In 1941 Tex Avery started a series of cartoons 'Speaking of Animals'. These cartoons may not be among the best cartoons there's ever been and those with Avery's involvement are not among the best he's ever done, but they are very interesting and entertaining on the most part with a unique visual style.
The first of the 'Speaking of Animals' series is 'Speaking of Animals Down on the Farm', and to me it's one of the best entries. It may not be one of the best cartoons personally seen, but it's a great one and fascinating for a visual and historical perspective, very important and popular at the time. Anybody looking for any kind of plot are best looking elsewhere. On a story level, the 'Speaking of Animals' cartoons on a story level are pretty slight. With that being said, it's not about the story. It's the visual style and the humour that the series is to be seen for and both are done brilliantly here.
'Speaking of Animals Down on the Farm' has ingenious use of Rotoscoping, with animation being re-shot and matted into the animal footage, and its combining of live action animals and animated mouths similarly looks incredible. It's this that is the cartoon's, and for the series in general, most striking and notable asset.
As for the humour, it's classic Avery with his wonderfully wild and often hilarious puns, sight gags and slapstick jokes. There is a lot of energy, and also found myself being educated somewhat too by the farmer's narration and introduction.
Mel Blanc continues to prove how incredible and multi-talented voice actor he was. The animals are incredibly funny and endearing, especially the parrot and the fourth-wall-breaking stubborn mule. It's not everyday an owl croons Bing Crosby too.
Overall, great start to an interesting series of cartoon and great in its own right. 9/10 Bethany Cox