In the Good Old Summer Time (1930) Poster

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6/10
What's a Tootsie-Wootsie?
boblipton14 November 2009
With the triumph of the sound cartoon, thanks to Mickey Mouse, the Fleischer Brothers ramped up production of their Screen Songs in 1929 and 1930 -- they had been producing them since 1924. They had not, however, gotten the hang of making them quite yet, with little stories filled with lots of the sight gags that Dave Fleischer enjoyed putting into the cartoons.

Instead, in this one, we get simple variations of people heading off to a May Day celebration, carrying a Maypole and a hippopotamus to serve as the Queen of the May. After that, the audience sings the verse on its own and a voice-over leads the chorus. The effect is amusing, but the Fleischers would get better at this.
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4/10
A Variety of Animated Characters
Hitchcoc3 April 2018
There's virtually no plot that gets us the singing. Almost everything in creation starts heading somewhere: animals, vegetables, inanimate objects. All are trying to get to a park to celebrate the summer. There is one group of cats that do a sort of Maypole thing with a giraffe. A rather depressing thing is a group of mice being eaten by a hungry hippo. The song is part of our past culture. It's a happy song and is the next in this long line of sing-alongs.
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In the Good Old Summer Time
Michael_Elliott28 September 2017
In the Good Old Summer Time (1930)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

The Fleischer Studio produced a number of these animated short films where the "bouncing ball" would have audience members singing together. The story starts off as a group of animals are playing around (in you guessed it, the summer time) and then we get to the famous song and the bouncing ball. A lot of the shorts in this series featured voices during the songs but this one didn't so it was left up to the audience members for the first verse. The "singers" eventually kicked in on the song and it was a quite pleasant version. As far as the film goes, the animation was quite good, the characters were good and for the most part this was an entertaining short for the series.
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