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Rating: 6.7
Reviews
Strong and Moving!
Entertaining from beginning to end, it maintains the spirit of the franchise while establishing it's own seal with a fun cast
There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.
By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
. . . World War Two Era U.S. Army Infantryman Pvt. Snafu is given a taste of every branch of the U.S. Military (except for the Marine Corps) by his fairy godfather, and concludes that none of them are his cup of tea. At a time when Snafu could have learned to milk cows, earning an agricultural draft deferment, or inspected radar assemblies, meriting a defense industries pass, or taught himself to tiptoe and swagger in a fey way for an M. Mitchell "John Wayne" Morrison cop-out, Snafu instead has let himself be drafted into the INFANTRY BLUES. Though this hapless goof ball's foray into the tank corps is by far the best episode here, leaving him hanging over a cliff from the tank's long barrel in a Wile E. Coyote-type predicament, his briefer sojourns with the Army Air Corps and the Navy (the latter aboard PT Boat #13) lack detail and development. If the first copy of this to be seen since 1943 turned up Today with no historical context, it's likely that many viewers would assume it was a propaganda piece dropped behind U.S. lines after being produced by the U.S. enemy Axis Powers, rather than a "morale booster" funded by American taxpayers.
A fun Private Snafu short made for use by the U.S. Army during World War II. This one has Snafu complaining that the infantry does all the grunt work while the other branches of the military have easier jobs and get all the glory and respect. So Snafu's personal fairy seen in many of the other Snafu shorts tries to set him straight by showing him how the Tank Corps, Air Force, and Navy have it rough, too. The point being that we're all in this together and each of us doing our part, an important reminder during wartime when low morale could be a major problem. Directed by Chuck Jones, with nice black & white animation. The action scenes are great. Solid voice work from the always reliable Mel Blanc. This is a very enjoyable cartoon from an entertaining and often risqué series (as evidenced again here with some swearing allowed, something you'd never see at the time in a cartoon available to the public).
The Private Snafu cartoons, while somewhat formulaic, are always entertaining and Infantry Blues is among the best of them(Spies and Booby Traps are my personal favourites of the series). The black and white animation looks so crisp and smooth, the story gets its point across effectively without being heavy handed and is also very snappily paced and the humour is often hilarious(though there are more daring cartoons in the series), so effective the visual humour is here that even the weakest gag is still very amusing. Snafu is funny and endearing, for the worst soldier in the army he is a likable and never annoying one. Technical Fairy is a wonderfully deadpan support character. Mel Blanc's vocals for both characters are superb and instantly recognisable, each character having their own defined personality and vastly different from one another. The best things though about Infantry Blues are the music and especially the dialogue. Carl Stalling's music is very characterful and enhances every line and sound effect, the pre-existing music brilliantly utilised and appropriate. The dialogue is deliciously witty and the rhyming style has Dr Seuss all over it. In conclusion, a great Private Snafu cartoon. 9/10 Bethany Cox
This is one in a series of training films commissioned by the US Army during World War II. There will be mild spoilers ahead:Private Snafu is the worst soldier in the service and his behavior is used to teach troop how they shouldn't approach things. Here the lesson being presented is that none of the other branches have things easy.Snafu is complaining, saying he should have joined the tank corps instead of the infantry. Up pops Technical Fairy, First Class with an assist transferring Snafu to the tank corps, where Snafu promptly comes to regret his choice.Next up, the Navy, which Snafu finds to be far more dangerous than he supposes. Finally, Snafu is in the air corps, which also presents its fair share of risks and dangers. Truth be told, each service has its advantages and disadvantages. Different jobs in different branches present risks (just look at ball turret gunners, for example). Which is basically the point to the cartoon. Combat is dangerous, land, sea or air.This short is available on various DVDs and online and is well worth watching. Most recommended.