Rhapsody in Rivets (1941) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
12 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Inventive
preppy-312 February 2008
Very odd but fun cartoon short that was nominated for an Academy Award. It shows a bunch of dogs that act like humans constructing a building. The foreman comes out and has them play like a symphony while building! This leads to countless sight gags as the dogs construct a mammoth building in record time. No dialogue--just the music which is "Hungarian Rhapsode #2". Bright, cheerful, fast-moving Merrie Melody. TCM shows this every once in a while and their print is in pristine shape. The music is loud and the colors are so bright and vivid that they pop out at you. Also there is a character from other 1940s cartoon in this. He's a small dog with a terminally depressed expression. He has a hand in the ending. Well worth catching.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
very funny and very inventive
didi-528 August 2007
Like 'Pigs in a Polka' and 'The Band Concert', this cartoon short centres on a piece of music with an inventive animated theme - this time, the 'orchestra' are workmen building the 'Umpire' State building, whether the little elevator dog or the scrawny cats knocking pegs into the ground.

Beautiful colour and music enhance this short, which was Oscar nominated but just pipped to the post. The foreman, with baton and whistle, monitors and directs the action, including an inventive bricklayer and a lift which can dodge obstructions.

Wildly funny and well constructed, 'Rhapsody in Rivets' is a real find, and is a Merrie Melodie well worth tracking down.
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Since polls show that many, if not most, Americans believe . . .
cricket3029 January 2015
Warning: Spoilers
. . . that WTC Building No. 7 was mysteriously blown up on 9-11 (if not the Twin Towers themselves), RHAPSODY IN RIVETS may be a great place to start looking for clues. That's because this 1941 Oscar-nominated animated short was widely circulated in its day, helping to mold the childhood brains of some of the key players on 9-11. RHAPSODY IN RIVETS closes with a high-rise collapse eerily similar to what everyone saw happen in Real Life that fateful Tuesday. Now, when Muhammad Ali decked Sonny Liston with the infamous "Phantom Punch" to end their rematch before it even began, conspiracy theories abounded. At least once a month, the radio news program COAST TO COAST features architecture experts explaining how 9-ll could NOT have happened the way the Official Report says. RHAPSODY IN RIVETS shows a slammed door toppling a newly-completed 100-story-plus high-rise. The shady character shown on the ladder several times just before this disaster is the ONLY human among the animals featured here. He's obviously an insurance underwriter (or Scammer), no doubt behind the mysterious collapse which more than likely provides huge financial benefits to the new owners of the cartoon high-rise. Perhaps the brand new WTC owner (as of August, 2001) saw RHAPSODY IN RIVETS as an impressionable youngster?
2 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Brilliance! sheer brilliance!
Theshapeshifter14 October 2005
When I first watched this cartoon short ages ago, I was amazed by the film itself. Such a hilarious cartoon playing out to the tune of a classical song, there are few of.

The story is that of a foreman, who is a lion, who "conducts" a group of human-like animal construction workers to build the tallest building, the Umpire State Building, a clear parody on the Empire State Building. While the animal workers strive to build this construction, hilarity quickly ensues in the form of the workers messing up each others' workings and a multitude of hilarious events which make this cartoon short well worth watching! I recommend it to all who enjoy a good musical parody.
6 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Bravo! Bravo!! Encore! Encore!!
llltdesq20 March 2001
This cartoon short SHOULD have won the Oscar instead of Lend A Paw! An absolutely perfect blending of music and action throughout, well-executed at every turn. Incredibly funny with no dialogue-sight gags only and the running gags are great! Wonderful marriage of beautiful music and antic lunacy with a drop dead ending! Fanatically, totally recommended! I love this cartoon!!!
5 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Skyscraper Rhapsody
TheLittleSongbird7 December 2017
Love animation, it was a big part of my life as a child, particularly Disney, Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry, and still love it whether it's film, television or cartoons.

'Rhapsody in Rivets' to me is among Friz Freleng's best work. And this is coming from somebody who is in his prime period and was responsible for some of my favourites. With the involvement of composer Carl Stalling, with heavy use of Liszt's oft-used in animation "Hungarian Rhapsody No.2", and writer Michael Maltese, 'Rhapsody in Rivets' potential was enormous, with it also being directed by Freleng. Potential that is as superb as one can get in execution.

Freleng's style is all over 'Rhapsody in Rivets' and he's in his elements, relishing every colour and every gag.

Animation is wonderful. Throughout it is vividly bright in colour, fluid and rich in detail and smooth in movement and design. Stalling demonstrates why he is my personal favourite of the regular Looney Tunes composers with his lush, characterful and action-enhancing scoring that is mainly a brilliant arrangement of the 2nd Hungarian Rhapsody.

Liszt's music is seamlessly arranged and synchronised with the visuals and gags. The setting is made very imaginative use of and the characters are great fun.

The cartoon is fast-paced liveliness in timing and the gags, in a gag-driven cartoon with no dialogue, are a great many and come thick and fast. There is not a misfire among them, actually haven't seen a cartoon as hilarious as this in a while.

Overall, wonderful. 10/10 Bethany Cox
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
as far as I'm concerned, any classic cartoon featuring "Hungarian Rhapsody" deserves full recognition
lee_eisenberg4 September 2007
I've always found it neat when classic cartoons play famous songs to move the action along, and Friz Freleng's "Rhapsody in Rivets" adds to that. This is one of the many instances* (it may have been the first one, in fact) where they play Franz Liszt's inimitable "Hungarian Rhapsody #2". In this case, a construction foreman conducts/instructs the builders to that tune as they erect a skyscraper...with a surprise at the end.

