(1933)

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6/10
Melodramatic air race
TheLittleSongbird3 May 2018
Ub Iwerks's Willie Whopper series of cartoons was short-lived, only lasting a year from 1933 to 1934. On the most part the Willie Whopper cartoons are not great or cartoon/animated masterpieces and it is sort of understandable as to why Willie didn't make it bigger. However they are far from terrible ones either and do amuse and charm.

1933's 'Spite Flight' is the third cartoon in the Willie Whopper series, after 'The Air Race' and 'Play Ball' also from 1933, and turns out to be a very decent and interesting effort although lacking in originality. This is coming from somebody who has only just gotten acquainted with the series as a huge animation fan. It is amusing and cute providing that one doesn't expect a masterpiece or too much.

'Spite Flight' may be on the formulaic side with conflict that is somewhat predictable, it is agreed that it does read more of a more melodramatic variation of Willie's debut cartoon 'The Air Race'.

Willie himself is slightly bland, though it is very early days still. The animation sometimes lacks finesse especially in some of the drawings.

However, there is some nice background detail and inventive little things. The music is energetic and characterful with appealing orchestration. The cartoon goes at a lively pace, has an appealing charm and the tale is wonderfully outlandish.

While not hilarious, 'Spite Flight' has a lot of very amusing and sweet little laughs which makes it entertaining. The ending especially. Although slightly bland, Willie avoids being annoying and he avoids being sickly sweet as well, fairly likeable. The supporting characters are a lively bunch.

Summing up, decent. 6/10 Bethany Cox
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6/10
Essentially a re-working of The Air Race
llltdesq5 December 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This is a cartoon in the Willie Whopper series produced by Iwerks studio. There will be spoilers ahead:

When Iwerks came up with the character of Willie Whopper, the first short was The Air Race, which MGM rejected. So far as I know, The Air Race was never theatrically released. This cartoon is a re-working of The Air Race, keeping some of the animation and some of the gags were re-done. The basic story is the same,but Willie has a more obvious motivation for being in an air race, which actually takes a bit away from the basic concept that Willie Whopper tells "whoppers"-great big fanciful lies.

This really doesn't seem like a Willie Whopper cartoon, as they changed the look of the character after this cartoon and it's played more like a melodrama than Willie telling a tall tale. The story begins with Willie looking at a poster promoting an air race, with a cash prize to the winner.

Willie's girl, Mary, is crying because her mother's house is about to be foreclosed on by the villain. Willie vows to pay the mortgage off. There are some good gags in here. Willie remembers the air race and builds an entry, only to find that the villain has entered. The bulk of the footage from The Air Race is in this part of the cartoon. They keep the designs on the planes, the hitch-hiking St. Peter, a bit with the planes and a train and some other stuff. They lose a black-face gag and keep a Jewish gag.

The ending is good, so I won't spoil it here. Though this is a decent cartoon, The Air Race was better and more in keeping with the premise of the series. This cartoon and all of the other Willie Whopper cartoons are on a Blu-Ray/DVD combo release from Thunderbean and it and the set are worth a look.
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6/10
The Whacky Racers
boblipton5 July 2009
I think that Willie Whopper was Ub Iwerks best cartoon series while backed by Pat Powers, releasing through Metro for the first half dozen years of the 1930s. Although in this one Willie is a fairly generic cartoon kid, like Buddy at Warner's or Scrappy at Columbia, Iwerks packed an awful lot of gags into this story about Willie trying to win the big air race in order to pay off the mortgage held by the guy in top hat and handlebar mustaches, who's also in the race.

The gags time in very frequently. Some are pretty far off color for modern tastes, some are weak and some are not well executed, but the sheer number of them means that if you wait a few seconds more, you'll see one you like. Good enough.
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