Banned Cartoons
filed in Agimia Stuff on Jan.01, 2009
This was the golden age of animation, after all. Illustrators and comedy engineers were only too delighted to inject healthy doses of social tension into the public meme. Colorful, extended virtuoso sequences were married to Carl Stalling’s sprawling, frenetic musical score and Mel Blanc’s hyper-enthusiastic vocal characterizations. Together, this massive ensemble yielded some of the most respected entertainment products our planet has ever produced. The sheer output, the quantity alone staggers the imagination. These were people working in an exploding new field, individuals genuinely married to their work.
In the early days, cartoons were screened before feature films at fancy schmancy “moving picture” theaters - often social engagements where men and women were inspired to wear their Sunday best. Later, these same cartoons would cycle endlessly for decades on broadcast TV or cable syndication courtesy of modern inventions like the tel-o-vision.
And later still - after the innovation of the video cassette recorder - these priceless artifacts would be made available for ho
me rental, so future generations (and their children, and their children’s children) could bear witness to each and every blessed key frame.
Actually, no. Sorry. As the result of objections by parents, overly sensitive sponsors, timid corporate policy, and “changing” cultural niceties, a substantial portion of these classic cartoons has been lost forever, and some may never again see the light of day.
Animated features with even the slightest reference to alcohol (including rum cake), adultery, breasts, chewing tobacco, cross-dressing, gambling, marijuana, pornography, profanity, “rim jobs” (i.e. dogs licking each other), vaguely sexual or flirtatious situations, recreational sex toys (i.e. Tom from Tom and Jerry sticks a vacuum cleaner up Mammy Two-Shoes’ skirt, producing giggles), smoking of any kind, suicides (i.e. a flusterated Daffy Duck blows his beak around in circles with a shotgun) - and even baby ducklings emerging from their shells in demure strip tease were deemed unacceptable. What’s left to laugh at? Dora the Explorer? Rotten Dot Com is confident it speaks for all of us when we say screw that edumacational bullshit.

Chow Hound (1951) directed by Charles M. Jones was a real classic - the story of a muscular dog who exploits a cat and mouse, concluding with a vicious turn of the tables: the dog is planted belly-up on a countertop and force-fed gallons of gravy (”…And don’t forget the gravy!”) through a garden hose. Well, consider those childhood memories stricken from the record. These days it falls under the category of imitatable behavior, i.e. too masochistic for children and families with pets.
Merrie Melodies chose to portray Australia as a desolate, sparsely-treed landscape populated by bouncing kangaroos and portly aborigines who communicate with one another by chucking boomerangs or screaming UNGA BUNGA BUNGA. That’s what critics had the good sense to label an unflattering portrayal, and it too was yanked from public shelves.
pardoné moi, but has anyone heard from Speed
y Gonzales lately? The Mexican rat? Yipa yipa, andele arriba? Nor have we. The Cartoon Network, which since 1999 has been the only television venue for vintage Looney Tunes, removed the Hispanic heretic from their day and nighttime schedules. Perhaps executives forgot Speedy actually won an Academy Award in 1955. Phone calls to Speedy’s dimwitted cousin Slowpoke Rodriguez (the world’s slowest mouse) went unanswered.T
oday, the most popular racial phobery (and war-inspired propaganda) has a new impetus: South Park, with its remarkable and timely depictions of both Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden. Swiping cultural cues from featurettes pioneered by Disney and Warner Bros., South Park manages to massage attitudes and manipulate the American agenda by unleashing brilliant leaflet campaigns of its own design.
Osama is illustrated wearing “farty pants,” mincing and prancing about the stage
like a young gazelle. Saddam is portrayed as- well, quite frankly a goddamn little faggot who refuses to keep his pants on. His voice is squeaky and ridiculous. His head flaps up and down like Canada’s own Terence and Phillip. In South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut, Mr. Hussein is observed wiggling an oversized jelly dong in Satan’s face.
Hey Fred - how about a Winston break? Winston’s the one filtered cigarette that delivers flavor twenty times a pack. Filtered blend makes the big taste difference - and only Winston has it!
Yeah, Barn - up front where it counts, in front of the pure white filter. Winston packs rich tobaccos specially selected and specially processed for good flavor and filtered smoking. Winston tastes good… like a cigarette should!
ugs Bunny marathon. Fearful of a potential backlash, AOL Time-Warner very nearly dropped a major anvil on Cartoon Network’s proposed festival in 2001. Racially charged episodes were aired out of order, late at night with the following disclaimer:“Japs!” screeches Bugs. “Hundreds of them!
When Spike Lee made Bamboozled (a film dealing extensively with black
stereotypes in Hollywood) Warner Bros. denied his request to include images of Bugs in blackface. But whether it’s Bugs Bunny tackling key issues of racism, or Popeye the Sailor Man binging on spinach while muttering to himself a private chorus of “you’re a sap / sap / sap / mister Jap,” or even
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Okay, never mind. But if you think words like banned or censored imply a degree of government intrusion which feels just a wee bit exaggeratory, consider this. In 1942, when the U.S. Treasury Department ran a whisper shy of funds during the war effort, they wisely sought financial counsel from the Looney Tunes division of Merrie Melodies. In theaters from coast to coast, Bugs Bunny showed up once again in full Al Jolson blackface, performing a musical number meant to peddle stamps and U.S. Savings bonds.
Th
e cartoon archetype of American smart guy / foreign dumb guy is a time-honored crucible best served during a war, and the Walt Disney Corporation concocted a few classics as well.The Swastika-dotted landscape of Der Fuehrer’s Face (1942) was the perfect brass band musical vehicle for Donald Duck, a Nazi munitions worker who “alternates between screwing nose cones onto bombs and saluting framed portraits of Adolf Hitler”. The Japanese make a cameo appearance too - and wouldn’t you know it, they’ve got lime green skin, big bulbous eyeglasses, Tupperware haircuts and protruding, jaggedy-ass dentures rivaling those of Bugs Bunny.The title song, performed by Spike Jones and his City Slickers, won an honest-to-gosh Oscar for Best Short, beating out veteran animator Leon Schlesinger’s wheezing, preachy and pedantic Pigs in a Polka. Other big winners that year: honkabilly big mouth James Cagney for Best Actor in Yankee Doodle Dandy and Irving Berlin, who penned the music and libretto for White Christmas.

