of, a brief sub-plot opens up when the Devil tries to feed one of his servant imps to the three-headed dog, only to find that this little guy is less-than-willing to sacrifice himself. Oh, and there's also a weird-looking cow/dragon that dispenses fire from its udder, for the drinking enjoyment of Satan. If all this Hellishness sounds like your kind of cartoon, then commit a sin, sit down and enjoy a supreme piece of Disney musical weirdness.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Dancing Devils
Foreverisacastironmess12312 October 2012
Warning: Spoilers
The demons of Hell gather together for a mad frolic. Everything's cool until Satan starts feeding the underlings to Cerberus! You can't have a cartoon that's set in Hell! That's not fun! It's too grim and not at all conductive to a positive atmosphere! Not of course that every early Disney short need be all bunnies and flowers and sunshine and lands of candy, but Disney, keep the action above ground and outta the graveyards please! If done right, which to me this wasn't, it could have been all infernal and impressive, but as it is, it feels like a mere playful romp through Hell rather than anything surrealy creepy and nightmarish like Some of the fantastic Betty Boop Cab Calloway shorts. It's not at all bad, but I thought it was very dull. The dancing does drag and becomes annoying. I mainly enjoyed this short for its darker qualities. We see wretched souls tossed into the hungry maw of Cerberus, and the Devil himself is usurped from his throne, but it's not at all as impressive and interesting as it sounds. There are those darn bats and that spider that like to fly at the camera again-you see them more than a few of times during the course of the Silly Symphonies series! Well what happens to the spider is a nice deviation, and it also foreshadows the ending. The ending is truly bizarre. Satan, hanging from a cliff, is spanked and then consumed by the fires of the underworld!!!:::2::: The black and white tones are not this particular short's friend. I've enjoyed several of the other colourless Symphonies, but not so much this one. Although the grim merriment feel is conveyed well enough, a little colour would have worked wonders. I think they might have reused some of the backgrounds or something later on in The Goddess of Spring. I liked the portrayal of Hades a lot better in that one. It's not a particularly brilliant, humorous or well animated short, but still a fairly enjoyable and entertaining one. Thank you.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Disney's Satan
gengar8434 November 2021
Disney teams up with weirdo animator Ub Iwerks to make an effective 6-minute opener for any flick you may decide to watch on Halloween. It's musical, as most of these "earlies" are, but you can take it... FREE ONLINE.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Horror Cuteness Disney Style
Rainey-Dawn17 October 2016
My guess: this is teaching kids and adults that if you end up in Hell then the devil will still get you for not obeying him but if you are good you can still overcome the devil. Really I have no idea of the message of this cartoon - lol - but it's really cute! Short and sweet, just under 6 minutes long but some great Halloween/Gothic imagery as eye-candy.

I love these old styled cartoons - nothing like them anymore. And I would love to have a DVD full of these old Gothic/Halloween creepy cartoons like this to watch anytime of the year. Disney's stuff today can't compare to their stuff of yesteryear - this is the real Walt Disney stuff you see in this cartoon! It comes straight off his comics, when he first got started good. Awesome stuff! 10/10
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Fun Disney weirdness
TheLittleSongbird18 May 2012
The Disney Silly Symphonies were part of my childhood, and I still love a lot of them to this day. Hell's Bells is not quite one of my favourites, the story is slight and one of the characters is a mix of a cow and a dragon and although maybe deliberate it was nonetheless weird to watch. However, it is wonderfully animated, the black and white is stylish and atmospheric, while the characters are generally well-proportioned. The music is outstanding, dynamic and and sometimes devilish-sounding. The obvious standout is Grieg's Hall of the Mountain King, though Gounod's Funeral March of a Marionette(originally written for piano and best remembered as the theme of Alfred Hitchcock Presents) and a small excerpt of Mendelssohn's Hebrides Overture. And the dancing is niftily choreographed and fits so well rhythmically with the music, especially in the Gounod. The characters are engaging too, none of them are developed well but this is not that kind of cartoons, besides they are a nice mix of the charming and satanic. All in all, fun and weird indeed, second only perhaps to The Goddess of Spring as the most compellingly weird of their cartoons. 8/10 Bethany Cox
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Only Disney could make this story-intriguing.
OllieSuave-00729 August 2018
Only Disney could create a cartoon sequence depicting Hell to look story-intriguing, with its catchy music, interesting characters, and whimsical plot. Here, the demons play music for Satan, but one becomes insubordinate and, as a result, literally all hell breaks loose.

There's some laughable moments, especially the title that somehow just rings well with the cartoon. And, as with older Disney cartoons, the animators and storytellers don't shy away from political incorrectness, over-protection, and over sensitivity. Overall, not a bad cartoon.

Grade B
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Scary? Back then maybe Warning: Spoilers
"Hell's Bells" is a 6-minute black-and-white sound cartoon from 1929, so this one soon has its 90th anniversary already. It is a Disney production and belongs to their great body of Silly Symphonies. Director is the legendary Ub Iwerks. The title already tells us that horror is a major aspect in this little movie. It plays down in hell during its entirety and we even see Satan for quite a while. I wonder if people back then found it actually scary. They were certainly easier to scare than we are today. Anyway, by today's standards you can really only appreciate this one for its comedy and creativity, but even if it has some good moments, I still found it underwhelming in terms of both. That is why my overall verdict is negative. I do not recommend the watch.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
This is the sort of refreshing "Truth in Advertising" . . .
pixrox15 October 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . that would restore one's Faith in Humanity--if only what started out with a modicum of Honesty did not morph so quickly into one of History's Great Pits of Deception, Prevarication and Despair. The producer of HELL'S BELLS casts himself as "Satan," an apt choice strongly reinforced by subsequent copyright and conglomeration controversies. Even the 21st Century tyke-gobbling crock makes a cameo appearance here, forecasting the upcoming Horror of the Not-So-Magic-Kingdom.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Ok
kaicesbr14 July 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Continuing my marathon of Disney shorts, one more that I have to look for on YouTube since it's not available on Disney+.

First time watching as usual.

I believe it can be compared with The Skeleton Dance since both short films are dark and even horror.

I even found the soundtrack of the 2 short films similar even to some dances.

But I still prefer The Skeleton Dance.

Hell's Bells is far inferior and less fun.

Conclusion: compared to El Terrible Toreador and Springtime this one has improved a lot but still The Skeleton Dance is Silly Symphony favorite.

But is ok

Watched on 14 of July of 2023.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
What the Devil!
Hitchcoc11 April 2018
This takes place in Hell. It seems like a reasonable pleasant place. Satan holds forth and the creatures seem to get along just fine. The animation here is pretty poor, the plot is minimal, and music borrowed from the classics. Basically, Satan makes life (or death) miserable for anyone he doesn't like. He feeds his minions to other creatures. Since they are supposedly already dead, will they return? A very average effort, certainly.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed