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Forty Winks | |
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Directed by | Otto Messmer |
Produced by | Jacques Kopfstein |
Starring | Harry Edison |
Music by | Jacques Kopstein |
Animation by | Otto Messmer |
Color process | Black and white |
Production company | Pat Sullivan Studio |
Distributed by | Copley Pictures Corporation |
Release date |
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Running time | 7:30 (correct speed) |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Forty Winks is an animated short film made by the Pat Sullivan Studio, and is among the Felix the Cat shorts.
Plot
One evening, Felix serves as a conductor to four singing cats. Meanwhile at a house only a few yards away, a hefty man is napping on a chair but gets awakened by their act. To silence them, the man grabs and rolls out a bowling ball, knocking Felix and the other cats off their feet. Felix, however, still insists to go on performing as he plays a flute and his friends dance. Awakened once more, the man takes out an ether sprayer and showers its contents onto the cats. While his friends fall into a snooze, Felix decides to have his sleep at home.
Felix enters his apartment, and lies on the sofa. But before he can rest long enough, his dwarf master calls him over. Felix comes in and hears about the dwarf's complaint about an insomnia problem. To assist his master, the cat offers a glass of warm milk but to no effect. The dwarf is still unable to sleep, and therefore craves for some entertainment instead. Felix then plays a clarinet, and the toy soldiers start dancing to his music. After moving around for a few moments, one of the little soldiers fires a small cannon, piercing a picture on a wall with its projectile. The dwarf is amazed by the presentation, and asks Felix to hand over the cannon. When Felix gives it and suddenly turns around, the hostile dwarf aims the small weapon at him and fires. Felix is struck at the back and frightenedly flees the apartment.
Out in the streets, Felix looks for suitable resting places. He then climbs up a telephone pole, and lies down on a set of pants hanging on one of the lines. Because the lines are brittle, the one holding the pants momentarily snaps, and Felix plummets back to the pavement.
Felix wanders further in the neighborhood until he sees a small house on the other side of a fence. He enters it, only to be chased out by the dog inside. Still wanting to take room, the cat stood on the house's roof and blows into the stack, pushing the dog outside. Felix re-enters the house through the stack and immediately closes the door, locking the canine out. The heart-broken dog starts weeping so much that the area is soon flooded by its tears. As a result, the little house starts to float away.
Riding on the floating house over time, Felix finds himself landing on the Dark Continent. After being chased by a hippo, the cat suddenly runs into a mountain lion. Thus the two felines started pummeling each other with punches. Following a number of exchanges, Felix became the only one throwing and landing blows. The little cat then slams the mountain lion repeatedly until the latter turns into a pillow. Felix lies down on his newfound pillow and finally goes to sleep.
See also
References
- Lenburg, Jeff (2009). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons (3rd ed.). New York: Checkmark Books. p. 79. ISBN 978-0-8160-6600-1.
External links
- Forty Winks at IMDb
- Forty Winks at the Big Cartoon Database
Felix the Cat | |
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Key people | |
Films | |
Television | |
Other media |
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Category |
- 1930 films
- 1930 comedy films
- 1930s American animated films
- Felix the Cat films
- American comedy road movies
- American comedy short films
- Films directed by Otto Messmer
- Films about sleep
- 1930s English-language films
- Animated films about cougars
- English-language short films
- American animated black-and-white films
- 1930 animated short films