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Barely a footnote in animated feature history, shinbone alley has an excellent
cultural pedigree but doesn't wear too well as an entertainment. It's based on a play
derived from Don Marquis' famous newspaper articles called "archy and mehitabel." Archy
is a cockroach with poetic ambitions, and since he types by leaping from key to key on
the typewriter, he can't produce capital letters -- hence the lower-case main title.
The genesis of shinbone alley includes Mel Brooks as a writer/adaptor, but this
musical cartoon version presented no challenge to Disney fare in 1971. Eddie Bracken
and Carol Channing contribute their distinctive voices.
Synopsis: Archy (voiced by Eddie Bracken) is traumatized by the fact that he's a
newspaper writer unaccountably transformed into a cockroach. But he continues to write
and carries on an obsessive campaign to reform Mehitabel (voice of Carol Channing), a
sexy alley cat who refuses to reform her flighty and promiscuous ways. Archy rails and
sermonizes, but Mehitabel is happy to be seduced by tomcat Big Bill (voice of Alan
Reed). Then she's given illusions of grandeur by a pompous actor-cat, Tyrone T.
Tattersall (voice John Carradine).
"archy and mehitabel" was once part of the core curriculum in High School creative
writing classes. Daily Sun writer Don Marquis scored a big hit in 1916 when he
pretended that his column was written by a cockroach named Archy. The insect
philosopher attempted to influence the backsliding behavior of Mehitabel, an
unrepentant she-cat popular with the alley tabbys. When the columns were anthologized
in book form, famous cartoonist George Herriman (Krazy Kat) provided
illustrations in his unmistakable impromptu style.
In 1954 composer George Kleinsinger and Joe Darion turned "archy and mehitabel" into a
not particularly successful stage musical starring Eartha Kitt. At the same time, they
released a concept record album based on the musical with the voices of Eddie Bracken
and Carol Channing. Two years later the show was further adapted with writing input
from Mel Brooks and re-titled shinbone alley.
In 1969 production began on this 'animated Broadway musical' version by the Fine Arts
Films studio of New York. Director John David Wilson had worked as an animator on
Peter Pan and other Disney films in the 1950s, and his independent style was
later seen on The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour. Wilson's most visible work is the
title sequence for the 1978 musical Grease.
The animated musical shinbone alley may interest fans of Broadway history and
the film's stars, but it's simply not very good. The character design is unexciting and
derivative and the dominant bluish-black backgrounds aren't very imaginative either.
Little four-armed Archy looks and moves like a generic character from a Public Service
spot, and the sketchy animation just looks cheap. Mehitabel at least fits the amusing
voice of Carol Channing (always pleasant to listen to) but she keeps reminding us of
the Judy Garland animated cat character in 1962's Gay Purr-ee, itself no
milestone in animation history.
For a few minutes the film's blah style is replaced with an animated imitation of those
ancient George Herriman illustrations. For just that section, the characters are more
expressive and the picture takes on a more arresting look.
Animated movies can be liberating in ways that live-action cannot, but for most of its
running time shinbone alley remains a literal transposition of a Broadway show.
The characters stand around, declare their feelings and then dance and strut while
singing the many songs, none of which is particularly memorable. Archy sings of his
misery and Mehitabel of her 'free spirit' while waving and gesticulating in place, as
if on a stage. The idea of cartoons imitating stage shows is the least charming feature
of Disney's 90s animation boom, and a trend also felt in lesser efforts such as Don
Bluth's The Pebble and the Penguin. Who wants to see animated characters doing
vaudeville routines?
shinbone alley received good reviews as a family film -- even Judith Crist
praised it -- but it's highly questionable children's fare. It starts almost like
Kafka's Metamorphosis. After a noisy tirade Archy drops his dismay at being
transformed into a cockroach and suddenly becomes enraptured with Mehitabel. That's a
good example of the way various Don Marquis ideas have been stitched together without a
real continuity. Literary critics did complain about Archy's unrequited love affair
with Mehitabel. In the original articles the cockroach is merely a disapproving
observer of the she-cat's racy lifestyle. Here, Archy behaves like an amorous Jiminy
Cricket. The aloof and amoral Mehitabel has become a sexpot tramp, forever winking the
one eye peeking out from under her fur, strutting about and giving the come-on to every
cat in the alley.
Despite Archy's whining, Mehitabel wanders off for a fling with Big Bill, a blowhard
Alpha Male Tomcat. With familiar vocal talent Alan Reed at the microphone, we might
think that Bill is really Fred Flintstone in a cat costume. When the passion fades
Mehitabel is cornered by Tyrone, an affected acting impresario who promises her fame
and fortune but is really after a free meal. Shakesperian ham John Carradine provides
the voice for Tyrone and his attempt to teach the ditzy feline how to read Romeo and
Juliet is amusing for a few lines. Mehitabel mangles the Bard's words and keeps
asking if she's a star yet. In the end, Archy arranges a place for Mehitabel in a
respectable household with guaranteed meals. She finds the decent life boring and
returns to her dirty but exciting alley. Archy welcomes her back for a musical finale.
Family Circle magazine called shinbone alley "A joy for the whole
family." The movie opens with the implication that Archy turned into a roach because he
committed suicide, but doesn't elaborate on that disturbing idea. The morbid theme
returns later in a song about a moth driven to kill himself by flying too close to a
flame. Mehitabel eventually has a litter of illegitimate kittens and expresses no
interest in motherhood. In fact, she makes sarcastic remarks about drowning the whole
litter. Don Marquis used his fantasy to comment on the morality of poverty, but
shinbone alley presents this odd and morbid content as if it were another
disposable joke for youngsters. A good analogy might be if Porgy and Bess were
turned into a cartoon starring the Archie characters. Because they don't mix
with the mediocrity of generic cartoon-making, the original literary meanings are lost.
Image's DVD of shinbone alley is presented in an okay but unimpressive flat
transfer. The original film may be slightly cropped; some credits are crowded during
the opening titles. The picture has occasional dirt but is intact and colorful; the
encoding does not appears to damage the sketchy character style. For an extra, the disc
offers a short subject about animation taped at the Fine Arts Film studios. While
students mill about a storyboard room, the lecturer explains animation basics and then
shows cels and drawings from John David Wilson's shinbone alley, Stanley, The
Ugly Duckling and his main titles for Grease.
For more information about shinbone alley, visit Image Entertainment. To order Shinbone
Alley, go to
TCM Shopping.
by Glenn Erickson
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