Going Home (1944) Poster

(1944)

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7/10
Un released to the the U.S. Army
emasterslake3 May 2006
Private Snafu returns home with a large coming party.

Snafu tells his family, girlfriend, and friends what he did.

Course the stuff he reveals is confidential and not suppose to revealed to the public.

But like always Snafu announces all the Army's secrets and plans including the bomb.

It's another memorable Snafu toon.

This Private Snafu cartoon wasn't shown to the U.S. army because it'll spread fear about the development of the bomb.

but it did get released on the DVD set, course I had to download it in order to see it.
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7/10
Solid Private Snafu cartoon
TheLittleSongbird26 December 2014
Not one of the best of the Private Snafu series, Spies and Booby Traps are my personal favourites but it is certainly worth watching. There are funnier Snafu cartoons around, by all means it is still fun and amusing but Snafu over-explaining things gets a bit too much, and there are others also in the series that are more daring and have more energy. The animation flows very smoothly though and looks good even now, while the music is lush and lively with good use of pre-existing tunes. Going Home may not be the funniest Private Snafu cartoon around but the humour still succeeds thanks to the witty rhyming dialogue and narration and never-less-than-amusing visual gags. If you are familiar with the formula the series adopts, all revolving around Snafu's ineptness in the army, the story isn't going to hold that many surprises but it's hardly tired or dull and it handles its serious message admirably, laying it on too thick or poking too much fun at it were very easy traps to fall into and Going Home manages to avoid both of them. Snafu as ever is endearing and lots of fun to watch and the narration entertains and teaches, good chemistry between the two too. Frank Graham fills the narrator role beautifully and even better is the versatile and always consistent Mel Blanc, making Snafu a hugely entertaining character as well as a touchingly likable one. All in all, there are better cartoons in the Private Snafu series but Going Home is solid stuff still. 7/10 Bethany Cox
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6/10
Snafu tells all
Tweekums20 July 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This animated short was one of many featuring the character Pvt. Snafu made by Warner Brothers for the US War Department during the Second World War as training tools. They were meant to teach soldiers the right thing to do by showing them the wrong thing! Here Snafu is back home on leave and it isn't long before he is telling his family, his girlfriend, his barman, barber and anybody in earshot just what his unit has been up to. This includes details of their locations, strengths and weaknesses. He also tells of a new super weapon... and it was this that got the film shelved as the military thought it bore a resemblance to the atom bomb and that was obviously too secret to even joke about.

While this isn't as funny as Warner Brother's shorts that were made for public consumption it has plenty of chuckles tucked in to the serious message... a great way to get the troops to want to see a training film and remember its content... even if this one wasn't shown the intention was there. The way he tells detail after detail does get a little stale but there are still enough laughs to make this worth watching.
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6/10
Unreleased but worth seeing...
planktonrules14 May 2009
The Private Snafu films were clearly made to be seen by soldiers and not by the general public. The dirty jokes, sexual innuendos and language is relatively tame today but never would have been allowed in the regular theaters due to the Production Code. But, such off-color remarks went over very well with the enlisted men and helped to illustrate important information in a humorous and memorable fashion.

According to IMDb, this short was never released to the servicemen because apparently a section talking about some "super-bomb" was considered to be too close to the secret atomic bomb that the country was working on at the time. However, today you can see and enjoy it.

Snafu comes home for a visit and as usual, he's a total idiot--and very reminiscent of his other film, SPIES. He talks and talks and accidentally gives out vital information concerning his unit...and naturally the enemy is able to use this against us. Clever, yes, but also not quite as crazy and funny as the usual Snafu film.
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Snafu Goes Home
Michael_Elliott7 September 2015
Going Home (1944)

*** (out of 4)

This War Department short warns soldiers of the dangers of going home and running their mouths. Private Snafu gets to go home where he begins talking to anyone who will listen to him. He talks about certainly classified material and before you know it several American soldiers are dead. GOING HOME is one of the better entries in the series as it's highly entertaining on a number of levels including the fact that there's some adult material here. Just check out the dame in the theater who Snafu runs his mouth to. The sexual innuendo with her rather large boobs was obviously something that general audiences at the time wouldn't have been able to see. Once again the animation is extremely good and especially one scene where we see Japan get leveled. Fans of the series are certainly going to enjoy the humor as well as the dark ending.
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7/10
The more things change the more they stay The Shame . . .
oscaralbert30 November 2016
Warning: Spoilers
. . . GOING HOME informs us. The American Military extorted taxpayer funding to churn out the mind-control doggerel verses featured in GOING HOME to drum the idea into the brains of privates than only generals could bask in the glow of War Stories. These armchair quarterbacks, such as "I Like Ike" Eisenhower, exploited GOING HOME Dictums for hushing up the Real Heroes of the Front Lines, so that they themselves could hog all the Glory and move into the White House. The grunts who survived World War Two were so thoroughly shushed by their own tax dollar-funded Thought Control of the GOING HOME variety that the phrase "He never talks about the War" became a Cliché. This not only was a misuse then of taxpayer funds, but it also Doomed America to half a million MORE War Dead and an inflation-adjusted $100 trillion in unneeded "Defense" spending during the following century. That's because when all of information doled out to the Civilian Public about the LAST war comes from the mouths of the Blood Money-Gorged Military\Industrial Complex, rather than the survivors of Front-Line Hell, the cards will always be stacked in favor of more and more War, whatever the cost!
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7/10
"I know what did it, what made the big hole."
utgard1425 September 2015
A fun entry in the Private Snafu series made for use by the US Army during WW2. Directed by Chuck Jones with rhyming dialogue courtesy of Dr. Seuss, this one was actually never released. The story is a simple one about Snafu coming home on leave and running his mouth to everybody that will listen, spilling his guts about things he shouldn't, which ultimately ends in disaster for the military. It's not known for sure why this short was shelved, though its depiction of a secret weapon being used against the Japanese that is similar to the atomic bomb is often suspected to be the main reason. The black & white animation is very nice. The sexy women are a highlight. Mel Blanc's voice work is flawless, as usual. It's a brief but amusing short with a lot of interesting elements.
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4/10
Snafu Blabs
Hitchcoc24 January 2019
Our knuckleheaded Private comes home from the war, but it is still going on. He proceeds to brag and give out "information," not realizing that he was privy to secrets that he should be keeping. This implies that there may be spies everywhere, especially attractive young women. As he talks about these things, the war effort suffers serious setbacks. I guess you had to be there.
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8/10
The narration and dialog is all done in rhyme
llltdesq21 December 2014
Warning: Spoilers
This is part of a series of training films featuring Private Snafu, the worst excuse for a soldier ever. There will be spoilers ahead:

The Private Snafu shorts were made with the intent to train soldiers in proper behavior by showing them the worst possible behavior from a moron in uniform, one Private Snafu.

In this short, Snafu returns to Podunk, a wide spot in the road, to a hero's welcome. Clearly, his home town doesn't realize what an idiot he is! He proceeds to violate all security protocols to blab everything he knows, to make himself look like an important man.

Of course, there will inevitably be consequences to his inability to keep his trap shut. This being a training film designed to drive home a point, the consequences manifest themselves by the end of the short.

As is typical, Snafu is clueless as to his own part in the fiasco which unfolds and he receives his just desserts. This short is available on various DVD collections of the Snafu shorts and is well worth seeing. Recommended.
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