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The Fighting 69½th

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The Fighting 69½th

Battalions of red and black ants go to war over an unattended picnic blanket full of food.

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Release : 1941
Rating : 6.3
Studio : Leon Schlesinger Productions, 
Crew : Director,  Producer, 
Cast : Mel Blanc
Genre : Animation Comedy

Cast List

Reviews

FeistyUpper
2018/08/30

If you don't like this, we can't be friends.

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Baseshment
2018/08/30

I like movies that are aware of what they are selling... without [any] greater aspirations than to make people laugh and that's it.

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Curapedi
2018/08/30

I cannot think of one single thing that I would change about this film. The acting is incomparable, the directing deft, and the writing poignantly brilliant.

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Juana
2018/08/30

what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.

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TheLittleSongbird
2018/06/14

Love animation, it was a big part of my life as a child, particularly Disney, Looney Tunes, Hanna and Barbera and Tom and Jerry, and still love it whether it's film, television or cartoons. Actually appreciate it even more now through young adult eyes, thanks to broader knowledge and taste and more interest in animation styles and various studios and directors.Have a lot of appreciation and admiration for Friz Freleng, while not one of my all-time favourites in animation. His early work was very variable but when on top form and in his prime the best of his work was great and even more. 'The Fighting 69 1/2th' is not one of Freleng's best. It is a very good cartoon though, even there are funnier, wittier and fresher cartoons from him, and saw signs of him finding his feet and settling. 'The Fighting 69 1/2th' may be predictable at times and the momentum could have had more sharpness at times. While there are no misfires, a few gags are not as funny as others and could have had more freshness.Mel Blanc as always does a fantastic job with the voice work, showing an unparalleled ability to bring individuality to multiple characters. The characters are cute with fun personalities, their interaction is one of 'The Fighting 69 1/2th's' biggest pleasures.The animation is as always bright and colourful, with lots of smooth movement, imaginative detail in the gags and rich and meticulous detail in the backgrounds. Carl Stalling's music score is as ever high in energy, liveliness, character, lushness and whimsy, and not only is dynamic and fits effortlessly with the action but enhances everything.What's more, 'The Fighting 69 1/2th' is entertaining, with some amusing wildness, wit and bite starting to show at this point in the dialogue. Plus there are some beautifully timed and animated and imaginative sight gags, that contain some surprises and a lively pace. Luckily the war element is not done in an over-the-top or heavy-handed way.Overall, definitely worth seeing. 7/10 Bethany Cox

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cricket crockett
2014/12/27

. . . breaks out between Black Ants and Red Ants in THE FIGHTING 69 1/2th. On the plus side, this "Merrie Melodies" entry is blissfully free of Sgt. Joyce Kilmer's doggerel verse (which is more than you can say about the Toon's apparent inspiration, a James Cagney feature titled THE FIGHTING 69th). On the other hand, this animated short is so lackluster that the print included on the "Warner Bros. Night at the Movies" DVD compilation is totally devoid of the usual credits (as if those involved wanted to disassociate themselves from the final product). The speech patterns of the Black Ants are clearly meant to Caricaturize a corresponding American ethnic group. While some may hear the Red Ant speech as pretty white bread, it would be a stretch to connect it to a particular continent or people. The Red Ants seem to make out the best here, utilizing the openings Swiss cheese affords as fox holes. This short implies that Limburger cheese has similar openings, which is news to me. But whichever\however you cut the cheese, THE FIGHTING 69 1/2th stinks.

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Lee Eisenberg
2008/11/03

One of the many one-shot cartoons released by Warner Bros. but not well remembered - it only recently got released as part of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 6 - "The Fighting 69 1/2th" portrays two groups of ants who go to war over a picnic blanket. Well, that's more justifiable than launching a war against a sovereign country just to gain control of its resources. The formic armies use pieces of food as weapons; that's better than nuclear weapons, right? The attempted negotiations don't go so well; not even Sergio Vieira de Mello could have helped these ants.Long story short, wars fought by cartoon characters look much more pleasant than wars turn out to be in real life. Friz Freleng's cartoon - stripped of its opening credits in the Blue Ribbon reissue - is pretty entertaining. Not a masterpiece, but worth seeing.

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slymusic
2008/10/27

The title of this Warner Bros. cartoon, "The Fighting 69 1/2th", is based on a superlative live-action World War I drama titled "The Fighting 69th" (1940), starring James Cagney, Pat O'Brien, and George Brent. In this cartoon, directed by Friz Freleng, a picnic setting featuring all kinds of delicacies becomes the site of a heated battle between two armies of ants, red and black.Highlights: Two ants engage in a "Oh no ya don't," "Oh yes I do" tug-of-war with an olive. When the red ants construct a sandwich, they are suddenly told to hold the onions. We see a wonderful spoof of the red ants' abdomens & boots marching through mud. And, if you can forgive the racial stereotype, one of the big-lipped black ants declares, "Forgot the mustard!" when a hot dog is taken prisoner.Let us please not ignore the genius efforts of composer/orchestrator Carl W. Stalling, whose music score is what really drives "The Fighting 69 1/2th" and comments on the action. An underrated maestro, that man.

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