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Snafuperman

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1944 film
Snafuperman
Technical Fairy, First Class, transforms Private Snafu into Snafuperman.
Directed byI. Freleng
Produced byLeon Schlesinger
StarringMel Blanc
Tedd Pierce
Music byCarl Stalling
Color processBlack & white
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
  • March 1944 (1944-03)
Running time
5 minutes
LanguageEnglish
The film.

Snafuperman is a 1944 animated shortsuperhero comedy produced byWarner Bros. and directed byFriz Freleng. It is one of a series of black and white "Private Snafu" cartoons created for theArmy-Navy Screen Magazine and shown only to American soldiers. The "Private Snafu" cartoons were not released commercially, until December 2010. The cartoon's title is a play on "Superman" and parodies the popularSuperman cartoons of the 1940s.

Synopsis

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Snafu annoys his fellow soldiers by listening to loudswing music and banging pots and pans in rhythm. The other soldiers at the barracks are busy studying maps, field manuals, and air recognition charts. Snafu dismisses their interest in studying, and claims he is not going to clunk the enemy over the head with books.[1] In response, Technical Fairy, First Class—a miniature,shirtless, gravel-voicedG.I. with wings, who appears in nine of the shorts—grants Private Snafu the powers ofSuperman in order to fight the Nazis. But Snafu is still Snafu.

His first task is to transport a bomb to Berlin and bomb it. He refuses to read a map and ends up inWashington, D.C. He drops the bomb over theUnited States Capitol. The Fairy stops the bomb and informs Snafu that the Americans are on their side. Snafu melts into a puddle in the air in embarrassment over his near blunder.[1] His next task involves stopping a "lumbering Japanese tank". He has actually misidentified an American tank and angers its commander, an American general. He nervously salutes the officer.[1]

He next spots "a mess ofMesserschmitts" about to bomb an American port. He successfully intercepts theiraerial bombs and piles them up on a pier. As he proudly sits upon the pile, while claiming that they're harmless as a burned out match, he fails to recognize thedelay-action bombs among them. They explode beneath him. As a result of his own ignorance, Snafu ends up hospitalized. The Fairy visits him, asking if there is anything he could do. Snafu angrily demands a field manual, ending the short.[1]

Analysis

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The short is one of several satirical takes on Superman produced during World War II. The purpose of the short was to entertain and educate low-literacy enlisted men.[2] Snafu ends up doing the wrong thing because of his refusal to read his field manual.[2]

The short uses a segment ofSammy Timberg's theme for Superman, which was previously heard in the Superman shorts byFleischer Studios andFamous Studios. Stalling was able to use the song without any legal issues since thePrivate Snafu shorts were meant exclusively to educate US soldiers and not for public viewing.

Availability

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The "Private Snafu" cartoons have fallen into the public domain and are widely available in free downloads and on unofficial VHS and DVD releases. Many have also been released officially.Snafuperman is a bonus feature onWarner Home Video'sLooney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 3 andSuperman Ultimate Collector's Edition (coincidentally, Warner Bros. and Superman's publishers,DC Comics, merged in 1969, which made the cartoon's inclusion in the latter set possible).

See also

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Sources

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References

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  1. ^abcdShull, Wilt (2004), p. 192
  2. ^abWeldon (2013), p. 68-69

References

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  • Leonard Maltin,Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated Cartoons, NY, 1987, p. 254

External links

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