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The Isle of Pingo Pongo

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The Isle of Pingo Pongo
Directed bySupervision:
Tex Avery (credited as Fred Avery on the original issue)
Produced byLeon Schlesinger
Narrated byRobert C. Bruce (uncredited)
Animation byCharacter animation:
Irven Spence (uncredited on the Blue Ribbon reissue)
Virgil Ross (uncredited)
Effects animation:
A.C. Gamer (uncredited)
Color processTechnicolor
Distributed byWarner Bros.
The Vitaphone Corp.
Running time
9 min

The Isle of Pingo Pongo is a 1938 Merrie Melodies cartoon supervised by Tex Avery (credited as Fred Avery on the original issue).

Plot

The short follows a cruise ship's trip from New York to the island, presumably located in the South Seas. The ship sails past the Statue of Liberty, who acts as a traffic cop, past the "Canary Islands" and "Sandwich Islands".

The cartoon revolves around themes of jazz and primitivism, and is set on a remote island. The central character is an early version of Elmer Fudd known as Egghead, and most of the cartoon consists of travelogue-type narration and blackout gags, many including Egghead. The inhabitants of Pingo-Pongo are mostly tall, black, and have big feet and lips. Like other cartoons at this time, the native inhabitants resemble animals and reflect stereotypes of the time. The natives are at first playing drums, then break into a jazz beat, still described as a "primitive savage rhythm," which leads the audience to connect the savage jungle to modern jazz music.

There is a running gag with Egghead where he says, "Now Boss?", but the narrator keeps saying "Not now." That is, until the end, where the sun fails to set when he says "as the sun sinks slowly into the West". Egghead reappears and says "Now Boss?" The boss says "Yeah, now!" Egghead shoots the sun, making it sink into the West and ending the film.

Notes

  • Despite the cartoon's re-release, a physical copy of the original titles is known to exist.
  • Because of the racial stereotypes used against black people throughout the short, it prompted United Artists to withhold it from syndication within the United States in 1968. As such, the short was placed into the so-called Censored Eleven, a group of eleven Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes shorts withheld from television distribution in the United States since 1968 due to heavy stereotyping of black people.[2]

References

  1. ^ "The Isle Of Pingo Pongo". Big Cartoon DataBase, August 30, 2014
  2. ^ The Straight Dope.