One Cab's Family (1952) Poster

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8/10
Tex Avery's taxicab story
TheLittleSongbird18 October 2017
Love animation, it was a big part of my life as a child, particularly Disney, Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry, and still love it whether it's film, television or cartoons.

Also have much admiration for Tex Avery, an animation genius whose best cartoons are animated masterpieces and some of the best he ever did. 'One Cab's Family' is not one of his best, animation limitations show in some of the backgrounds and it lacks the imagination and hilarity of his best work. It is nonetheless a very nicely done cartoon with a good deal to like, managing to make a story about a taxicab family entertaining, endearing and full of human emotion which can't have been an easy thing to do but was achieved.

'One Cab's Family' is somewhat a two-halves cartoon, but despite how that sounds it's not disjointed. Just that one half is one tone and the other is more another. The first half is amusing, if not hilarious, and cute, the more dramatic second half has pathos and a good nature with a poignant ending.

The characters are very engaging and easy to like and the voice work is very good.

Expectedly, Avery fares very strongly in the directing, even if other cartoons show off his unique wild and wacky style more. As well done and charming 'One Cab's Family' is, for Avery it's fairly tame.

Some limited backgrounds aside, the animation is colourful and expressive. The music is lushly and cleverly orchestrated, with lively and energetic rhythms and fits very well indeed, a lot of the action is even enhanced by the music.

In summation, very nicely done but Avery is not at his best. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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6/10
Cars before Pixar
Horst_In_Translation31 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Well.. long before actually. This is an 8-minute cartoon from famous animator Tex Avery and he made this one over 60 years ago. A little cab is born and quickly the parents realize that he has a need for speed. This gets him and his dad in serious danger near the end. The first half is mostly fun, an argument here and there, but all pretty cute, the second half has more drama and a nice emotional twist near the end. That one really elevated the film. Thumbs up. Apart from that, I also liked the car/human references, for example that the worst word of the little one is actually the sound of his motor or also near the end the way in which the father wipes away his tears. Good stuff all in all with competent performances by the two voice actors (June Foray will be 100 soon!) and I recommend it.
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8/10
Cars
SnoopyStyle24 October 2020
Cars are people, too. A taxicab waits nervously at the hospital for the couple's new arrival. It's a joyous occasion with Junior's birth. He starts growing up but he wants to be a racing car rather than following in his father's footsteps. This is a classic. It's Tex Avery. It's a fun little short. It's basically Cars.
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6/10
Beep Beep
boblipton25 October 2020
Tex Avery reworks A STREAMLINED GRETNA GREEN. Junior doesn't want to be a taxi like his father, but a racing car.

The gags don't come at the breakneck pace of most of Avery's cartoons, but there's a goodly number of them on view, as when Junior, having converted himself into a hot rod, goes rushing out of the house, spreading havoc and converting wandering pigs and chickens into ham and eggs. It looks as if this cartoon had been in production for some time before it was finished. It has an unusually lush look for the period.
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7/10
"He's a chip off the old motor- . . . "
oscaralbert24 October 2020
Warning: Spoilers
" . . . -block," chortles the proud yellow cab dad near the beginning of ONE CAB'S FAMILY. However, if this young whippersnapper represents a slice of life from either parental unit, it becomes increasingly clear that is must be Mom. Dad is clearly portrayed here as a staid work horse type, blindered by the constraints of his daily grind to any attractions lying beyond the common rut. On the other hand, Junior is always hot to trot, constantly revving his engine and looking for greasier ovals on the other side of the race track fence. Reading between the linens, viewers begin to question the true paternity of this young whelp, a conundrum compounded by Mom's woeful lack of screen time here. Is her reason for being AWOL due to a tryst with a Studebaker, or is her grill locked in passionate embrace with some Nash? We'll never know for sure.
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3/10
Derivative...but still entertaining
runar-47 November 2002
With few changes, this is basically a remake of Friz Freling's Streamlined Greta Green (1937). The juvenile car chooses the wrong career, gets tanked (literally and figuratively) on premium and races a train, only to end up in a car hospital after a bad crash, followed by reconciliation. Avery reprised with Little Johnny Jet (1953), with the baby born a jet rather than choosing jethood (jetdom?).
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