Do
nald T. Duck would later redeem himself as
an air ranger in Commando Duck, a deftly animated farce combining traditional Disney magic with anti-Japanese tomfoolery. The premise: he parachutes into enemy territory during World War II. It’s treacherous terrain, marked by snipers hiding inside myopic, bucktoothed tree trunks which speak in pigeon-toed English, alternately bowing respectfurry toward one another and offering endress aporogies.
A-
prease and a-thank you! Time to shooting now prease I hope! Japanese custom say always to shooting a man in the back prease! Ah so! Ah so! And so on. Donald’s target coordinates on his map are F-8. Fate, get it?
Donald’s mission: contact the enemy, surround them single-handedly, and wash them out. After a series of slaphappy bumbling mishaps, he manages to direct an avalanche of tumbling boulders down a gushing waterfall toward a Japanese military facility. The airfield is flooded. Hundreds of Nipponese soldiers drown, and dozens of red-spotted planes hang like limp turkeys from dead, drooping trees. Sad, squawky trumpets wup-wahh across the horizon. But not in a hate crimey kinda way! This comical vignette, for all intents and purposes, eagerly delivers the very quintessence of merriment.
ts of historical cartoon propaganda is without a doubt Disney’s regrettable vignette, Education For Death, which graphically details the life and times of Hitler youth. The narrator solemnly intones the distorted text of Gregor Ziemer’s The Making of The Nazi.German adults are portrayed in classic Disney “sinister bulldog” style: barrel chest, small rear end, bowed legs, and no neck. The bellowing, red-faced instructor’s jowls flop around like coattails as he berates a kindergarten classroom full of Bambi-eyed waifs in lederhosen, whose pluckish heads are delightfully oversized. The military professor’s singular goal: get these scatterbrained kids to appreciate Hitler’s way of thinking.

As Education For Death descends toward its bloody climax, the animation is bathed in murky red tones. The viewer is urged to “listen closely to the fanatic cry” of the German people. What follows is a pounding orchestral soundtrack and a relentless montage punctuating all things fire and brimstone.
ssic hardbound volumes of literature and philosophy are piled high, fanned at the spine and set ablaze. Flaming torches cast violent, flickering shadows as the Holy Bible morphs into a limited first-edition Mein Kampf. Crucifixes hung by the chimney with care are zapped by swift arcs of lightening from the heavens, and transformed into unfurling Swastikian flags or bladed Iron Crosses.Delicate, stained glass church windows are smashed out during drunken antisemetic protests - and endless squadrons of squat, pear-shaped children in silhouette are seen goosestepping in grids for miles across the globe, arms outstretched toward the sky as they Heil Hitler over and over. Today Germany - tomorrow the world!
no seed of laughter, hope, tolerance or mercy. For him - only heiling and marching, marching and heiling. The grim years of regimentation have done their work. Now he’s a good Nazi. He sees no more than the party wants him to. He says nothing but what the party wants him to say. And he does nothing than what the party wants him to do. And so he marches, with millions of comrades, trampling on the rights of others. For now, his education is complete. His education… for death.”
November 18th, 2009 on 2:19 pm
I’m fascinated by the diverse range of views and opinions. Who’s your “go to” guy?
December 25th, 2009 on 5:57 pm
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December 28th, 2009 on 7:26 pm
tnx for all