The Academy's decision to not give this cartoon an Oscar was matched only by their decision to not give "The Shawshank Redemption" any Oscars. It's one of the all-time classics and one that I recommend to everyone. Among other things, it goes to show that a cartoon doesn't need dialog to be great; as a matter of fact, that makes it easier for people in other countries to understand. Available as a special feature on "The Bride Came C.O.D." DVD.

*Other Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies cartoons that play that song are "Rhapsody Rabbit", "Back Alley Oproar", "Wise Quackers" and "What's Up, Doc?". Many years later, Daffy Duck and Donald Duck played it in "Who Framed Roger Rabbit".
4 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Bravo Friz Freleng!
slymusic27 October 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Friz Freleng is my favorite animation director. Why? Because he knew, probably more so than any other cartoon director, how to synchronize music with animation so as to enhance the humor of whatever situation the cartoon deals with. In the case of "Rhapsody in Rivets", the entire plot involves constructing a gigantic skyscraper to the musical accompaniment of Franz Liszt's Second Hungarian Rhapsody. The cigar-chomping construction foreman wears a Stokowski wig, lays out his blueprints like a music score, and does a masterful job conducting all of his subordinates to perform their tasks (and even make their mistakes!) in time to the music.

Highlights: A sleeping dog misses his cue and gets hit in the face with a brick. A long-faced hound dog arrives late for work, accompanied by a lively solo clarinet melody. Several workers unknowingly pound nails into their rear ends. An Irishman tries to run up a ladder, only to continually get trampled downward. And as one worker digs a hole, another worker buries him in that same hole!

Friz Freleng deserves all the accolades he can get for doing such a brilliant directorial job on "Rhapsody in Rivets". In order for this cartoon to be as effective as possible, Friz understood that he needed to KNOW the music score of Liszt's rhapsody. Without this knowledge, the cartoon would be nowhere near as funny as it is.
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
The approach and general idea may have been the problem here
Horst_In_Translation19 October 2017
Warning: Spoilers
"Rhapsody in Rivets" is an American 7.5-minute cartoon from 1941, which means this is from the days of World War 2 and it had its 75th anniversary last year. Freleng and Maltese made this one, which means it is by Warner Bros and Leon Schlesinger was nominated for an Oscar for it. Actually, he was even nominated twice, but came short just like he did on every other occasion when he was nominated. Disney won that year. This film here is a movie that is made by its music as they used the Liszt piece you hear in here and built a plot around that that includes a handful of dogs at a construction site moving, working and constructing synchronously with the music. That's all there is really and it was tough enough a challenge, so you cannot be too mad at them for not really turning this into a comedy highlight. The one dog with the Droopy can't-be-arsed face expression was still kinda funny though. But as I am not a great classical music lover, this film did not do too much for me either. But those who are and love animated films and/or cartoons, will have a glorious time watching and listening to this one. Everybody else can skip it though. Nowhere near WB's finest in my opinion.
2 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
My brother used to pound the piano . . .
pixrox129 September 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . something terrible. A version of the music from RHAPSODY IN RIVETS was his favorite piece. Sometimes he'd play it continuously for hours, backwards and forwards, or lying on the piano bench with his hands crossed above his head on the keyboard (like some kind of musical contortionist). But mostly he sat upright, alternating between this lumbering Liszt and Chopin's Funeral March in E-Minor. I was always afraid he'd literally bring down the house one day with all of his piano pounding. That's what RHAPSODY IN RIVETS does for me: It brings back memories of tune storms.
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Young ones might not appreciate it, but adults sure will
planktonrules27 January 2014
While classical music (as well as this particular tune) has long been used in cartoons, I can't say I've ever seen it used like it is in "Rhapsody in Rivets". It's darned clever and made incredibly great use of the music--integrating it into a film that is simply a delight to watch.

This film begins with the foreman on a construction job overseeing it just like the conductor of an orchestra. As he gesticulates, the characters working on the bridge do so in perfect unison with the music--or when they don't the foreman becomes very angry. Seeing hammers, jackhammers and the like perfectly times with Liszt's 'Hungarian Rhapsody Number 2' was pretty amazing. And, I am not surprised that this one ending up getting nominated for an Oscar for Best Animated Short. For kids, I'd score this one a 6, as kids want more humor and characters bonking each other on the head. But for older audiences, it deserves at least a 9, as there is nothing quite like it!
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Rhapsody in Rivets was the second Oscar-nominated cartoon from 1941 I'm reviewing
tonyvmonte-549736 March 2024
This is my second review of a cartoon nominated for an Academy Award for 1941 having previously done so for George Pal's Rhythm in the Ranks. It depicts a dog construction crew performing Franz Liszt's "Hungarian Rhopsody # 2" with their tools. Director Friz Freleng does the gags justice when done in tune here. That particular piece of music would appear in other cartoons over the years including Freleng's Rhopsody Rabbit starring Bugs Bunny. I thought the whole thing was hilarious from beginning to end. Freleng always knows how to make entertaining musical cartoons, that's for sure! So on that note, Rhapsody in Rivets is highly recommended.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed