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Dreams of the Rarebit Fiend: The Pet

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Dreams of the Rarebit Fiend: The Pet

After eating a rarebit, a man falls asleep and dreams his wife adopts a mysterious animal with an insatiable appetite. The pet eats its milk, the house cat, the house's furnishings, rat poison, and passing vehicles, including airplanes and a blimp, while growing larger and larger. This cartoon is part of a Dream trilogy animated by Winsor McCay in 1921. (CBGP)

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Release : 1921
Rating : 6.8
Studio : Rialto Productions, 
Crew : Director,  Writer, 
Cast :
Genre : Fantasy Animation

Cast List

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Reviews

Odelecol
2018/08/30

Pretty good movie overall. First half was nothing special but it got better as it went along.

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Lachlan Coulson
2018/08/30

This is a gorgeous movie made by a gorgeous spirit.

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Freeman
2018/08/30

This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.

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Caryl
2018/08/30

It is a whirlwind of delight --- attractive actors, stunning couture, spectacular sets and outrageous parties. It's a feast for the eyes. But what really makes this dramedy work is the acting.

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Boba_Fett1138
2010/11/13

This is really obviously a movie from the early days of animation. It's of course completely done by hand all and even by just one person; Winsor McCay, who before venturing into animated movies was already a successful cartoonist.The concept of this movie also comes from a successful newspaper cartoon done by him. This movie was the first out of three, which he based on his successful comic 'Dreams of a Rarebit Fiend'.It really isn't a very smooth and stylized looking animated movie. The character movements are extremely awkward at times for instance and the sequences really don't always flow that well. Most sequences even feel overlong and it just doesn't always get to its point quick enough. Also the animation style itself, so its characters and such really aren't anything too impressive looking. The backgrounds on the other hand were quite good looking.But as for the actual entertainment value of the movie, it's certainly a good enough movie to watch. It has an amusing concept, which get executed well, mostly in its second half.The movie at its beginning cites Winsor McCay as the inventor of animated drawing but this simply isn't true and seems to be an early advertisement trick. it's true though that he was the first animator who's movies became a big commercial success as well and reached a wide audience with his movies.Very early animated movie, that is still entertaining enough to watch now days.7/10http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/

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tavm
2007/06/06

The Pet is another entry in Winsor McCay's animated series Dreams of the Rarebit Fiend. In this one, a man has just eaten a rarebit of the title. His wife has warned him about having bad dreams for doing so to no avail. As he dreams, we see outside of the house a small animal that's hard to identify but-according to the word put on screen-says, "Meow." The woman picks him up and decides to keep him. She gives him a bath and feeds him milk on a saucer a little bigger than him. After he's done, however, he becomes a little bigger than the bowl which turns over on his entire body as he leans his head forward. He later eats a cat under the table and then an electric lamp on it (and doesn't even get electrocuted!). The husband then goes to the store to get a barrel of rat poison in order to kill this "pet". After the pet eats it, he develops some splotches on his body but they disappear quickly as he keeps growing. He eventually grows as tall as the tallest building in the city as more than dozens and dozens of planes appear and shoot him to pieces as the man finally wakes up...As always, McCay gives great detail in backgrounds that make you almost forget you're watching animation. Many humorous touches throughout as when the "pet" swallows a hose before spewing water through a neighbor's window at a neighbor! And that final sequence with all those pieces of the "pet" falling down. Wow! As with anything that McCay has done, The Pet is certainly essential viewing for animation fans.

