Yanky Clippers
Yanky Clippers | |
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Directed by | Walter Lantz Tom Palmer |
Produced by | George Winkler |
Color process | Black and white |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Running time | 5 minutes |
Language | English |
Yanky Clippers is a silent animated film starring Oswald the Lucky Rabbit. It is among the few shorts created during the Winkler period known to be existing. The cartoon is also Oswald's last silent film.
Plot
Oswald is a hair stylist and runs a barber shop. His first customer is a shaggy terrier, and Oswald goes to give it a haircut. Every time Oswald shaves some hair from the terrier's back, the hairs keep growing. In time, Oswald finds out that the little dog is drinking a bottle of hair-growing liquid while he shaves. He then takes away the bottle and continues working. Though all he intended to is to give the terrier a little trimming, Oswald made the dog almost completely hairless.
His second customer is a hippo who comes to have some chin shaving which Oswald provided easily. The next patron is an elephant who seems to need a trunk makeover. Oswald irons the elephant's trunk and curls it with some tongs. The elephant blow its trunk like a party horn and appears to be satisfied by it.
Oswald then comes to a bear who arrives to have a manicure. To make himself more charming, Oswald puts on a skirt and some lipstick. He then smoothed the bear's sharp claws with an automatic nail-filing wheel. Because of the feminine outfit the rabbit is wearing, the bear thinks Oswald is a girl and therefore falls in love with him. Oswald is then asked by the love-stricken bear to have a ride in the latter's car but Oswald declines. To make the rabbit get in, the bear lures Oswald using a lollipop. The plan works and Oswald is in the vehicle sitting beside his client.
They set off in the car, leaving the barber shop and exiting the city. While they were riding through an open field minutes later, the bear picks up Oswald with two hands and starts kissing the rabbit constantly, much to Oswald's dismay. Oswald is able to get out of the bear's grasp and jumps off the car. Oswald goes on running with the bear in the car chasing.
The chase continues even when night falls. It ends when they reach a long fence. Having enough of the bear's affection, Oswald confesses he is actually a guy as he takes off his skirt and wipes off the lipstick. The bear is disgusted and drives away. Oswald is finally left in peace.
See also
External links
- 1929 films
- 1929 animated films
- 1920s American animated films
- 1920s animated short films
- American films
- American silent short films
- American black-and-white films
- Films directed by Walter Lantz
- Films directed by Tom Palmer (animator)
- Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoons
- Universal Pictures films
- Cross-dressing in film