Señorella and the Glass Huarache (1964) Poster

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7/10
A 'Modern' Cartoon In The Looney Tunes Golden Collection
ccthemovieman-18 November 2007
A Mexican version of the famous "Cinderella And The Glass Slipper" story? Yup, that's what you get here in this modern-day Looney Tunes cartoon. I say "modern day" because I don't recall seeing any cartoons in the LT Golden Collection DVDs made as late as 1964. I have seen all the collections but Volume Four, and can't recall any of the '60s.

The opening graphics are so different than the '40s and '50s it was almost a shock to see. The artwork was good, though: very colorful and done well in a new style for Looney Tunes.

The story would probably be censored by Politically-Correct Police of today as it uses names for Mexicans such as "Sarsaparilla, Tabasco," and other phrases; anything that sounds Spanish and the accents are a bit exaggerated. (I'm not on PC side unless it is overtly racist or mean-spirited to any group.) This has a nice side; it's not trying to demean Hispanics but by today's standards, it comes across as a bit condescending in spots. Not every Mexican is a bullfighter, or wears a sombrero everywhere, or can't spell or brutalizes the English language, etc.

Anyway, the humor is "fair," nothing super but not bad. I liked the colorful and modern artwork, and the faces and "latest dresses from Madrid" of the women, were a lot of fun to watch. This was a hoot for the eyes, even if the jokes were a little too corny to laugh.
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7/10
An amusing cartoon if not a hilarious one
TheLittleSongbird26 December 2012
From the viewpoint of a long-term animation fan, I did enjoy Senorella and the Glass Huarache. While it didn't wow me, it was interesting and did give me some pleasure. This said, I wouldn't go as far as say that Senorella and the Glass Huarache was great. The story, while the spoof and the concept are very interesting, could have done with some tighter pacing, and does feel routine and predictable. There are also some amusing moments, but nothing really hilarious or what I consider fresh. On the plus side, I did like the animation. It wasn't amazing, with some stiffness here and there, but the stylised style-with use of very thick lines-of it did look colourful complete with backgrounds that don't look too rushed or sparse(like the later Speedy Gonzales cartoons) and decent character designs. Bill Lava's music is another strong asset, the style working much better than it did in the Speedy and Roadrunner-Coyote cartoons, it is very catchy and gives a lot of energy to Senorella and the Glass Huarache. The characters are at least engaging, Senorella is wonderfully vivacious. True, they are stereotypes, but not overdone or offensive ones. Mel Blanc as ever excels in the vocals. All in all, amusing if not hilarious. 7/10 Bethany Cox
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7/10
Interesting, though average, short produced under the WB studios just before it was shut down the first time
llltdesq9 November 2007
Warning: Spoilers
This short was the last short produced by the Warner Brothers animation department. The studio shut down the animation department, only to farm out the production of cartoons to the Depatie-Freleng Studio, which also produced the Pink Panther shorts. I'm going to talk a bit about the short, so there will be mild spoilers below: Though there really isn't anything particularly exceptional about this short, I noticed some things I thought were at least somewhat interesting about it when I saw it today for the first time. For one thing, it had a lot of visual similarities to the shorts produced by Depatie-Freleng-the character design of Senorella, for example, is very similar to female characters in a couple of later Pink Panther shorts. The backgrounds are also very much like the later backgrounds, which I suppose is hardly surprising, given that a number of the people who worked on this short went on to work for Depatie-Freleng.

As for the short itself, it's a largely by-the-numbers version of Cinderella, with the nominal twist of it being populated with Hispanic characters. Apart from the narrator's accent and pronunciation, the slant given this short is generally benign and marginal. The short's greatest deficit is that it really isn't terribly funny and there isn't enough variation in the plot to make up for the lack of decent jokes. It's rather predictable to anyone who knows the story of Cinderella.

Still, it is worth seeing once and is currently in print on Disc 2 of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection, Volume 5. Recommended for Looney Tunes completest.
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Quite a sad story, amigo.
slymusic8 July 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Written by John Dunn and featuring a very good south-of-the-border music score by Bill Lava, "Senorella and the Glass Huarache" is a fairly adequate Warner Bros. cartoon that spoofs the famous story of Cinderella. Two silhouetted Mexicans (voiced by Mel Blanc and Tom Holland) discuss the story of poor Senorella as we segue into flashbacks of her amazing transformation from rags to riches. The animation is rather stiff, but, as we shall see, this stiffness is an integral part of the humor of this cartoon.

