The Old Plantation (1935) Poster

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4/10
Not very interesting plantation
TheLittleSongbird10 August 2018
Love animation, it was a big part of my life as a child, particularly Disney, Looney Tunes, Hanna Barbera, Studio Ghibli and Tom and Jerry, and still love it whether it's film, television or cartoons. With significantly broader knowledge of different directors, animation styles and studios, actually appreciate and love it even more now.

Rudolf Ising made a lot of cartoons leaning towards the cute kind of cartoon rather than the laugh a minute kind, the latter being the one that a lot seem to prefer (understandably, though am hardly biased against the former). This approach has varied in cartoons. In some instances it has been very sweet and charming, in others it can be cloying and too cutesy. 'The Old Plantation' unfortunately falls in the latter category. Not one of Ising's very worst (though among the lesser ones) by all means, with obvious strengths but with a good deal of big drawbacks.

Starting with the good things, the animation is very well done. It is fluid in drawing, vibrant and atmospheric in colour and rich in meticulous detail. The music is even better and performed with gusto, it's full of energy and character and is lushly and cleverly orchestrated, adding to the action and enhancing it.

A few parts charm and the voices are solid.

On the other hand, the story is paper thin and full of old-fashioned melodrama that holds no surprises whatsoever. Too often the cartoon is too sugary sweet and the over-stretched feel of the story makes 'The Old Plantation' feel dull, very little energy here. This is further accentuated by the agreed overlong length, 'The Old Plantation' easily should have been three minutes shorter.

'The Old Plantation' is completely humourless and near-completely charmless, none of the content engages enough, while the characters are never interesting or even appealing. Am not one to get too offended at racial stereotyping, but the stereotypes here are excessive and are hard to take even when judging it for a product of its time.

In summation, nicely made but lacklustre and doesn't hold up well. 4/10 Bethany Cox
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6/10
This animated short debunks the Revisionist History . . .
tadpole-596-9182561 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
. . . continuing to plague our American Homeland into this Modern 21st Century. Some deluded songwriter penned a ditty with a refrain going something like this: "It ain't necessarily so." But we CANNOT throw out the Holy Child with the bathwater, and suddenly repudiate our Sacred Pledge of Allegiance, Monticello, the thrusting digit of our Washington Monument, any of the four verses of our National Anthem, the USA's motto, the most famous film of all time (GONE WITH THE WIND), pancakes, half of Mount Rushmore, Brazilian nuts, our Monument Avenues, Mount Vernon, and the idyllic epoch labeled by Homer as "The Antebellum Period." THE OLD PLANTATION reveals the Truth behind the Old South's "Peculiar Institution:" tribal conflict carried over into the New World. Villain "Simon" is the sort who'd sell out his own granny for a nickel. Though most of those shown working THE OLD PLANTATION share Simon's hue, they are Loyal to "Col. Julep"--tending his crops and progeny with loving care--and distrustful of Simon. Give them credit for realizing upon which side of their bread is buttered. No doubt a thousand (or ten thousand) Simon types rounded up their traditional tribal foes and sold them down the river, bamboozling the Col. Juleps of this world as much as anyone else. THE OLD PLANTATION reflects the views of the two newest SCOTUS appointees. Stay tuned.
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6/10
Visually beautiful but seriously dated and overlong
llltdesq2 November 2013
Warning: Spoilers
This is an early MGM animated short which is not seen much these days because of racial characterizations shown throughout the short. Because I can't really discuss this without covering the plot of the short, there will be spoilers ahead:

This is set in Toyland and concerns "the old Kaintucky home" on a toy plantation as you would find in the Old South of the US. The plot, such as it is, is straight out of the old melodramas, complete with heroine and dastardly villain. The mortgage on the plantation is due and an old "horse" named Black Beauty" 'must win the race' or all is lost!

While the short is not without its charms (it looks and sounds beautiful, like most of the Harman-Ising color shorts done for MGM do) the cartoon doesn't hold up well after close to 80 years. Part of the problem is that, at ten minutes, is a little too long. Roughly eight minutes would probably have been a better running time. Like the old melodramas, you know how things turn out in the end.

If you like the old melodramas and you aren't overly sensitive to stereotypes, this might be worth watching at least once.
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7/10
Imagination
boblipton4 April 2008
Although I usually don't like the Harman-Ising cartoons from MGM -- the combination of high production values made possible by their large budgets and inanely saccharine plots is very off-putting to me -- this one works: it puts you immediately into the imagination of a child to see her toys come alive in a simple plot in which the wind-up horse, 'Black beauty' must win a race against other toys in order to save the Old Plantation, a doll house.

Other people will object, no doubt, to the stereotype of the era. Harman and Ising did a lot of cartoons that today are considered to be too racist to show to easily influenced children -- or their parents who can't tell the difference between a cartoon from more than seventy years ago and real life today.
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3/10
Beautfil and gross at the same time.
planktonrules28 January 2017
The beginning of this cartoon says it's in Technicolor and that surprised me. After all, full color Technicolor (using the three color strip technology) was only in use in cartoons by Disney because they signed an exclusive deal and the competitors needed to use alternate (and inferior) color processes such as Two Color Technicolor and Cinecolor. However, I checked and this cartoon was made just AFTER the Disney monopoly ended and as such it makes it one of the first non-Disney full color cartoons ever made. It's also hellishly awful!

So why is this such a terrible cartoon? Well imagine showing a cartoon to kids that is filled with 'happy darkies' living on the plantation in pre-Civil War days! It's just chock full of black characters in pickininny braids and enacting the sort of safe and disgusting characters the public embraced at that time. No maltreatment of the slaves in this film...they are like one giant happy family and the family needs a wise head...which, naturally, is the genial slave master!! All this is god-awful and filled with caricatures of the "Uncle Tom's Cabin" characters. Sadly, "Uncle Tom's Cabin" was a wonderful story and was never meant to be anything like this tripe.

Not surprisingly, you don't see this one on TV today...even if it's important historically due to its use of full color. If you are curious, it's on YouTube as well as many even more offensive cartoons which have been yanked from circulation due to their negative portrayals of blacks and Asians.
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