The Snowman (1933) Poster

(1933)

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7/10
Fared better on re-watch
TheLittleSongbird12 June 2015
Upon first viewing of The Snow Man, I found it a well-made and animation cartoon with superb music and a memorable titular character, but also a little uncompelling and mean-spirited with a bland first three minutes. Re-watching The Snow Man(this time in colour), while it wasn't great, and a couple of the same criticisms still stand, it fared better on re-watch.

The Snow Man's best components are the animation and music. The animation is very crisp, vibrant and atmospheric with lovely backgrounds. And while The Snow Man looks very good in black and white, it looks even better in colour and has much more atmosphere. Some parts like when the snowman is introduced are also very inventively animated, especially with how the snowman comes to life. The music, as ever with the consistently great Carl Stalling, is also brilliant, the energy it has the entire time is non-stop, the way it's orchestrated is lush, rich and haunting, and a suspenseful but characterful atmosphere is created. There are some nice and inventive sight gags, namely the snowman's Jimmy Durante impression, personally also really appreciated how deliciously dark some of the humour was. The animals are sweetly endearing, the Eskimo is likable and the snowman makes for an unsettling but also fun(mostly the former though, as a kid he was nightmare-inducing) impression, his introduction being the highlight. The ending is predictable, but a nice way to end, the snowman's defeat being another inventive bit of animation.

One can forgive that the story is as thin as ice and practically non-existent(most cartoons were at this time), but if the cartoon was paced well and if there was some more charm that might have been forgivable. Unfortunately for me, the cartoon did drag in the bland and overly-cutesy first three minutes(before picking up significantly once the snowman is introduced), and the cartoon is still lacking in charm and heart. Instead the cartoon still feels a little too creepy and mean-spirited(though not as badly as it did on first viewing as the humour came over stronger), and the juxtaposition from cute to creepy while unexpected also seemed a little clumsy and felt like a moment of the cartoon not knowing what to do with itself.

To conclude, well-made and animated, and much better on re-watch thanks to the humour and seeing it in colour, but still didn't blow me away. Frosty the Snowman it certainly isn't. 7/10 Bethany Cox
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8/10
The Snowman, or Frosty's Revenge
MissSimonetta4 December 2014
The Snowman is bizarre to be brief. It starts out like any routine 1930s cartoon, with a cheerful little boy and his animal friends going through winter-related gags and building a cute little snowman. Then things get strange once said snowman comes to life, grows fangs, and starts ravaging the country side like Frankenstein's monster.

This nightmarish turn makes it feel as though this were a parody of 30s cartoons rather than the real deal. The animation is well-rendered and inventive, and the humor is deliciously dark.

A must-see for animation geeks. And for fans of 1930s cinema in general, I may add.
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9/10
Exceptionally good and very strange cartoon
llltdesq6 February 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This cartoon was done by Ted Eshbaugh. There will be spoilers ahead:

This is a remarkable cartoon from the early 1930s. It was originally done in Technicolor, but black and white prints survived and it looks pretty good as a black and white short, This starts off all warm and fuzzy with an Eskimo bedding down for winter, even putting his pet seal out in his own igloo, complete with hot water bottle. After the alarm goes off and the Eskimo wakes up, he and his seal (along with lots of little baby seals and a pelican, the first sign that this cartoon is going to turn sideways) we see all sorts of cute things happen, culminating in the Eskimo and various animals building a snowman. It may be a hint of what's to come that eye sockets are created violently, by punching them into the head.

The snowman is built and there's much dancing and rejoicing-until the snowman comes to life and clearly shows malevolent intentions. Everyone scatters and we get a chase scene, the snowman chasing various animals while the Eskimo hops in a kayak and paddles like mad. There's a nice bit with a church, a walrus playing the organ and a penguin choir singing until the snowman breaks in-then the snowman starts playing the organ (watch for a quick caricature here).

As the snowman corners lots of scared and cute animals, the Eskimo arrives where he's headed and starts moving a switch. A power switch, which turns up the heat. Consequences are predictable. The ending is nice.

This short is available on various DVDs and online. It's well worth tracking down.
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