My favorite moments from "Senorella and the Glass Huarache" include the following. Senorella is quite amusing as she shakes her hips to a growling trumpet accompaniment. Also funny is a meek little chihuahua as it suddenly growls in Senorella's face. After a bull rams Don Miguel into a wall, Miguel punches the bull away from him! But the funniest moment of all involves Don Miguel's son Jose dancing with Senorella; the stiff animation, combined with the bland facial expressions of the couple, are what make me laugh at this sequence.

"Senorella and the Glass Huarache" is not the Warner Bros. animation department's finest hour, but it doesn't matter; I very much enjoy this cartoon and what it has to offer. One thing that arouses my curiosity, though: I wonder if audiences from the mid-1960s were ready to see tattoos on women's arms in animated cartoons. Considering that the sixties were a strange time frame, probably so.
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7/10
a last gasp of air
lee_eisenberg7 January 2008
In the last Warner Bros. cartoon made before the studio closed its animation unit, a man tells his friend the story of Senorella, a Mexican version of Cinderella. Obviously, fairy tales are some of the easiest stories to work with, and the Warner Bros. animation unit had been doing it from very early on. I should note, however, that the animation looks kind of metallic here and the narration starts sounding like an echo.

Otherwise, "Senorella and the Glass Huarache" is worth at least checking out. As for possible stereotyping of Mexicans, it's nothing that we haven't seen in a Speedy Gonzales cartoon. Now available on the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 5. And if you ask me, considering that around the time that this came out was also about that time that the studio retired Bugs Bunny, they shouldn't have attempted anything after that (except for the compilation films).

Back when Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising made the first Bosko cartoon for Leon Schlesinger Productions in 1930 (which released its cartoons through WB), they probably had no idea that their studio would branch out into things like this.
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5/10
A Mexicano Cinderella Story
elicopperman5 May 2023
In honor of Cinco de Mayo, it's time to look at a fascinating attempt to adapt a classic folk tale with a foreign twist, Señorella and the Glass Huarache. Known as the final cartoon from the original Warner Bros cartoon studio to be released as the division had been shut down, this 1964 short film would ultimately mark the conclusion of a highly regarded era in the eyes of classic animation fans. Looking at the short today nearly 60 years following its original release, this take on the Cinderella story with a Mexican twist has just as much going for it as it has going against it.

Now arguably the biggest contributing factor of Señorella being a Mexican take on the Cinderella story lies in the art direction. As this short was directed by Hawley Pratt, known as Looney Tunes director Friz Freleng's longtime layout artist, the film looks gorgeous in its recreation of Latin American landscapes, caricatures and color palettes. One can tell how much inspiration the filmmakers took in recreating a more stylized flat looking short film as opposed to the more rubbery and geometrical slapstick cartoons in the Looney Tunes lineup, and the results are mostly well done for the type of short this is meant to be. In addition, composer Bill Lava's blending of retro Mexicano music and jazz ensemble suits the short splendidly depending on the scene, as the orchestrations flow smoothly in between many of the more saucy moments in the short. Lastly, while no particular character in the short is fleshed out at all, there are still a few humorous scenarios and pratfalls here and there to find amusement in Señorella and the Prince Don Jose Miguel, at least within the WB context.

With all of those qualities said, the short is unfortunately not that common from most takes on the Cinderella story, in that its too simple and straightforward for its own good. Since the short is told through narration by two men at a Cantina, the pacing is constricted by what's being told as the film progresses, leaving very little impact on any of the characters, humor or stakes. Also, as much as the Mexican influence is all set in stone, it's painfully obvious that no matter how much tribute is being paid towards one country, the short reeks of white people trying to replicate a certain style and falling short in stereotypical character designs, eye rolling Latina puns and an outdated twist ending related to the story that was no longer funny by the time of the short's release. Considering that we as Americans have come to better terms with respecting other countries through film and animation, this short is at least more tastefully done than other cartoons prior to its time but not close enough. It says a whole lot when the title is somewhat of an indicator on what you'll expect for both better and worse.

