Betty Boop's Hallowe'en Party

1933
6.5| 0h7m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 03 November 1933 Released
Producted By: Fleischer Studios
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Betty Boop hosts a Hallowe'en party with a few uninvited guests.

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Cast

Director

Dave Fleischer

Production Companies

Fleischer Studios

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Betty Boop's Hallowe'en Party Videos and Images
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Betty Boop's Hallowe'en Party Audience Reviews

Actuakers One of my all time favorites.
ShangLuda Admirable film.
InformationRap This is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.
Marva It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,
TheLittleSongbird 'Betty Boop's Halloween Party' may not be one of the best Betty Boop cartoons. This said, it is still a very good cartoon in many ways, despite having a title that can easily mislead people.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 flaws are few, but as said the title is misleading. The party only takes up a very small portion of the cartoon and it's over too soon and is not as memorable as when 'Betty Boop's Halloween Party' becomes spookier and more imaginative. There are too many characters somewhat, and some are better than others.However the Halloween atmosphere is great, the visuals help give the cartoon a spookiness and much of it is wonderfully bizarre and deliciously surreal. The black and white animation is extremely good, smooth, meticulously detailed and well drawn with the black and white not looking too primitive. A lot of it is actually very imaginative as well, some of the most inventive, fantastically surreal and eye-popping of the early Betty Boop cartoons to me. The music is both atmospheric and infectious.It's never a dull cartoon either, and the spirit of Halloween is incredibly well evoked, as well as some welcome humour, even if it is more risqué in other Betty Boop cartoons. The voice acting is fine.Overall, good Halloween fun. 8/10 Bethany Cox
Horst in Translation ([email protected]) "Betty Boop's Hallowe'en Party" is one of the shorter Betty Boop cartoons at 6.5 minutes. It is from the year 1933 and of course it is another Fleischer Studios production. Betty likes to party and has invited all her friends over for Halloween. The first half of the film is basically the preparation, then the party begins and finally a villain shows up to destroy the fun, but Betty scares him away. Nothing scary about this little movie though despite the time of the year that offers some scares occasionally. The title is a bit of a lie as there is probably only a minute actually dealing with the party itself and this minutes is not really funny or entertaining. Same can be said about everything before and afterward. This was not a good Betty Boop cartoon. It had so many characters, but they did so little with them. Not recommended.
Foreverisacastironmess I try quitting the Boop but she just keeps pulling me right back in! Oh, that old bobblehead Betty! She never could quite keep herself out of bizarre and super-freaky situations in her weird and wonderful little monochrome world! Who wouldn't ever wanna love to go to *her* Halloween party? I know I would! I loved the impressive detailed opening scene and the effect with the clouds passing over the full moon and taking on new and uncanny Halloweeny shapes! The scarecrow reminded me a little of another one that features in an awesome scene in a great Ub Iwerks animation called "Jack Frost." I like all the clever and inventive little ways in which Betty gets all her festive decorations for the party done! I really enjoy the scene where she lights the pumpkins, the lighting makes them look really diabolic! It's always so cool the way everything that happens is in a beat, the sense of rhythm with everyone constantly rocking in one big motion always helps a lot to make these kinds of shorts fun. Being pre-code, as well as a Halloween-themed short I was expecting some really crazy kooky psychedelic, all the denizens of hell type s**t! But this wasn't hardly spooky or surreal at all, nothing like the truly special and infamous best Fleisher shorts that all fans of them know about. It's still a good one though, the animation and detail of everything is noticeably well done. Even though it never quite degenerates into an explosive monsterfest, it does get pretty great towards the end as all the Halloween decorations come to life and creepy ghosts swirling around in the dark scare the bejeezus out of the mean, party-crashing Frankenstein-like gorilla who I thought was really lame, until he hightails it the heck outta there! And it was a nice twist at the end when it's revealed that the mysterious black cat who unleashed all the mayhem upon the gorilla was really Betty in a costume! Did not see that one coming, if nothing else, these particular weird old shorts were always unpredictable. I thought the ring around the cat's foot was a charming touch. ::: I heard this one was banned because around the three minutes and ten seconds mark you can see her undergarments.. I've seen a coloured version of this that if you look closer at, you can tell that the cartoon itself has been carefully redrawn as well. And in my opinion that doesn't do this antiquated and distinctive animation style any favours. It looks more special in the black and white in a unique and vital way. It's like looking at crude copies of old classic paintings that lack the subtlety and texture of the originals. And there's no way in a million years all Betty Boop cartoons end on a positive note, that's total bull. But oh well, who cares! See ya, Happy Halloween y'all!!!
theowinthrop This has it's moments as an early Pre-code Betty Boop. On Halloween a scarecrow finds a printed invitation to Betty's house for a party. He shows up, and after warming himself he assists her in setting up her home. Like most of the plots of Fleischer's cartoons, the initial structure is jettisoned for new incidents and characters to take over. The last we see of the Scarecrow is his putting up wall pictures of witches and black cats from special paint cans labeled "witch paint" and "cat paint". He flicks these on the walls, and the witches appear on brooms while the cats appear with their backs humped up. Betty is shown coring pumpkins (actually a cat descends with a device to do the coring, but Betty acts tired after each one is cored).Soon the guests arrive, and we see them bobbing for apples - one gets knocked out by an apple he is supposed to catch with his teeth. Then, about two thirds of the way through the cartoon, we see a gorilla arrive. YOU TUBE suggests that this particular cartoon was taken off the television shows of the 1950s and 1960s because it is a racial stereotype (presumably for African - Americans), but it does need stretching to see that. The idea of a gorilla as a symbol for a Black male is an old one, but this gorilla has nothing suggestive of what racial stereotyping would suggest. It just is a bullying gorilla, who first hits a tree (hurting a behind that suddenly appears), and blackening the eyes of a inoffensive owl. He then sees the party, and appropriates all the apples in a bobbing for apples. But soon he is being pursued by goblins and witches, apparently directed at him by a mysterious big cat. He is eventually chased out of the party, to the happiness of the other guests. But was that supposed to suggest the stereotypical superstition associated with male African-Americans too? I still find it quite a stretch.It is not a bad cartoon, but not one of the best efforts by Fleischer's studio.