The Enchanted Square (1947) Poster

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9/10
A Very Beautiful Cartoon
nostalgicman200431 March 2004
A little blind girl is given an abandoned doll (who just happens to be Raggedy Ann) by a kind-hearted policeman. Through Raggedy Ann the girl's imagination comes splendidly alive in this wonderful forgotten Famous Studios cartoon that is filled with vibrant scenes, touching characters, a good score and grand direction. This cartoon is highly recommended for animation buffs of all ages and especially families looking for good entertainment. The policeman may have been played by radio and cartoon actor/announcer Jackson Beck (Bluto of the Popeye series). Available in the Public Domain in very good quality. Find it if you can, it's a gem!
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7/10
An Inspiring, Sentimental Story In Animated Form
ccthemovieman-128 February 2007
This was my first look ever at a "Raggedy Ann" animated short, so I had no idea what to expect. Being part of a package of old cartoons put on DVD, I expected some humor. However, this story - and maybe her others (I'll find out) - are not meant for comedy. This is simply an inspirational little movie, a really nice story with nice people and a nice message. It also has some dazzling artwork, although the copy I saw is in desperate need of some "restoration."

In a nutshell, this introduces a rag doll, the famous "Raggedy Ann," to a blind little girl named "Billie." Through the doll, the girl learns to use her imagination and "see" things, for the first time.

It is a very touching sentimental story. At first I thought this was strictly for little girls, but not so: the message and the way it's presented is pretty profound for people of any age and gender.
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8/10
Sentimental but Not Overbearing
Hitchcoc26 June 2019
This is a Raggedy Ann film where she ends up in the arms of a pretty little blind girl. They go to a place called Enchanted Square where there are so many things that she can sense without her eyes. This could be maudlin, but it works very well and has a soft landing. Nice animation for this period.
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10/10
The Enchanted Square - Truly Enchanting!
ellisonhorne14 November 2005
This is a true masterpiece of storytelling, one that has lasted me over 45 years when I saw it as a child. I hope to see it again as I have not seen it since then but have fond memories of its heartwarming power. In many ways I believe it has influenced my life's work in deep and meaningful ways. I'm a video producer who has devoted the past 25 years to creating videos the encourage people and uplift them. I wish we could have a network devoted to these treasures for new generations to be touched by. If anyone knows of other classic cartoons like this one I would like to know so that we could start a classic cartoon club and have home screenings to ensure that new generations get to see the artistry and storytelling from the past.
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10/10
Truly Enchanting
forestkeeper28 November 2009
This cartoon deserves more than 10 stars, but 10 is the highest this website allows. I had seen the cartoon on YouTube, and discovered that it was part of the 600 Giant Cartoon DVD collection I had purchased some time ago. No matter how many times you watch this cartoon, it will still bring a tear to your eye. It does to me just thinking about it. This cartoon is in a class by itself, and I believe everyone should see it. This cartoon ends with one of the best lines I've ever heard in any movie, cartoon short, or TV show: "There's some that sees with the eyes in their head; and there's some that sees with the eyes in their heart. And that's the Lord's own truth." I would love to have seen this done as live-action, although I think it would have been too powerful. It's powerful enough as a cartoon.

Some of Fleischer's lesser-known works are equally heartfelt. Like someone else had said, the Fleischers were better known for their character-driven cartoons, like Betty Boop, Little Lulu, and Popeye, all of whom had funny and wacky adventures, all good for a laugh or two. The lesser-known cartoons are the ones that tend to stick with you for a long time, and have a more heartfelt message to them. They're lesser-known only for the titles. If you go to any forum or question/answer site, you will find many asking "what was that cartoon with the blind girl and the doll" or "what was that cartoon with the brother and sister who were poor and dreamed of eating ice cream and popcorn", with a few people being able to provide the correct answer.
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10/10
Incredibly touching and even more enchanting than the title suggests
TheLittleSongbird8 June 2015
As far as the Raggedy Ann cartoons go, The Enchanted Square has to be somewhere towards the top. As a child it was enchanting and had a lot of emotional staying power, and it still holds up today as very magical and touching.

