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Aviation Vacation

United States

1941

6 Min
Color
English
  • Currently 2.6/5 Stars.
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DIR Tex Avery

PROD Leon Schlesinger

SCR Dave Monahan

CAST Mel Blanc, Robert C. Bruce

ED Treg Brown

MUSIC Carl W. Stalling

ANIM Sidney Sutherland, Robert McKimson, Virgil Ross

Synopsis

This early Tex Avery effort, made way back when he was still calling himself Fred, already features his crazy trademarks. The whole cartoon is just a collection of crazy sight gags one after another. On this plane trip to Africa (via Ireland), airplanes fly like birds, sound like trains and dance to music. Shadows move like they have a mind of their own, Mount Rushmore get a (at the time) topical joke and even the sun and moon get in on the act. Strangely enough there are no references to W.W.II. —IMDB

Director

Original

Tex Avery

A descendant of both Daniel Boone and Judge Roy Bean, Fred “Tex” Avery enjoyed on-the-job art training when he was assigned to illustrate his high school annual (“The only guy there who could handle a pencil”) Avery left his home in Dallas to take a three-month course at the Chicago Art Institute, then headed for Hollywood, to look for work in the animation field. Contrary to previously published reports, Avery did not get his start at Terrytoons or Van Beuren, instead, he “met a fella who knew a girl” in charge of inking and painting at the Walter Lantz Studio.

From 1929 to 1934, Avery animated scenes for other directors, and also dabbled in gag writing. Seeking out a better-paying job, Avery wangled a job with Warner Bros. animation producer Leon Schlesinger after convincing Schlesinger that he’d directed two cartoons at Lantz. He hadn’t, but that didn’t stop Schlesinger from appointing Avery head of his own unit at “Termite Terrace,” populated with such animation wizards as… read more

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