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wmorrow59
2007/03/08

He's not exactly in the household word category anymore, but to fans of comic strip art Winsor McCay is a legendary figure, a pioneer visionary who created amazing vistas for the Sunday papers. For film buffs, McCay was a key figure in the history of animation, the man who almost single-handedly devised and drew the first real cartoons. He devoted four years of work to his initial effort, Little Nemo (completed in 1911), and hand-colored the results. And although he employed an assistant McCay is said to have personally inked some ten-thousand drawings for his best-known film, Gertie the Dinosaur, completed in 1914. That's a level of dedication approaching madness, especially when you consider that McCay was simultaneously producing daily comic strips and full-page color works for the Sunday papers -- and works of top quality, too.By the early 1920s, for reasons unknown, McCay seemed to lose interest in the production of animated cartoons. Perhaps he was just getting older and slowing down. Among the last known films he worked on were three episodes of a series based on his popular comic strip "Dreams of the Rarebit Fiend," a strip which had inspired director Edwin S. Porter to a produce a famous (and still extant) trick film back in 1906. Within the rigidly unchanging format of this series McCay could let his imagination run wild: at the beginning of every installment a gentleman would eat too much rarebit (or some other rich food) and then have a wildly surreal dream; the dreams could involve space travel, time travel, inanimate objects coming to life, or -- a favorite motif -- humans, animals or objects changing size, either becoming enormous or miniaturized. McCay was never much for dialog, but his draftsmanship was extraordinary and his work had a genuinely dream-like vividness.This series entry, The Pet, begins on a deceptively slow and quiet note, once the middle-aged married couple at the center of events fall asleep. The rarebit-eating husband dreams that a strange little dog-like creature has appeared on their lawn and that his wife has adopted it. The creature varies somewhat in size and appearance from scene to scene; its eyes are blank and the only sound it utters is "Meow," but it looks more like a cross between a calf and a dog than anything feline. Dad is increasingly unhappy as the Pet invades the conjugal bed and glides about under the covers. He moves to the sofa. Meanwhile, the Pet grows at an alarming rate. The tone of the film changes sharply when, almost as an aside, the Pet devours the family cat and then eats everything on the breakfast table, including the plates and the coffee maker. Dad goes straight to a drug store to buy a barrel full of rat poison. The Pet, who is now as big as a horse, eats all the furniture in the house as well as a pile of coal, sucks water out of the garden hose and spews it on his hosts.By this point it's clear that what we're watching is no cute little cartoon comedy: this is a nightmare, one that some pet owners can understand. McCay is playing on that fleeting fear many of us may have experienced at one time or another that a family pet has taken over our lives, or (in more extreme cases) is genuinely malevolent or even monstrous. Animals, like humans, can turn ornery despite the best treatment. McCay takes this scenario and spins it into an impossible yet strangely familiar horror story. The most disturbing scene in the film comes when the Pet eats the entire barrel of 'Rough on Rats' poison and goes all trembly, then breaks out in disgusting-looking boils. The boils fester, but the Pet survives his ordeal and only grows larger and more powerful. He lumbers away in a trance-like state, eats a garden wall, a tree, and a car, then advances on the downtown area, now as big as a battleship. In the end, it takes the mobilization of the air force to put a stop to the rampage.The final scenes will remind movie buffs of The Lost World, the various adventures of King Kong and Godzilla, Tex Avery's King-Size Canary, and countless sci-fi flicks in which giant creatures attack cities, but it's worth pointing out that McCay was well ahead of them all. In its 20-minute running time The Pet looks like a condensed preview of these movies, but it has an eerie, nightmarish quality all its own. I only wish this film had marked the beginning of a new phase of Winsor McCay's cinematic career; instead, it was the end of the line for this quirky, brilliant and innovative film pioneer.

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Snow Leopard
2005/06/07

This is an amusing and imaginative 'Rarebit Fiend' feature that makes good use out of one basic idea to provide material for a number of good moments. Most of it is simple elaboration on the basic premise, but the way that Winsor McCay steadily builds things up makes it work pretty well.This time, the rarebit-induced dream concerns an unusual pet that quickly gets out of control. As its rampage gets worse and worse, some of the shots bring to mind similar sequences from numerous later movies, such as "King Kong" and "The Lost World", and this gives "The Pet" even extra interest.In itself, it's pretty good as well. The animation is of McCay's usual high quality, and it works quite well for its era.

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