| Early to Bed | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Jack King |
| Story by | Carl Barks Jack Hannah |
| Produced by | Walt Disney |
| Starring | Clarence Nash |
| Music by | Oliver Wallace |
| Animation by | Jim Armstrong Ed Love Hal King Ray Patin Judge Whitaker |
| Layouts by | Bill Herwig |
| Color process | Technicolor |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | RKO Radio Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 7:45 |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
Early to Bed is aDonald Duckanimatedshort film that was released on July 11, 1941, byRKO Radio Pictures.[1] The film was colored byTechnicolor, produced byWalt Disney Productions, and directed byJack King. The cartoon tells the story of Donald, who is trying to sleep, despite the annoyingly loudticking of the clock keeping him awake.
This short film not only portrays Donald as a human but also emphasises on a well known proverb, "Early to bed".[2]
The film opens withDonald Duck yawning at the sunset, ready to go to bed, but when he lays down, he hits his head on the bed. He angrily moves down the bed, fluffs his pillow, and lays back down. As soon as his head touches the pillow, it explodes with a burst of feathers. The screen cuts to Donald lying on the bed again with a new pillow. This time, whenever he places his head on the pillow, the clock on his bedside table begins to loudly tick-tock. He puts the clock away into a drawer, but then, the entire drawer begins to vibrate due to the loud sound of the clock. Donald, visibly becoming angry, retrieves the clock from the drawer and throws it against the wall. It lands in a vase, and the entire vase begins to shake with the loud tick-tock of the clock. Finally, Donald throws the clock out the window, where it gets caught in some laundry and bouncing back up, landing into Donald's yawning mouth and causing him to accidentally swallow it. After various attempts to break the clock that is still ticking inside him, Donald manages to spit out the broken clock into small pieces.
Donald goes back to bed, relieved. This time, however, whenever he turns out the lights, hisfolding bed snaps shut with him inside. Donald struggles to get free, only to be launched into the ceiling by the bedsprings. The screen cuts to Donald laying in bed again, this time with the bed affixed to the floor with a variety of boards and ropes. He settles back down to sleep. The broken clock, however, reassembles itself just enough to ring its alarm. Donald sits up fast, and his bed flies apart, launching Donald into the air. He lands back on his bed, now little more than a board with tacks in it, a sheet wrapped around his head like aturban. A sock lands in front of him on a spring, swaying back and forth so that he looks like an angrysnake charmer and the short ends with a frustrated Donald Duck.
The short was released on May 18, 2004 onWalt Disney Treasures: The Chronological Donald, Volume One: 1934-1941.[3]
Additional releases include: