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Two Gophers from Texas (1948) Online

Two Gophers from Texas (1948) Online
Original Title :
Two Gophers from Texas
Genre :
Movie / Animation / Family / Short / Comedy
Year :
1948
Directror :
Arthur Davis
Cast :
Mel Blanc,Stan Freberg
Writer :
Bill Scott,Lloyd Turner
Type :
Movie
Time :
7min
Rating :
7.0/10

A theatrical dog decides to answer the call of the wild and hunt for his food. He targets two polite twin gophers as his first conquest and tries to kill them with a falling-rock trap ... See full summary

Two Gophers from Texas (1948) Online

A theatrical dog decides to answer the call of the wild and hunt for his food. He targets two polite twin gophers as his first conquest and tries to kill them with a falling-rock trap hooked to a radish patch, then plots to attract them into range of his clutches by dressing himself like a baby, then by playing music. The gophers foil all of these schemes and trap the dog in his own piano as they play the keys, which are linked to hammers whacking the dog's rear.
Credited cast:
Mel Blanc Mel Blanc - Mac / Dog (voice)

"Mac" and "Tosh", Warner's Goofy Gophers, did NOT have names at all until ABC-TV'S "The Bugs Bunny Show", made especially for that network's prime-time line up (1960).


User reviews

Thofyn

Thofyn

Of the Arthur Davis-directed Gophers cartoons, the best and funniest is 1947's 'The Goofy Gophers'. 'Two Gophers from Texas' is still extremely good and almost as great as that cartoon, just not quite as funny, original or clever.

The dialogue is razor-sharp and witty and the gags- in laugh-a-minute mode- are imaginative and executed very well indeed, if not quite as brilliantly as in 'The Goofy Gophers'. The fast pacing and fun story, detailing of the intellectual and well-spoken dog even when crafty not being a match for the very polite but also very dangerous gophers, further complement the humour. The dark and often brutal slapstick and violence also add to the fun without being too over-the-top cartoonish or too sadistic that it's stomach churning.

Here in 'Two Gophers from Texas', the animation is great, with some luscious colours and richly detailed backgrounds and everything is very fluidly and smoothly drawn with no obviously jarring movements or frames. Carl Stalling has been consistently wonderful with his music, it is always dynamic and beautiful to listen to while also enhancing the action and colour(which is what music in cartoons should do) and his scoring for 'Two Gophers from Texas' is not a disappointment whatsoever. The dog and gophers work wonders together, and voiced with aplomb by the always entertaining Stan Freberg and particularly one of the gods of voice-acting Mel Blanc.

Overall, great cartoon. 9/10 Bethany Cox
Alsantrius

Alsantrius

Art Davis ran Warner Brother's fourth cartoon unit for a couple of years until shrinking budgets due to competition from TV forced its closure and he returned to animating for almost twenty years. It was a pity. I think his cartoons averaged much better than Bob McKimson, who had seniority.

In any case, this is one of Davis' "Goofy Gophers" cartoons in which Mac and Tosh (voiced by the ubiquitous Mel Blanc and the uncredited Stan Freberg) very politely torment the well-spoken dog who was their usual opponent. It is the usual collection of sadistic gags, perfectly timed and animated, as you might expect. The contrast between the gophers' punctilious behavior towards each other and their violence with their enemy makes this very funny.

You may wonder why this cartoon has this title. There's no particular reason. "Two Guys from Texas" was the title of a Warner Brothers movie starring the popular team of Jack Carson and Dennis Morgan that year. They didn't put a lot of thought into naming these things.
Orevise

Orevise

. . . from Warner Bros.' Prognosticators Non Pareil, their Animated Shorts Seers division (aka, The Looney Tuners), those oh so proficient prophets of America's upcoming Calamities, Catastrophes, Cataclysms, and Apocalypti. Occasionally Warner's uncannily accurate providers of Extreme Early Warnings for We Americans of (The Then) Far Future take a cartoon off from their visions of Armageddon in order to alert us about an historic upcoming cultural event, such as the pivotal Game Three of the 2017 MLB Championship series between the Yanks and the usually hapless Houston, Texas, Astros. TWO GOPHERS FROM TEXA$ eerily provides a pitch by pitch forecast for Houston's Top of the Sixth at Yankee Stadium. In the midst of a tense zero to zero tie, the over-confident Yankee Dog (who begins this tale by stating "I crave the zest of Wild Game; I'm a Big Game Hunter stalking food in the raw") loads the bases with Gophers (or Astros--call these Gulf Coast Lilliputians what you will) via walk/catcher's interference/walk. Gopher track star Altuve rounds out this TEXA$ trio, as "Tosh" on the first sack. Then "Mac" Gurriul, an ACTUAL first basemen, clears the bases, symbolized here when the Yankee dog gets his rump stuck in the piano of his would-be victory orchestra. (And PLEASE don't get me started here on Rumps!)
Xal

Xal

Fun Goofy Gophers short from Arthur Davis. A silly dog who carries on like a ham actor, melodramatically narrating his actions, reads a book and decides to hunt for his own food. This leads him to target everyone's favorite polite gophers, Mac and Tosh. A sequel of sorts to the original Goofy Gophers short, which was also directed by Davis. This one has the pair dealing with the same melodramatic dog, supposedly patterned after John Barrymore. The gophers are cute and fun but the real star here is the dog; he's just hilarious. The animation is beautiful and nicely detailed; love the colors. The music is terrific. Excellent voice work from Mel Blanc and Stan Freberg. The Goofy Gophers is one of the more under-appreciated series in the Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies library. Cartoons like this highlight the potential they had but, for whatever reason, they never really caught on like the bigger characters.