Alice Gets in Dutch

1924
5.5| 0h10m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 01 November 1924 Released
Producted By: Walt Disney Productions
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Alice misbehaves in school and is forced to sit in the corner. She falls asleep and dreams, but schoolwork intrudes even into her dreams. Alice dreams of dancing dogs and donkeys until her fun is interrupted by three walking schoolbooks.

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Reviews

Redwarmin This movie is the proof that the world is becoming a sick and dumb place
Verity Robins Great movie. Not sure what people expected but I found it highly entertaining.
Ginger Very good movie overall, highly recommended. Most of the negative reviews don't have any merit and are all pollitically based. Give this movie a chance at least, and it might give you a different perspective.
Dana An old-fashioned movie made with new-fashioned finesse.
Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de) "Alice Gets in Dutch" is a 10-minute short film from 1924 and the name in the title and the year (over 90 years old) should tell you that it is another film from the Alice series by the pretty young Walt Disney, who is in his early 20s here. Alice is a little prankster in this one here and she gets sent by her teacher to the corner where she falls asleep promptly and the dream is the animated sequence we see. Alice and her friends fight against an army of books led by her teacher. It is all extremely strange and bizarre from start to finish in this dream sequence and if you were mean, you could wonder what Disney was smoking back then, but then again these old cartoons were frequently very odd because they had to make up for the lack of sound and color in other fields. As for this one, I don#t recommend the watch. Even the little Virginia Davis is fairly forgettable in here.
MartinHafer Unlike a typical Alice comedy, this one begins in the real world. Alice is being a class clown and her prank gets her in trouble. While sitting in the dunce chair, she begins to dream of wild adventures--all of which occur with her in the cartoon world. The adventure consists of her and her animal friends doing battle with an evil teacher and her evil textbooks. The teacher, not surprisingly, looks a lot like a cartoon version of her real one! Apart from Alice being a bit faded in a few portions (possibly due to film decomposition), this is another good Alice film from Walt Disney. The pace is brisk, cute little Virginia Davis is just fine as Alice and the film still holds up reasonably well today. It has a silly sort of charm that most of the films have and it's all in good fun. Well worth seeing.
aimless-46 Contrary to popular belief Walt Disney's first sustained character was neither Oswald the Rabbit or Mickey Mouse. It was a six-year old real life girl named Alice. While working for an advertising agency in Kansas City Walt experimented with stop-action animation in his spare time. Borrowing an idea from ? ? Max and Dave Fleischer's "Out of the Inkwell" series (which superimposed animated figures on real film backgrounds-allowing a live actor to and superimposed a live actress (Virginia Davis) on an animated background. Eventually there would be 56 Alice cartoons although Virginia was eventually replaced over a pay dispute. ? ? "Alice Gets in Dutch" is an earlier example of the series but Disney had already figured out the basic economies of the cartoon business. It was far cheaper in those days to film live action than to draw the 12 per second frames needed for good animation, and the first half of "Alice Gets in Dutch" is live action. Of course the reverse is true today as computer animation is now cheaper than filming live action ("Ultraviolent" is actually a return to the silent film days where Fleischer's live characters interact with animation). The short begins with Alice in a classroom where she is blamed when an exploding balloon covers her teacher's face in ink. Alice is banished to a stool in the corner and given a Dunce Cap (when is the last time you saw one of those). She falls asleep and dreams she is outside the schoolhouse dancing with a bunch of cartoon animals. A cartoon version of her teacher (with devil's horns) comes outside the break up the fun. Trailing behind as her assistants are three animated books; labeled reading-writing-arithmetic. The two sides shoot cannons at each other with inconclusive results until a cayenne pepper charge cause the books to sneeze until they are just piles of pages. But the next charge backfires and Alice and her pals begin to sneeze. Although crudely drawn the animations do convey a bit of personality and Virginia Davis does a great job with her part.Then again, what do I know? I'm only a child.
boblipton An extensive live set up goes into this early Alice short: our heroine is in a schoolroom where she gets into trouble and is made to sit in a corner with a dunce's cap on, whereupon she falls asleep and dreams of cartoonland. Spec O'Donnell is one of her classmates in the live sequence.Other people commenting on this series have made claims that Alice was a 'groundbreaking' series combining, as it did, live action and animation. In actual fact, Fleischer's 'Out of the Inkwell' series had been in production for six years at this time and had much better production values and scripts. Nonetheless, it is a pleasure to see a print of this early Disney short on the newest Disney Treasures DVD. Take my advice and skip the Leonard Maltin introduction which apologizes for there actually being anything of interest here. Thanks for getting it out to us, Leonard. Worth seeing if you are a Disneyphile or interested in the history of animation.