Where The Enchanted Square really appeals is in the animation, the music and the way the story is told. The drawing in the animation is very smooth and elegant, and with no signs of roughness or jerky movements. The backgrounds are imaginative in look, are incredibly detailed with every one looking like hours went into making just that one. The colours and shades are well and truly lavish, with the darker colours giving off real atmosphere and the livelier colours being really sumptuous.

Famous Studios regular composer Winston Sharples provides the music score here. Not only does it compliment the whimsy and poignancy of the story and visuals brilliantly, but it's just a wonderful score on its own as well. Rhythmically it has so much character, and once again Sharples shows the remarkable knack of not just matching what's going on screen but actually adding even more to it. The orchestration is lush-sounding and very rich in texture and tone colour, the lusher moments not being too syrupy at all. Sharples' scores often are one of the pleasures of the cartoons they feature in, and often were the best thing about the Popeye and in particular Herman and Katnip cartoons, so the music in The Enchanted Square doesn't disappoint in any way.

The story is just beautifully done and told here. The Enchanted Square could easily have had a story caked in over-sentimentality and corniness, but neither is the case here. Sure the story is sentimental, but never overly so. The emotion here is actually incredibly touching and often tear-jerking, and the whole story is told in a deeply heart-warming way. There is also just the right amount of whimsical charm without being coy or cloying and enchanting surrealism without being too weird or tonally unsettling. The characters are sweet and engaging, with Raggedy Ann being a quite endearing title character, while everything here is written with genuine warmth and charm.

In summary, touching and enchanting. 10/10 Bethany Cox
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10/10
Magnificent!
richard.fuller127 November 2010
Warning: Spoilers
I saw this wonderful Raggedy Ann cartoon in a Christmas collection of old forgotten shows, cartoons and programs. Of the nearly over 100 cartoon shorts alone (not a lot of them are Christmas, in fact, this one really isn't either, but it is close enough) only this one and a Lil Audrey with international children helping Santa Claus (Something for Santa or Present for Santa, can't recall now) stand out.

Just an amazing piece of story-telling with a heroine who we see being thrown out in the trash at the beginning. The animation, the setup (friendly neighborhood policeman, comical music player, cat and dog, etc) and undeniably the song and music make this one an absolute powerhouse.

Often times we can look at movies that one best picture and wonder how it was even nominated. That Raggedy Ann never won an Oscar (I think the category was largely always dominated by Disney, WB and MGM's Tom and Jerry) or that this one wasn't even nominated is truly shocking.

Ann's gotten a bad rap over the years, but in truth, I recall no harmful jokes or jeers her way either. Obviously anyone who examines her history, she was a champion for the underdog in the severest way.
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10/10
Going Direct For The Heart Strings
Seamus282919 December 2008
'The Enchanted Square' is one of those animated shorts like most of the other shorts from Famous Studios that has sadly gotten the s**t end of the stick (most of the non Popeye shorts produced by Fleischer & Famous Studios that were released by Paramont Studios got sold to various film distribution firms in the mid to late 1950's in 16mm to television stations,and subsequently got lost in a black hole in space in the late 1960's,making them extremely hard to find,although badly scratched prints have turned up on cheaply produced VHS video copies years later). This is one of the few Raggedy Ann shorts that Famous Studios produced. The story concerns a Raggedy Ann doll,found in the trash & found by a kind policeman (voiced by Jackson Beck),and is given to the mother of a little blind girl. When Ann comes to life (in the girl's fantasy),and points out to the girl about how she can see more than she can with eyes. This is a beautifully illustrated & animated short that is a depart from the usual laugh filled shorts (i.e. Popeye,Little Lulu,etc)that Famous was known for. Pity that these long lost shorts aren't available for a generation that could appreciate early cell animation.
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9/10
One of the Most Emotional Cartoons of Animation's Golden Age
elicopperman17 May 2018
After Max Fleischer and his brother were ousted from their own studio, Paramount reorganized the studio, titled it the Famous Studio (later called Paramount Cartoon Studio) and lasted another 25 years making more Popeye and Superman cartoons, as well as cartoons featuring Casper the Friendly Ghost, Baby Huey, Herman & Katnip, etc. In all honesty, even as a huge admirer of animation, I've never really been the biggest fan of their work, as much of their series were more formulaic than Tom & Jerry and they seemed to appeal more to children than both children and adults (well, some at least). That being said, I think one of if not the best cartoon they ever made was this Raggedy Ann cartoon called The Enchanted Square, mainly for how emotional and heart warming it is.