So as a final wrap up for the original Warner Bros cartoon filmography, Señorella and the Glass Huarache is a decent enough conclusion to a beloved era with as many strong points as it has flaws. For all of its Latin American influence going for its artistically, it still falls short due to its already routine storyline basis and impulsive need to romanticize the aesthetic it's going for. I would recommend this short on the grounds of judging it by its own merits as opposed to the final short from a studio cherished by animation fans, since it should be taken under admiration but with a grain of salt.
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9/10
Great final short from the original Warner Bros. Animation
wile_E200527 December 2007
I first saw this short on the new Looney Tunes Golden Collection Vol. 5 DVD set. It was the last short from the original Warner Bros. Animation studio before closing in 1963 and having DePatie-Freleng take over the Looney Tunes series. Coincidentally, this short actually DOES resemble a DePatie-Freleng cartoon! For one thing, it uses the "modernized" abstract Looney Tunes opening and closing sequence with the bizarre theme music that was used on all LT shorts from 1965 onward. The logo was originally intended for stylized one-shot cartoons from the original studio, the first two being "Now Hear This" (done in a totally-abstract, artistic style by Chuck Jones) and "Bartholomew Versus the Wheel" (drawn in a James Thuber-style and directed by Robert McKimson). This cartoon is somewhat stylized, but in a manner so it resembles the mid-to-late 1960s Pink Panther cartoons. Then again, many of the Warners' staff that worked on this cartoon went to work for DePatie-Freleng afterward, so it makes sense. This Mexican twist on the old Cinderella story is also rather amusing. Bill Lava's Mexican music works here instead of those crappy Speedy vs. Daffy cartoons he would later go on to score at DePatie-Freleng. The backgrounds look very UPA-ish and the thick-line drawings are pleasing to look at. I don't think Cartoon Network aired this very often when they were showing Looney Tunes. They might've been worried that it was politically incorrect and all that junk. However, this is one latter-day Looney Tunes short I highly recommend!
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10/10
A Wonderful Animated Take On the Classic Cinderella Story
bbwvixen6726 October 2002
Warning: Spoilers
WARNING: My brief comments on this film may contain a spoiler, so please don't read if you don't want your curiosity to be ruined.

I first watched this classic Warner Bros. short on the Nickelodeon children's network when it was a part of their daily "Looney Tunes" program and I instantly fell in love with it. After that first showing, I was hoping the network would show it again at a later date, as I was taping most of the Merrie Melodies/Looney Tunes shorts for later viewing. They did show it again--and yes, I taped it. I watch "Senorella" along with the other shorts on tape every now and then, and it still makes me laugh every time I view it.

This animated short starts off with two Mexican drunks in a bar who are only seen as figures in shadow over a visible sign for a play (or movie) called "Cinderella and the Glass Slipper", and one of them relates the "Senorella" story to the other--but with a few exceptions. Senorella is shown as a dirty, disheveled, thin girl; the wicked stepmother and stepsisters are gluttonous; there are bugs helping Senorella with the chores instead of mice; and instead of Prince Charming, there's a single but inept bullfighter named Don Miguel, whose wealthy father desperately wants to marry off.

Don Miguel's dad arranges a ball in which all of the women of the village are invited, and like in the classic Cinderella tale, Senorella gets uninvited by her stepmother. Of course, the Fairy Godmother comes to her aid, and in a hilarious twist, she makes Senorella look like a gorgeous hooker--complete with glass huaraches! Senorella then goes to the ball, dances with the bullfighter, and runs out of the ball at the stroke of midnight; leaving one of her glass huaraches behind.

After a nervewracking search, Don Miguel and his dad finally found Senorella in a muddy pig's trough the following day (she was put there by her stepmother to hide her away from them). He then placed the huarache on her foot and took her away from her wretched stepfamily to marry her. They ended up living happily ever after as "manuelo and wife" (as the narrator ended the tale before we see the drunks' shadowy figures one last time as the cartoon comes to a close).

The good folks at Warners did a great job with this short, and although it's not a big side-splitter by any means, it is an enjoyable change of pace from the standard Bugs Bunny and Co. fare, which is what most animation buffs tend to remember and enjoy more over the years. I give this hilarious but forgotten piece of animation history ten stars.
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