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The Impatient Patient

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1942 American film
The Impatient Patient
Title card from the original B&W version.
Directed byNorman McCabe
Story byDon Christensen
Produced byLeon Schlesinger
StarringMel Blanc
Music byCarl W. Stalling
Animation byVive Risto
Cal Dalton (uncredited)
I. Ellis (uncredited)
John Carey (uncredited)
Color processBlack-and-white
Color (1968 redrawn color edition and 1992 computer colorized version)
Production
company
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
Release date
  • September 5, 1942 (1942-09-05)
Running time
8 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Impatient Patient is a 1942Warner Bros.Looney Tunes cartoon directed byNorman McCabe.[1] The cartoon was released on September 5, 1942, and starsDaffy Duck.[2] The film is set in amad scientist's laboratory.

Adding to the medical theme, the signatures of the personnel credited (McCabe, writerDon Christensen, animator Vive Risto and music composerCarl Stalling) were featured in the opening credits, just as a doctor would sign a prescription.

Plot

[edit]

While traipsing through theOokaboochieSwamps, Daffy Duck seeks to deliver a telegram to "Chloe". Unable to find the telegram's recipient, and suffering from a severe case of hiccups, he stumbles upon the home of "Dr. Jerkyl" and hopes that the physician can cure his condition. Daffy's hiccups are so severe that they cause him to damage or destroy everything around him.

Dr. Jerkyl captures Daffy and restrains him to a doctor's chair. Hoping to scare Daffy in order to cure his hiccups, Dr. Jerkyl creates and drinks a potion that turns him into Chloe, a grotesque ogre. Daffy, realizing he has reached his destination, then reads Chloe the telegram: the lyrics to "Happy Birthday To You" (albeit spoken and not sung), sent to him by Mr.Frank N. Stein.

Chloe, who is enamored with Daffy (who, in turn, is now cured of his hiccups), chases the duck around the laboratory until the radio is accidentally switched on, prompting him to dance. Once the music ends, the chase resumes. Daffy scrambles to the lab table and mixes a potion, which turns Chloe into an infant. As each brandishes a hammer insisting each one doesn't know the other that well (doing imitations ofRed Skelton's "Mean Widdle Kid" character), the action moves offscreen, a large thud is heard, and the bird from the doctor's cuckoo clock displays a large sign reading "He Dood It!" The baby Dr. Jerkyl then screams "Ooo, you broke my little head! Ooh you broke my little spine! Oh!"

Colorization

[edit]

This cartoon was colorized in 1968 (just afterSeven Arts Productions, successor to Guild Films, to whom the TV distribution rights to the black-and-white cartoon library had been sold some time before, acquired Warner Bros.) by having every other frame traced over onto a cel. Each redrawn cel was painted in color and then photographed over a colored reproduction of each original background. The animation quality dropped considerably from the original version with this method.

The cartoon was colorized again in 1992, this time with a computer adding color to a new print of the original black-and-white cartoon. This preserved the quality of the original animation (the end result also resembled the actual color cartoons released around the same time).

References

[edit]
  1. ^Beck, Jerry; Friedwald, Will (1989).Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies: A Complete Illustrated Guide to the Warner Bros. Cartoons. Henry Holt and Co. p. 133.ISBN 0-8050-0894-2.
  2. ^Lenburg, Jeff (1999).The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. pp. 70-72.ISBN 0-8160-3831-7. RetrievedJune 6, 2020.

External links

[edit]
Preceded byDaffy Duck Cartoons
1942
Succeeded by
Daffy Duck in animation
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