The Wizard of Arts (1941) Poster

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4/10
Wacky art
TheLittleSongbird21 July 2018
Dave Fleischer was responsible for many gems. Ones that were amusing and charming, though over-cuteness did come through in some efforts and the stories were always pretty thin, with appealing characters, outstanding music and visuals that were inventive and with innovative animation techniques.

'The Wizard of Arts' is one of eleven cartoons forming Fleischer's "Animated Antics" from 1940-1941. None of the eleven being high points in the studio's output (a long way from that), the worst even being some of the weakest they and Fleischer himself did. To me and quite a few others Fleischer's overall quality declined quite a bit in the early 40s and that can be evident in the "Animated Antics" series, almost as much as the worst of the Gabby cartoons. 'The Wizard of Arts' is not one of the worst but there is not much note worthy here.

Best asset of 'The Wizard of Arts' is the music, which is outstanding. It's lush, cleverly orchestrated, energetic, full of character and not just adds a huge amount to the action it enhances it. The animation also comes over well, it's not elaborate or ground-breaking but there are some good detail in the backgrounds that don't seem to show limitations and fluid enough drawing, the black and white also being crisp.

Jack Mercer does a nice job with the voice work, or at least with what he has. The end gag is the only amusing and clever moment of the cartoon.

However, all the characters are bland with very little to them, where personality and likeability goes out the window. There is very little charm here, it tries far too hard to be cute and there is nothing remotely amusing let alone funny. There is a severe shortage of gags, or much worth investing in.

Furthermore, the story is paper thin and it does feel like 7 minutes over-stretched to breaking point that the pace is very dull, coming nowhere near close to matching the energy heard in the music. It gets rather repetitive and the running gag wears its welcome too early.

Overall, very mediocre but not unwatchable. 4/10 Bethany Cox
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5/10
Decent 1940s Fleischer
boblipton12 October 2014
An artist with a smock, a beret and a voice like Jerry Colonna shows off the sculpture in a gallery. It's a series of blackout gags in which the audience sees the title, and then the sculpture is revealed .... and it's always a pun. This goes on for a bit too long in this decent but unremarkable late Fleischer cartoon.

The studio was losing its focus as brothers Max and Dave fought and the cartoons suffered. They were down to the Popeye series, hobbled by the Production Code and were looking for other series. Their efforts were not particularly successful and the studio was being floated on loans from Paramount. They would produce arguably the most beautiful color cartoons of all time -- the Superman cartoons -- for more money than had ever been spent on short cartoons -- and go broke. Certainly, this one wasn't much help in staving off the end.
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