Fright from Wrong (1956) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
3 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Boo! Boo! Boo! The Ghostly Trio in their first film.
fayremead1 December 2023
Warning: Spoilers
The Ghostly Trio, staple characters in Harvey Comics from the 1950s through the 1970s (and The New Casper Cartoon Show of 1963 television) have their animated debut here. They don't like Casper's friendly attitude, especially after the local birds no longer fear them, and try to drug him to the dark side. Casper becomes a red imp (this design must have influenced the creators of Hot Stuff, who appeared in the comics in 1957). Casper immolates one brother (didn't know ghosts were flammable), irons another, and decapitates the boss. Next, he wants them feathered -- no tar is handy, but glue is a fine substitute and with the help of a washtub, a fan, and pillows full of feathers he gets the results he wants. The trio is last seen fleeing from a lawnmower.

The story develops a sadistic, spur-of-the-moment feel but avoids the common formula of Casper scaring characters he wants to be friendly with. It was also a surprise to see all of the Ghostly Trio's attempts to scare Casper's friends fail. Winston Sharples' music works well, and the animation is good for a mid-1950s Paramount cartoon. The boss is especially well animated, and Jackson Beck's voice is a perfect fit for him.

Overall, this is a moderately satisfying cartoon, above average for a late-stage Famous Studios short.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Demonic Casper
TheLittleSongbird6 December 2016
The late-40s to the early/mid-50s Casper the Friendly Ghost cartoons had a higher budget and overall the overall quality was much better. Onwards, the quality did diminish quite significantly though the overall cartoons varied, some decent, many mediocre.

Famous Studios' cartoons are not for all tastes, but my opinion is that their early stuff and some of the early 50s output are good. While they were very formulaic they were always well animated and voiced with some funny parts, some poignancy and decent characters and their regular composer Winston Sharples could always be relied on to write a great and often outstanding score.

Admittedly though, by the mid-50s through to the late-60s Famous Studios' cartoons did get repetitive. While Sharples' music still shone and the voice actors did their best the animation suffered due to lower budgets and tighter deadlines, the humour became more tired and slow in timing than sharp and funny, the stories became increasingly predictable and rehashed and some characters started losing their initial spark, this is particularly true of most of the later Herman and Katnip cartoons.

'Fright from Wrong' is quite easily one of the better later Casper cartoons, which were very much hit and miss but mostly average or less. Perhaps the best since 'Boo Moon', and definitely the most imaginative and least repetitive since that cartoon.

Best thing about 'Fright from Wrong' is the music score. Here it is typically merry and whimsical, it's beautifully orchestrated, energetic and adds so much to the mood. The music has always been one of the best assets of the Famous Studios cartoons and it's not an exception here. In fact how it's composed and how it meshes so well with everything going on in the animation, story and action contributes to it being the best thing about the cartoon.

The "mean pills" concept is well and inventively handled, seeing a different side to Casper (whoever knew that a typically cutesy character could be "evil"?) was refreshing and his methods of teaching his uncles a lesson inventive, scary and also quite funny.

Excepting Cecil Roy being a bit too cloying, the voice acting is good. Jack Mercer always did excel at villainous voices and he does here. The animation, while not close to the animation of the earlier Casper cartoons, is a significant step up from a vast majority of the cartoons since 'Boo Moon' ('Casper Genie' saw a big nosedive in visual quality), the drawing does lack finesse and a bit crude in places but the colours are more vibrant and there is more detail and more visual invention in the ways the Ghostly Trio are tricked.

Where 'Fright from Wrong' isn't so good is two things. One is in the dialogue, which is not only forgettable but tries too hard to be sweet and instead falls on the wrong side of sugary. The other being a couple of the gags/lessons veering a little on the too cruel and would have been sadistic if any more so (very easy to see why some childhood friends found it frightening when watching it as a child).

Otherwise, 'Fright from Wrong' is surprisingly good and fun. 8/10 Bethany Cox
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Idiotic Red Demon Casper story
imdb-252885 October 2021
Warning: Spoilers
So it starts off good with Casper turning into a demon and doing evil things like chopping the head off his ghost friends and their foot, and then at the end, it turns out he didn't take the mean pills, that was HIS OWN MEANNESS. Wow. Way to teach a lesson to kids. And I thought this was supposed to be good cartoons back in the.. well it's the 50s what do you expect? The 40s were way better. It went all downhill with the rockandroll and the Elvis drugs. There you go! Cartoons about drugs by druggies for your future druggy kids.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

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


Recently Viewed