The Three Bears

1935
The Three Bears
6.3| 0h8m| en| More Info
Released: 29 August 1935 Released
Producted By: Celebrity Productions
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Synopsis

Playing hide-and-seek with her dog, young Goldilocks scampers away into the woods and stumbles upon a lovely little house. Unbeknownst to her, a family of bears live there. The bears, however, have gone to do something in the woods. Goldilocks spills their food, breaks their furniture, and generally creates havoc in their house, before settling in for a nap in the one remaining usable bed. What she doesn't know is that the bears are coming back, and when they get back.......

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Reviews

MartinHafer There is a lot to dislike about this Ub Iwerks produced cartoon. Most importantly, it's filled with very sappy music that is so saccharine-sweet that you want to scream. Then, they made Goldilocks so repellent that you couldn't help but root for the three bears to maul this little creep!When the film begins, Goldilocks is playing hide and seek with her dog. While hiding, she discovers the Three Bears' house and proceeds to go inside and destroy almost everything. These were not mistakes--Goldilocks is some sort of sociopath in this cartoon. The bears return and try to maul her (can you blame them?) but in the end she manages to escape thanks to some skunks.Sicking music and a bratty main character who never gets her comeuppance...what a stupid film. Compare this to the brilliant Bugs Bunny cartoon where he tangles with the Three Bears and you'll see why I rate this one so poorly. Not fun to watch despite some decent animation.
Michael_Elliott The Three Bears (1935)** (out of 4)Goldilocks stumbles into the home of the three bears and I think you know the rest. Ub Iwerks made a lot of these fairy tale adaptations where he took familiar stories and then added his own twist to them. Like so many others, this one here features some very good animation but the stories are just so lacking that it's hard to get too involved in them. The biggest problem here is that Goldilocks is rather annoying and I'd argue mean as well. She really does a number on the bear's home so it's hard to care or feel too much for her. Even the three bears are rather bland and forgettable. The one saving grace is the animation but even that can't completely save this one. It's mildly entertaining at best.
Robert Reynolds This is a ComiColor short from Iwerks studio. There will be spoilers ahead:For a period of time in the 1930s, Ub Iwerks ran his own studio after he briefly struck out on his own away from Walt Disney. Iwerks studio produced some technically nice cartoons, but all too often, there was entirely too little in the way of plot or story and the shorts suffered for the lack. This short is an exception.This is the old fairy tale, Goldilocks and the Three Bears, with some nice little additions to the basic storyline. First of all, Goldilocks is playing hide and side with her dog when the short begins. Right away, she comes off as a bit of a brat. Come her turn to hide, she sneaks off and finds the house of the Three Bears, who have just about everything in threes-three entrances to the yard, to the house, three radios, cuckoo clocks, three cats, "Three Blind Mice" playing on all three radios with slightly different voices and so on.By and by, the basic story asserts itself and Goldilocks, eats porridge, wrecks two beds and occupies the third and then the bears are introduced and return home. They discover their lovely home has basically been wrecked, investigate, find the perpetrator and a chase ensues. The animation is great and the gags are very good for an Iwerks short.Goldilocks eventually manages to get out of the house with bears in full pursuit and the dog reappears in the short. The ending is unexpected and hilarious, so I won't spoil it here.This short is available on DVD and online and is well worth looking for. Most recommended.
Gblakelii Among Iwerks' non Disney work, Jack Frost(1934) is more popular among viewers, perhaps because of its seasonal appeal, and yet The Three Bears(1935) is crafted with the same expertise. This is a hip version of the favorite children's bedtime story, Goldilocks and the Three Bears. Goldilock's actually is not given a name in this film, and was not called thus in the earliest incantations of the story, but we'll use it here, nonetheless. She is shown dancing, the bears dance, and while she listens on the radio to a jazz version of "Three Blind Mice" complete with lyrics, 3 animated blind mice dance as well. The bears are given extra emphasis with their somewhat countrified vocabulary. The plot begins with Goldilocks playing hide and seek with her dog. She wanders off, enters the 3 bears unoccupied house and finds 3 of everything inside. There are 3 umbrellas, 3 pianos, 3 fish, etc. Then the familiar routine gets under way with the porridge then the beds. The ending is very funny and original. The music is a real highlight, with Carl Stalling at the helm. He had worked with Disney earlier as well, and of course later would move to Warner Brothers and do the Daffy, Porky & Bugs Bunny cartoons. This film must have been well preserved as the version viewed, a dollar DVD, had very good (non faded)color. In fact this would appear to be the 1st color movie edition of the famous tale that has been filmed over a dozen times. The story's popularity(it's origins going back long before it's first printing in 1831 by way of oral tales)is still high with many books in print as of 2009, e.g. James Marshall, Jan Brett, Little Golden Books, etc. Even the Flintstones had an encounter with the story in the Hanna-Barbera's cartoon series record album entitled Goldi Rocks and the Three Bearosauruses.