Dumb Patrol

1931
5.4| 0h7m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 19 May 1931 Released
Producted By: Harman-Ising Productions
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

During the Great War, Bosko and a fearsome beast are in a dogfight. Bosko loses, but that's only the first battle.

Genre

Animation, Comedy

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Dumb Patrol (1931) is currently not available on any services.

Director

Hugh Harman, Rudolf Ising

Production Companies

Harman-Ising Productions

Dumb Patrol Videos and Images

Dumb Patrol Audience Reviews

NekoHomey Purely Joyful Movie!
SpunkySelfTwitter It’s an especially fun movie from a director and cast who are clearly having a good time allowing themselves to let loose.
Brendon Jones It’s fine. It's literally the definition of a fine movie. You’ve seen it before, you know every beat and outcome before the characters even do. Only question is how much escapism you’re looking for.
Philippa All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.
TheLittleSongbird The Bosko cartoons may not be animation masterpieces, but they are fascinating as examples of Looney Tunes in their early days before the creation of more compelling characters and funnier and more creative cartoons.'Dumb Patrol' fares considerably better than the previous two at best average Bosko cartoons, and while a long way from a cartoon masterpiece it's somewhere around top middle as far as Bosko cartoons go. The Bosko cartoons are ones where the stories are never a strong suit, and that it would be silly to expect much, even then 'Dumb Patrol' while not plot-less as such is slight and predictable.Surprisingly 'Dumb Patrol' fares surprisingly well tonally, cheeriness amidst something as heavy and harrowing as war sounds like a recipe for disaster but, apart from occasionally the constant cheeriness going a little overboard to the point of annoyance and the fate of the airplane being a little cruel (considering the airplane was quite compelling as a character), there is a good mix of fun and emotional power.As to be expected, even in the lesser Bosko cartoons, the animation is not bad at all. Not exactly refined but fluid and crisp enough with some nice detail, it is especially good in the meticulous backgrounds and some remarkably flexible yet natural movements for Bosko. The music doesn't disappoint either, its infectious energy, rousing merriment, lush orchestration and how well it fits with the animation is just a joy.Bosko's personality appears significantly more fleshed out, before he tended to not be interesting let alone endearing but he is rootable enough here. Honey is neither annoying or bland, and while the villain is stock they also fare well providing the obligatory conflict. Liked the character of the airplane too. The material does quite well finding the right balance of tone, being fun while not necessarily trivialising war.Overall, decent if not great. 7/10 Bethany Cox
Edgar Allan Pooh . . . Warner Bros.' always psychic Looney Tunes prognosticators feature their Cute Widdle Bosko template for 2016 White House Resident-Elect Donald J. Rump as he exchanges 3 AM Twitter Rants with his Russian Doppelganger, KGB Strongman Vlad "Mad Dog" Putin early in the morning on Dec. 22, 2016. This endearing duel of boyish chest beating turns into the World's first nuclear exchanges ever (as America's nuking of Japan to win World War Two technically was a one-sided affair). Bosko finds Vlad has the jump on his own Luftwaffe comprised of "over-priced" F35s, and Bosko's fleet is wiped out while on the U.S. Military's $3 Trillion Defense back-order list. This forces America's Fearless Leader Rump to engage in one of his serial dalliances with a music hall gal, but the Looney Tuners warn We Americans of the Future that 2017 is no year to be wasting money on music or art (or Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, National Parks, or Wall Street Regulators, for that matter) by having Vlad destroy Bosko's Honey's piano with another nuclear blast at 5:20 (just after she's performed the Big Screen's first-ever Twerk at 3:50). Don't worry America, the Looney Tuners reassure us, as the resourceful Rump uses his squadron of trick wiener dogs to turn Russia's Coup D'Grace Third Wave of nukes into a Boomeranging Barrage which destroys the evil Commies instead.
J. Spurlin Bosko in his scrappy, anthropomorphic plane and a fearsome beast in his awesome, cannon-hauling machine are in a dogfight, and Bosko loses. His plane is vaporized in mid-air, but Bosko's fall is broken by the keys of a piano. Bombs have destroyed most of the house surrounding the piano, but the instrument itself is undamaged. Bosko meets Honey, a French girl who happens to skip by. His piano playing impresses her, but the fearsome beast interrupts his performance by dropping a bomb on him. This time Bosko uses a dachshund for an airplane by spinning its head around like a propeller. Now, with a homemade machine gun and the pickets from a picket fence for bullets, Bosko can't lose."Dumb Patrol" makes excellent use of Bosko's relentlessly cheery disposition by having him whistle and sing merrily as bombs fall all around him. Honey makes an equally hilarious entrance, by skipping among the ruins as if she were enjoying a day at the park.Bosko's scrappy airplane has something of a personality, which makes the cartoon seem a bit cruel when it allows the villain to destroy it. But that kind of tart humor is necessary to counterbalance Bosko's psychopathic cheeriness.
Robert Reynolds Warfare is not going to get Bosko or Honey down, nosiree! The title is a play on the film title Dawn Patrol and Warner Brothers made another short 33 years later with the same title. Both are decent, but they started to flesh out the Bosko character at about this point in the series, so this one is better than most, if a bit inane. Well worth watching. Recommended.