Let’s start with the very first non-holiday and the
first of its kind as a completely stop-motion feature length film since Hansel
and Gretel, Willy McBean and his Magic Machine.
Originally I was going to review The Edgar Bergen
& Charlie McCarthy Show, but video of it doesn’t exist yet, and only exist
of Black and White stills.
Now let’s hear a little backstory. Before this film
came out, majority of stop-motion (in America) were mostly used in 7 minute
shorts such as the Puppetoons and Gumby (both of them processed by Video Craft)
or effect for creatures in films such as Lou Bunin’s Alice in Wonderland or
Jason and the Argonauts. Just like with every medium of art will have their
first film, for hand drawn with Snow White, for CGI with Toy Story, or for
flash animation with Magos y Gigantes or Golden Blaze that we’re better off
forgetting about. Technically the first is Hansel and Gretel, but that film was
rarely brought up, and this is the first not based on fairy tales.
Any who, let’s get on with the synopsis.
Rasputin VonRotten created a magic machine (two
words that doesn’t work together than science babble, but I digress) to travel
back in time to replace the iconic figures to become the replacement. His caged
Mexican Monkey named Pablo escaped from his castle to warn to the nearest
person to stop him, which is a little boy named Willy McBean.
Willy happened to be a young inventor and able to
build an exact magic machine thanks to the plans from Pablo. They time traveled
to many time and place, including the Olde West with Buffalo Bill, Spain with
Christopher Columbus, Camelot (Patsy: Tis only a model) with King Arthur, Egypt
with King Tut, and assuming Africa with a specific caveman.
Willy is an innocent kid, yet being an inventor and
happens to have mostly the exact parts for the machine just sound too
convenient. What other invention he was going to make with those parts is
beyond me, or he got them as part of the My First Science Kit (now with your
Dr. Insano goggles). It does sound a bit distracting that we’re hearing Billie
Mae Richard’s Rudolph voice coming out of Hermy’s body with Rudolph’s fur color
for his hair, as Pablo is voiced by Hermy’s voice actor, Paul Soles. So yes,
Rudolph in Hermy’s body is talking to a monkey voiced by Hermy. While I’m aware
this film was released six months after Rudolph, so few of the characters had
to be reused for the films with different parts, even the same voice actors.
Especially Alfie Scopp voiced a dragon in Camelot, who you may know him as
Jack.
Charlie In the Box: No, Charlie!
The villain, Rasputin is a riot. That’s Larry D. Mann
voicing him, the same actor who voiced Yukon Cornelius (Rudolph the Red Nosed
Reindeer) and he has the same enjoyment and the same laugh only manically. It’s
a shame it’s the last time we hear his voice in that range until the extent of
Filmation’s Snow White’s Christmas as the Magic Mirror. His plan isn’t bad, and
execution on executing is kind of sneaky. Though if he had made a time machine
to travel any time exactly, couldn’t he just kill them while they’re in a
crapper or otherwise?
He at least has ways to outshine the icons such as trying
to shoot first, or loosen the rust, or disguise as a Chinese man to trick
Columbus.
Yeah, as much as I
don’t want to talk about stereotypes, there’s about a few of them in this film.
There’s Mexican, Native American, Chinese, maybe for the dragon, and less
extent of Egyptians. I could say Italian or Spain, but I wouldn’t say much
since the story of Christopher has a bad reputation with Magic Voyage. Maybe
this is part of the reason why there wasn’t a DVD release in this film in this
PC world. If that was the case, then why is the Puppetoon Movie on DVD
including the Jasper In A Jam and other Jasper episodes in the special feature?
I don’t want to understand this world. This is part of the reason why the very
first feature length stop-motion isn’t widely known much today compare to Snow
White, Toy Story, and even Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer in terms of holiday
tv special.
Do I recommend watching
this film? Yes, just for watching an historical piece, as a completion to seen
every Rankin Bass films, and for fun entertainment. The only people who
wouldn’t watch this is those who’s too sensitive on stereotype, knowing better
time traveling films, or just not a fan of Rankin Bass films.
If you have a time to
spare, check it out!