Horst in Translation ([email protected])
If you have not realized it yet by the title "Sock a Doodle Do", then the names of director McKimson, writer Pierce and voice actor Blanc should really tell you that these slightly under 7.5 minutes we got here are another Warner Bros cartoon and this one is actually from the Foghorn Leghorn (and Barnyard Dog) series. It was released back in 1952, so has its 65th anniversary this year. They went with the common tradition to add one new character to bring new spice into the relationship between two old characters and this worked very well as the new rooster who packs quite a punch every time he hears a bell ring worked very nicely in my opinion.It took until one third into the movie, around the 150-second mark until he finally met one of our two heroes. But it was also a good watch before that as we see Foghorn witnessing the existence of flying saucers. This was just one example of FL and BD giving us funny sequences and there's of course also a lot after the 2m30 mark. The little rooster was a good edition, but he wasn't essential. I am not surprised that he seemingly didn't return in other cartoons as honestly his story is told in here in its entirety basically and he is certainly not the comedic highlight in here. But he worked greatly as means to the story. He was voiced by Sheldon Leonard (perfact name for Big Bang theory fans) and that was before Leonard won 3 Emmys for his television work as the man in charge behind the camera in fact. The inclusion of a cuckoo clock (with us knowing way before Foghorn what was about to happen) was quite fun and so was the ending that involved an actual boxing ring. I must say Foghorn is a definite contender for my favorite from WB and I like him more than the big names Daffy and Bugs for example. And this one here is a contender too for my favorite Foghorn Leghorn cartoon. A contender for 1952's finest and if you know how big cartoons were around that time, then you know what that means. I highly recommend seeing this one if you want to have a fun time.
Edgar Allan Pooh
" . . . the horse you rode in on," is a famous saying of FOGHORN LEGHORN, the punching bag of SOCK A DOODLE DO. Warner Bros.' Prognosticators Non Pareil, their Animated Shorts Seers division (aka, The Looney Tuners) outdo themselves with the clairvoyance of their psychic predictions aimed, per their usual, at We Americans of (The Then) Far Future. SOCK A DOODLE DO incorporates so many of the trademark Warner Bros. warnings to us 21st Century Folks that it would take a mighty thick tome to catalog all of them. Lacking the same, let's focus on Warner's main warning message of SOCK A DOODLE DO, which pops us late in this brief cartoon when Barnyard Dog lures Foghorn Leghorn into a shack labeled as a "Hula Hula Hut" for his ultimate punishment. The outside of this deplorable hillbilly-type edifice is plastered with photos of young HUMAN females, of the same sort that got Alabama's Judge Roy Moore banned from his local shopping mall when he was a powerful 32-year-old prosecutor incapable of keeping himself from persecuting the teen "jailbait" gals frequenting that mall. (The security guard who enforced Alabama's version of a "no fly list" against Moore has been deposed several times on TV this past week.) First Red Commie KGB Chief Vlad "The Mad Russian" Putin's White House Sock Puppet Don Juan Rump infested the White House with a nest of High Treason Viper-like Traitors while winning Putin's rigged election for U.S. President in Alabama, DESPITE confessions from the Horse's Own A$$ during the infamous ACCESS H0LLYWOOD tape that he's a serial finger rapist. NOW Alabama is Hell-Bent upon electing ANOTHER of Satan and Putin's proved Arch Demons in Roy "The Banging Judge" Moore as the next U.S. Senator from the sorry sad sack so-called "state" of Alabama. As Foghorn says, "Fool me once . . . " Clearly, it's past time, in Warner Bros. estimation, for ANYONE with a connection to Lucifer\Putin's Pedophiliac Repug Party (aka, The GOOPERS) to be permanently placed on America's Sex Offender Registry, until such time as their U.S. Citizenship can be revoked on the grounds of High Treason and Conspiracy to Abet Sexual Predation (following the Benedict Arnold and John Wayne Gacy precedents). Before they're deported to the massive iceberg floating along Antarctica's Coast, of course, it will be incumbent upon the rest of We True Blue Loyal Patriotic Normal Average 99 Per Center Silent Majority Progressive Union Label Citizens to use America's Civil Forfeiture Laws to strip these Fifth Columnist Quislings of their ill-gotten assets, property, weapons, and Bitcoins to pay off the outrageous National Debt for which they're responsible. As SOCK A DOODLE DO proves, you can either punch Evil in the face, or you're part of the problem.
utgard14
A boxing rooster named Kid Banty, the Pinfeatherweight Champion of the World, falls out of his trailer onto the highway and makes his way to the farm where Foghorn Leghorn lives. Foghorn and his nemesis Barnyard Dog are busy making each others' lives miserable, as usual. It quickly becomes obvious that Kid Banty is a little 'punchy.' Whenever he hears a bell ring he immediately starts boxing whoever is in front of him. Foghorn and Dog waste no time trying to use this to their advantage in their never-ending feud. A funny short with several good gags and lines. The animation is colorful and bright with well-drawn characters and backgrounds. The music is cheery and upbeat. Mel Blanc is wonderful as usual and Sheldon Leonard does a great job as Kid Banty. A fun cartoon that Foghorn fans will enjoy.
Lee Eisenberg
When I took an ethics class, one of the topics that we discussed was using someone as a means to an end. It contradicts ethical practice to involve someone in a process so as only to benefit oneself (more commonly referred to as using someone as a mere means). In this sense, Foghorn Leghorn and Barnyard Dog violate ethical practice in "Sock a Doodle Do". When a boxing rooster accidentally falls out of a truck and ends up on farm, FL and BD use him as the fighter in their eternal fight; you see, whenever he hears a bell, he immediately starts boxing.I admit that I'm probably reading way too much into this cartoon. After all, it was probably just intended as quick entertainment to be shown before a feature film (and it certainly is entertaining). But I always like to see whether or not I can derive a greater issue from these cartoons. If I'm wrong, then I am - to quote Foghorn Leghorn - as wet as a used tea bag and as sharp as a bowling ball.All in all, a pretty good cartoon, even though "How many lumps do want?" was pulled out of the Bugs Bunny vehicle "Rabbit's Kin".