The short centers around a little blind girl in New York named Billie, who on Halloween is given a Raggedy Ann doll from the police officer Flanagan. Despite being blind, Billie is told by Raggedy Ann that she can see with her imagination (or in this case, her heart). And so, Billie imagines a beautiful voyage where she and Ann travel through a carnivalesque land based on the real world but much more imaginative and colorful. What makes this such a sweet tale is how emotional it is, as we see how even those without the ability to see can think outside the box and imagine a world far beyond our own. What could have been saccharine ends up feeling genuinely sweet and heartfelt, and the ending does a perfect job summing up how there may be more to the physically impaired than one might think.

Adding in to that, despite there only being one song, You Can See With your Heart gives the proper optimistic tone to help recreate reality into fantasy, and it's hard not to tear up when listening to it. In addition, the animation is very colorful, vibrant and harmonious, with the lusciously beautiful landscapes and environments Billie recreates, showing how the young can think up of anything. In all honesty, I think the only real gripe I have with the whole short is that I wish it was a little longer so we could maybe see more of a conflict, but then again, that's not really the main point. The short knows exactly what it wants to say, and it does its job beautifully and poetically.

Whoever said cartoons shouldn't make people cry? Overall, The Enchanted Square is not only one of Famous Studios' crowning achievements in animation, but I'd even go as far as to say that it's one of the greatest animated shorts of the Golden Age of American Animation. If you're a fan of animation or you have a kid of your own, check out this short any given time; it might even inspire you or them. In fact, I think the internet short Out of Sight might have taken some inspiration from this, who knows? Anywho, to wrap this up, I'm going to quote officer Flanagan. "There are some who see with the eyes in their head, and there are some who see with the eyes in their heart, and that's the Lord's own truth."
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10/10
A beautiful cartoon with a message that is never too cliche
ja_kitty_7111 May 2022
Here is another great cartoon from my childhood, because I remember having this cartoon on a VHS tape as a kid a long time ago. But alas, it's been lost over the years, and I couldn't find it ever since. Of course, thank God for YouTube. On YouTube, I found a really exquisite high-quality version of this cartoon, and I was impressed that a cartoon from Paramount's Famous Studio could be, well, exquisite, even from them; sorry to repeat "exquisite."

The story is about Raggedy Ann, who was mysteriously thrown in the trash and found by a kind police officer. The officer gives the rag doll to a blind girl named Billie. Raggedy Ann teaches the child about seeing the world through the power of imagination. That is all I have to say about this cartoon, folks. You know, in 1944, Famous Studios did a Raggedy Ann cartoon called "Suddenly, It's Spring," where Ann went up to the heavens to make the sun shine to make the sick little girl who owns her well. Of course, I love this cartoon even more.

As I always point out in my reviews, I don't have a favorite scene because I love this cartoon from beginning to end. And also, I like to point out a message the cartoon has that, to me, is never too cliche.
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10/10
Warning this cartoon will make you cry.
Payback101631 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
I mean that in a good sense of course. I first saw this cartoon short on a a video entitled "6 Hour Cartoons." It was what introduced me to Raggedy Ann and at the time I had no idea how popular she was. When I first watched it, I was a kid and didn't understand story structure at the time, so I didn't understand until my adult years, that Billie was blind. The story goes, like so, Raggedy Ann in sort of a running joke based off her trademark rag doll appearance; gets thrown out presumably by a previous owner. Officer Patrick Flannigan picks her up and decides it would make a nice present, for the nice blind girl Billie. Once given, Raggedy comes to life (The only doll show other than Toy Story to do this without scaring people.) and teaches Billie how to see through imagination. Prompting her to believe that her rundown New York Neighborhood is a wonderful fantasy world, filled with friendly people and fun games to play. The song "You can see with your heart." Is a recurring theme in the short, which teaches us that you don't have to rely on your eyes to live your life wonderfully. Aside from Ann, there are wonderful characters who help Billie on her adventure, such as Giuseppe the Organ Grinder and the Halloween kids. In my opinion, this movie should have won an Oscar. If it did, then it would be the best way to remember the Raggedy Ann franchise, before the Musical adventure movie tarnished it with it's trippy imagery.
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