Spooks

1930
6| 0h7m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 13 July 1930 Released
Producted By: Walter Lantz Productions
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Info

Late in the evening, just as a skeleton puts out its cat for the night, the masked Phantom stalks the graveyard, pausing only to insult an overly inquisitive owl. The Phantom enters the local opera house and falls in love with Kitty, a feline singer who is terribly jealous of the star of the show, a husky-voiced hippo. The Phantom falls in love with Kitty at first sight. For her sake, he sabotages the hippo (by popping and deflating her). Then he puts a phonograph player down Kitty's skirt. She walks out and pretends the recording is her own voice. Even though the record skips and, moments later, slows down to a stop (forcing the Phantom to crank the machine for her), Kitty is a hit. But does she appreciate the Phantom? No. Backstage, she jumps into the arms of Oswald the Rabbit. Enraged, the Phantom grabs Kitty and takes her down with him to the catacombs underneath the stage. Oswald goes on a rescue mission.

Genre

Animation

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Director

Walter Lantz

Production Companies

Walter Lantz Productions

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Spooks Audience Reviews

Taraparain Tells a fascinating and unsettling true story, and does so well, without pretending to have all the answers.
Kaelan Mccaffrey Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.
Philippa All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.
Raymond Sierra The film may be flawed, but its message is not.
TheLittleSongbird Despite Oswald the Lucky Rabbit and his cartoons being popular and well received at the time, they have been vastly overshadowed over time by succeeding animation characters. It is a shame as, while not cartoon masterpieces, they are fascinating for anybody wanting to see what very old animation looked like.Not all the Walter Lantz Oswald cartoons are good representations of Oswald or Lantz, a few for historical interest only. Some are good however. 'Spooks' is really not either at their best, though they've certainly done far worse. It's an okay and slightly above average (but only just) cartoon but wildly uneven. Nowhere near close to the best of the Disney and Winkler era cartoons, the best of which are very good.Sound quality for a cartoon so old and techniques still in its early days is not as primitive as it could have been. Oswald is very endearing and there are nice kooky characters.It's music is as energetic as ever too, and Oswald is endearing. The animation is quite good, pretty detailed, not as crude as in some of the Lantz Oswald cartoons and Oswald's movements, expressions and gestures are well done. There are two good gags, one with a skeleton and one with a songstress.Too many of the rest of the gags are not particularly funny and pretty weak, due to mechanical execution, going on for too long, hence what is meant by less than crisp pacing, and being short on wit and action. It does make what little of the story drag.At times there is a spooky atmosphere but it doesn't come consistently, the cartoon needed sharper timing.Overall, okay but uneven. 6/10 Bethany Cox
MisterWhiplash 1) Maybe if Milli Vanilli had watched this they would've been warned about the perils of lip-syncing.2) This is a fairly shameless rip-off of what Disney/Iwerks were doing at the time (though I'm not sure if Pinto Colvig, who would go on to voice Goofy for most of his life, was working for them yet), down to this seeming more than a bit like that one short where Mickey Mouse gets told by the Grim Reaper to play the piano: "I c-c-c-can't play!" "PLAY!" "Y-y-y-yes, ma'am." There's even a side character that looks like Mickey. Not to mention Universal took Oswald away from Disney a couple years before this and kept at it anyway. I know that it might seem unfair to compare another short to Disney from the period as if he and Iwerks were the only ones making animated movies, but having gone through almost all of the early shorts Disney/Iwers were doing at the time, the similarities are uncanny (aside from that one specific example, the short with the Halloween theme in the graveyard has a similar tone). So I suspect it was a conscious attempt at doing what Disney was getting successful at, ironically after firing him.3) As far as shameless rip-offs go, this had a good pace until the last minute so it's fun, though I wouldn't watch it again.
Foreverisacastironmess This to me feels like it really should have been one of the early more surrealist Betty Boop cartoons as the more Gothic and weird parts of it are much more suited to the style of her freaky little world than the thoroughly lame Oswald Rabbit.. Some of the opening images are to me very familiar indeed by now, and look as though they're almost directly lifted from the Silly Symphonies' classic "The Skeleton Dance". But unlike that and many others of the joyously bizarre and twisted vintage cartoon shorts that I greatly loved getting into a while ago(I think I watched them all!), this'n isn't really about spooky frenetic strangeness, it's more a series of random nonsensical visual gag jokes that are accompanied by the constant incoherent shrill yammering of the characters. I freakin' swear, at points it's totally like this cartoon is deliberately trying to be as irritating and obnoxious as possible! Very poorly done voicing for the most part, and some rather noticeably stilted animation, but thankfully it picks up a lot and to me is saved by the last couple of minutes when a villain who is clearly a Phantom of the Opera parody appears, and I thought the best animation of the short was done with him. There's a great eye-catching charm to his simplistic design, and I loved the flowing effect of his cloak as he morphs and looks almost like a blob of ink as he chases down Oswald only to end up telling him one truly scary joke! It kinda came off like they forgot how to give it a real ending, but I loved how it concluded in such a crazy and unexpected way, it capped-off the short very nicely and made for a great little punchline. I guess some things may not be as scary as they seem.. It was definitely one of the more rough-around-the-edges old cartoon oddities that I've ever seen, and I think it could have done with being a little more scarier and mean-spirited, but it was still entertaining enough and was worth the time. Pretty decent for an Oswald show.. I do believe in Spooks, I do believe in Spooks, I do-I-do-I-do!!!
boblipton This early sound Oswald the Lucky Rabbbit is a mild send-up of THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA, which was enjoying a reissue at the time this came out -- a fine opportunity to do the cartoon.At this point, Walter Lantz' unit was probably the best cartoon factory in the business and you can tell by the list of talent that later appeared elsewhere: Clyde Geronomi and Pinto Colvig both worked on the script and Colvig is credited with some voice work.The net effect is a decent little cartoon, with the gags fairly mechanically paced, but well executed. If you have any fondness for any of the associations you should find it amusing.