A Little Soap and Water (1935) Poster

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6/10
Words Of Wisdom From Betty's Song
ccthemovieman-128 October 2007
"Wash away your troubles in the tub." Now those are words to live by - really! That's just one line of the lyrics in the opening Betty Boop is singing as she prepares a bath for her little dog Pudgy.

Pudgy, like most dogs, doesn't share our enthusiasm for a nice hot bath. What follows is Betty running around the house, crawling underneath the big living room rug and other hijinks while trying to get the dog to take a bath.

It's "cute" but it really isn't one of Betty's funnier cartoons. This very little to it except a few slapstick sight gags which are "okay" but nothing above that, humor-wise.
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5/10
Watered down Betty Boop
TheLittleSongbird4 February 2017
This is going to be fairly similarly worded to some of my other reviews for the Betty Boop cartoons made after the Production Code, as they all have the same strengths and flaws pretty much.

A good deal of the pre-Production Code Betty Boop cartoons are daring and creative, with content that makes one amazed at what's gotten away with. While the later Betty Boop cartoons made after the Code was enforced are still watchable and exceptionally well-made, they are so toned down, with the risqué and surreal edge and creativity of the pre-Code cartoons gone, that they feel bland.

Fleischer were responsible for some brilliant cartoons, some of them still among my favourites. Their visual style was often stunning and some of the most imaginative and ahead of its time in animation. The character of Betty Boop, one of their most famous and prolific characters, may not be for all tastes and sadly not as popular now, but her sex appeal was quite daring for the time and to me there is an adorable sensual charm about her. The good news is that she has not lost her charm, she is still cute and her comic timing is good.

Less good is that, thanks to the production code her sensuality is heavily muted, and it was like she had lost a large part of what made her such a unique character back then and what made her popular.

Some of 'A Little Soap and Water' is cute and initially is amusing. The animation is beautifully drawn and detailed and the music infectious and dynamic. Pudgy is adorable, and the character you relate to most despite the fact that the thought of a hot bath is something to look forward for a fair few of us. The voice acting is good.

However, if anybody enjoyed the pre-code Betty Boop cartoons for being wonderfully surreal and for its daring risqué content that was ahead of the time back in the 30s and wouldn't be seen a lot now in cartoons, they will be disappointed here. Both are missing which gives a rather tame and bland feeling throughout.

Creativity and more consistent (in quality and timing) jokes are also missing, while the story is very thin and somewhat repetitive which makes the cartoon drag and never holds any surprises.

In conclusion, okay but bland. 5/10 Bethany Cox
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7/10
Many reviewers have pondered the relationship between "Betty Boop" . . .
tadpole-596-91825621 February 2020
Warning: Spoilers
. . . and her first mutt "Bimbo," which was reputedly a conjugal one. But what about Betty's interactions with her next cur, "Pudgy," from the later 1930s? Everyone has heard the expression that "A dog is a man's best friend." Loyal canines have served their masters as "seeing eyes," emotional support animals, relaxation buddies and have even swung into action in the guise of smoke detectors on some fiery occasions. But on the flip side, it's a less common usage to say that "Rover is a girl's best bud." Some researchers claim that a Lover named "Linda" permanently poisoned this well back in the 1970s with her infamous take upon the RIN TIN-TIN flicks. Other authorities cite evidence dating back further than Lassie to suspect the so-called "fair sex" of being overly partial to certain kinds of congress with doggies. Suffice it to say that in A LITTLE SOAP AND WATER, Betty does NOT reek of total innocence when it comes to possible charges of species comingling. Perhaps Exhibit A would be the point in this sordid story when Pudgy "rides" his mistress across the living room, with only the thickness of a thin carpet serving as a barrier or chaperone. Then, towards the end of this dog-gone exercise, Betty lets slip with an "Okay, Toots" while Pudgy is the only animate critter in the room! Does this sound like a harmless interlocution to you? Perhaps Betty's mouth (or, better yet, mind) needs to be washed out with A LITTLE SOAP AND WATER!
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4/10
Pretty insipid
planktonrules12 March 2014
Warning: Spoilers
"A Little Soap and Water" is a rather insipid cartoon from the Fleischer Brothers. It definitely has a lot less edge than a typical Betty Boop cartoon--mostly because it also featured her dog, Pudgy.

This cartoon has minimal plot. The cartoon begins with Betty preparing a bath for her puppy, Pudgy. However, he hates baths and is very tough to bathe. Eventually, after Betty finishes, Pudgy climbs into a bucket of coal--and the cartoon ends.

As you probably noticed, this ISN'T much of a plot and the film mostly consists of Betty running about trying to clean her accursed dog. It has a few cute moments but nothing more. The only plus is the animation--and the Fleischers always made lovely and well-animated cartoons.
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