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Don's Fountain of Youth

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Don's Fountain of Youth
Huey, Dewey and Louie think their uncle really has turned younger from the Fountain of Youth.
Directed byJack Hannah
Story byRalph Wright
Produced byWalt Disney
StarringClarence Nash
Music byJoseph Dubin
Animation byVolus Jones
Bill Justice
George Kreisl
George Rowley (effects)
Layouts byYale Gracey
Backgrounds byArt Riley
Color processTechnicolor
Production
company
Distributed byRKO Radio Pictures
Release date
May 30, 1953 (USA)
Running time
8 min (one reel)
LanguageEnglish

Don's Fountain of Youth is a 1953 American animated short film by Walt Disney Productions featuring Donald Duck.[1]

Plot

Donald and his nephews are in Donald's car on vacation in Florida, and pass by an "old Spanish fort" and a flamingo. The nephews, however, are more interested in their comic book, refusing to look up from it. Donald's car begins to overheat, which sends him scrambling to find a source of water for his radiator. He comes across a small pond with a sign reading "This spring was mistaken for the Fountain Of Youth". Donald decides to use this to trick the boys, with the intent of making them believe Donald is experiencing dramatic reverse aging. Donald breaks off the top half of the sign, leaving only the bottom portion reading "The Fountain of Youth," and yells for help to get the boys' attention. The boys find Donald wearing a baby bonnet and exhibiting baby-like behavior, including tearing pages from their comic book. "Baby" Donald's outlandish behavior causes the boys to decide that some discipline is called for, and the boys go off to find a tree branch to use as a switch. However, Donald uses this time to steal an egg from a nearby sleeping crocodile, place it where he had just been standing, and put his baby bonnet on it to fool the boys into thinking he has further regressed to an egg. Donald watches from a nearby hiding spot alongside the very crocodile he stole the egg from (who had just woken up from Donald sitting on her). As the boys lament losing their Uncle to the reverse aging process, Donald attempts to share a laugh with the crocodile, who soon discovers that her egg is missing and Donald is the culprit. Enraged, the crocodile whacks Donald on the head with her tail and a dazed Donald sits on her egg. She then chases the triplets for the egg and they throw it to coincidentally where Donald is. As Donald gets out of his daze from having the egg bounce off him, the two crocodile eggs hatch, imprinting the baby crocodiles into thinking Donald is in fact their mother. After further time spent evading the crocodile, Donald suffers a concussion that puts him into a stupor, after which the boys see him stumbling. Reuniting with the triplets, the baby crocodiles come up to Donald excitedly and Donald fears about them thinking he is their mother, so they run to the car and make a hasty exit. The babies begin to cry from Donald getting away. The crocodile is reunited with her babies, however due to their earlier imprinting onto Donald, they are terrified at the sight of their biological mother. The mother crocodile quacks, causing her babies to accept her after all.

Voice cast

Releases

References

  1. ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. pp. 74–76. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  2. ^ "The Three Caballeros DVD Review". Retrieved 2012-08-24.
  3. ^ "Disney Shorts - Walt Disney's Funny Factory with Huey, Dewey and Louie". Patrick Malone. Retrieved 2012-08-24.[permanent dead link]