Yodeling Yokels (1931) Poster

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6/10
Yodeling Bosko and Honey
TheLittleSongbird3 April 2017
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.

While there are better Bosko cartoons, there are also worse. 'Yodeling Yokels' is watchable, but only just a little above average, so as far as Bosko cartoons go in ranking it's somewhere in the middle. As ever with a Bosko cartoon, the story is slight and some of the antics and peril with Bosko and Honey is predictable and struggles to maintain momentum.

'Yodeling Yokels' does have some amusing moments and good visual gags, but the predictability and repetition of some of the gags make the cartoon an amusing one in parts rather than a continually very funny or even hilarious one. And yes, Honey and particularly Bosko's yodelling is pretty painful.

On the other hand, 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 is neither fleshed out or annoying, more endearing than before and fun if a little bland. Likewise with Honey. The best character here is the mouse, whose material is much funnier and whose scenes and story have a lot of freshness and charm. The sound is good and hardly static.

In summary, watchable but just a little above average. 6/10 Bethany Cox
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6/10
The highlight of this one isn't Bosko, but a mouse
llltdesq20 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This is a rather marginal short-not terrible, but not very memorable for the most part either. I will discuss some scenes from this short, so what follows contains spoilers: Two of the most disturbing words to be combined in a sentence are "Bosko yodeling" (I shudder at the memory. He's no great shakes at yodeling and he's clearly a very sore loser-just ask the owl who outdoes him here about his sportsmanship.

Sadly, Honey joins Bosko in yodeling but (mercifully) it doesn't last long. The short then diverges into two story lines-Bosko and Honey at play, with Honey naturally getting into danger so that Bosko has to rescue her and a mouse deciding to brush up on his golf game by playing a few "holes" on a piece of Swiss cheese. This is far more entertaining than the other track and I almost wish they'd just made the last part of the cartoon about the mouse alone, as the peril and the rescue are hardly novel ideas and are all too predictable. At least a mouse putting a pea around on a wedge of cheese is different.

This short does have some nice visual gags and a few good moments, so it is worth seeing at least once.
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4/10
glacial wit
lee_eisenberg30 November 2022
When we think of the Looney Tunes, we picture a carrot-chomping rabbit, a lisping mallard, a stuttering pig, a dim-witted hunter, and others. A lot of people don't know that the stars of Warner Bros. Cartoons in the early '30s were a different group. At first, there was Bosko, a character of no discernible genus or species (but looked like a blackface performer) and his girlfriend Honey. After Bosko's creators moved to MGM, Warner Bros. Created Buddy, a humanoid.

The cartoons starring these two are largely forgotten, and "Yodeling Yokels" is an example of why. One could argue that Leon Schlesinger's animation unit was still figuring out what they wanted to do. It would be a few years before they introduced Porky with "I Haven't Got a Hat", leading to Daffy, then Elmer, then Bugs. This is one that you watch if you want to see every Looney Tunes cartoon. Otherwise, stick with Warner's output from the '40s and '50s.
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2/10
The opening to "Yodeling Yokels" is so sugary sweet, Diabetics might wanna dkip this one!
planktonrules11 May 2021
"Yodeling Yokels" is a great example why the early films of Looney Tunes were pretty bad and nothing like the clever and sarcastic shorts they did in the 1940s and 50s. Much of the problem was the production team lead by Harmon-Ising. The pair loved singing and cute animals in their cartoons as opposed to humor or edginess...and I must say this particular cartoon is among their worst. It's bereft of humor and filled with stuff that most likely encouraged theater goers to use this film as a chance to buy popcorn or use the bathroom!

When the story (such as it is) begins, Bosko is looking cute...yodeling and skipping about and frolicking. This goes on for some time and eventually some type of conflict occurs when Bosko's girlfriend, Honey, is stuck on a ice floe....sort of like Topsy in "Uncle Tom's Cabin". So, it's up to Bosko to rescue her.

In addition to little, if any humor, as well as the godawful singing, it IS interesting to see all the characters who are spitting images of Mickey Mouse. Obviously the studio was trying to capitalize on the mouse's success...instead of coming up with something the public would actually enjoy. Overall, the animation quality is decent for 1931...otherwise I can't find much I can like about it. Yes, it's THAT dull.
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6/10
Someone once asked, "They shoot horses, don't they?" . . .
oscaralbert22 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
. . . and one of the always psychic warnings from Warner Bros.' Division of Animated Shorts Seers finds these Looney Tuners prognosticating about the policy of the U.S. Forest Service, America's pristine National Parks, our Dept. of Interior, as well as the Environmental Protection Agency under White House Resident-Elect Donald J. Rump, for whom Bosko often served as an Early Template. Since Warner's Looney Tuners were never the type of people to Shilly Shally and beat around the bush with their warnings, they decide to make their point about Rump during the early going of YODELING YOKELS. At the 1:51 minute mark, to be exact, Bosko whips out his Gat and guns down America's last Spotted Owl, an icon for the success of American Conservation since the turn of the penultimate century under Teddy Roosevelt. Given that Rump has made it clear that he hates the Chinese, and with our National Zoo having a big supply of their signature black & white bear national mammals, Warner is telling us not to be surprised if Rump serves up some Panda Burgers (from the zoo--NOT that fake stuff at Panda Express--most likely on Red China) during his first State Dinner for his buddy Vlad "Mad Dog" Putin, resulting in a quick answer to the recent Rump Tweet, "What's the point of having nukes if you're not going to use them?"
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