Barney Bear's Victory Garden (1942) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
5 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Late Harman-Ising For MGM
boblipton4 June 2022
Rudolf Ising's penultimate Barney Bear cartoon is a typically beautiful-looking effort from his and Hugh Harman's studio. Barney is trying to plant a victory garden, full of visual puns, and he has a nice crop coming along. But here comes a mole to rob him of the fruits of his hard labor.

Although Ising's work had developed a sense of humor, and I think this is a very amusing cartoon, its jokes are not visual.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
IF World War Two were raging Today . . .
oscaralbert10 November 2018
Warning: Spoilers
. . . and folks saw BARNEY BEAR'S VICTORY GARDEN for the first time, how would they react to it on Social Media? IF a Public Opinion Poll were taken on BARNEY BEAR'S VICTORY GARDEN, would "Survey Says" blame it on the Allied Side, or the Axis Powers? Watch it for yourself, if you get a chance. (My neighbor is a History Major, and he claims that "Tokyo Rose" was hung for less.) Consider what's shown on the screen during BARNEY BEAR'S VICTORY GARDEN. This brief cartoon suggests that the Typical American lives in a garbage dump. (Does this seem accurate to you, or does it strike you as more like Enemy Propaganda?) Furthermore, VICTORY would have viewers believe that U.S. farm land is more or less infertile. VICTORY goes on to imply that U.S. military training flights may endanger civilians. For its finale, VICTORY depicts a nation overrun by vermin sure to gobble up any meager agricultural production BEFORE it can be used to bolster America's War Effort. Surely if VICTORY first saw the light of Today, it creators and distributors would be facing the Firing Squad!
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
wartime cartoon
SnoopyStyle4 June 2022
Barney Bear is setting up his Victory Garden but it gets invaded by a gopher. This wartime cartoon is directed by Rudolf Ising. The Hitler face target is playing to the crowd. The rest is a standard garden battle against a pest. I do have a problem with the final image which resemble too much like a bomb crater. The better way to go with this wartime premise is to turn a bad piece of land into a fertile garden for the war effort. The closing image should be a garden of Eden.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Victory garden growing with Barney Bear
TheLittleSongbird3 November 2017
While not one of my favourite cartoon characters, Barney Bear was a very funny and likable character where his sluggishness was a huge part of his charm. He was also interesting for being modelled on both his creator Rudolf Ising (who also was his first voice actor until 1941) and the mannerisms of Wallace Beery.

To me, the early Barney Bear cartoons are among Ising's better cartoons. The same goes to Barney's eighth cartoon (of 26), and eighth of ten for Ising, 'Barney Bear's Victory Garden', which may not be one of Barney's best or funniest efforts but it is very hard to dislike. It may be slight and predictable, with an ending that can be seen from miles away, and it doesn't blow the mind or have much that is hilarious or innovative. But it's well made, cute and entertaining and executes many of its components very well and not making without completely wowing.

As to be expected, Barney's personality again is very well established and he proves again why he was deserving of his own series and it was sad he didn't last longer. He is a fun and adorable character and easy to root for, one can really understand his frustration. The animation is colourful and beautifully drawn with fluid movements and meticulous attention to detail. The amount of detail given to Barney's character design was incredibly nuanced and it was a shame that it became simplified later on and lost its special uniqueness.

Music, courtesy of Scott Bradley, is lushly and cleverly orchestrated, with lively and energetic rhythms and fits very well indeed, even enhancing the impact of actions and gestures.

'Barney Bear's Victory Garden' is charming, has some silly chuckles, has enough that is amusing and is paced beautifully. The gopher is a suitably fun foil and works very well with Barney, although the conflict is not a fresh one. Gayne Whitman does a nice job narrating.

On the whole, decent. 7/10 Bethany Cox
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Wartime short has Barney trying to plant a victory garden
llltdesq24 December 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This is a short in the Barney Bear series produced by MGM studios. There will be spoilers ahead:

During World War II, given that food was rationed, Americans were encouraged to plant vegetable gardens to supplement their diet and help out the war effort. This short humorously has Barney Bear trying to plant and maintain one with limited success.

The short begins with a narrator telling the audience what is needed to have a victory garden and starts with "Preparing The Soil". It turns out that the ground Barney has to work with is hard and dry. How he finally gets the soil loose enough and turned enough to plant is great and it's also a nod to wartime propaganda.

Then, there's a section on what to plant, with some good to average gags in what is the weakest section of the cartoon. Finally, a gopher enters the scene and the fun begins. There's a running gag here which actually is less flat and stale than I would have thought it would be. Barney spends the rest of the short dealing with the gopher.

The ending of the cartoon is predictable but entertaining and this short is well worth watching. Recommended.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed