eutychus
2015-01-18T16:41:34Z
The Barnyard Battle (Disney - 1929)

One of the things that made Disney cartoons different from, say, Warner Brothers Cartoons was in the use of what I call magical realism. In the Warners cartoons, if Bugs wanted to bonk Elmer Fudd over the head with a mallet, all he had to do was reach behind his back and produce one. There didn't need to be any rhyme or reason why it should be there or even if it physically could be there. It just was. This gave the Warners cartoons a much greater feeling of anarchy; a feeling that anything could happen.

With Disney, though, you had to follow a specific set of rules and although it seems bizarre to follow physical rules in a world of talking mice and ducks, they had to have an internal logic. So, for Mickey to be pulling things out of thin air, he had to be in the character of a magician (such as in "Magician Mickey.") There had to be a mechanism for him to be able to produce effects not in keeping with his worlds internal logic.

(There are exceptions to this. In Warners Roadrunner/Coyote cartoons, the coyote is usually bested by his attempts because of his inventions following their physical possibilities. And in "The Band Concert", Donald pulls an endless supply of flutes out of thin air.)

So not that he needed to in a lot of his shorts, but one of the ways Disney got a lot of animals working and playing together was to have the scene set where a wide assortment of animals would naturally be, such as in a barnyard. So we, have "Barnyard Olympics","Farmyard Symphony", "The Barnyard Broadcast" and this weeks featured short, "The Barnyard Battle" although here it's just the mice vs the cats.

Most critics consider "The Pointer" to be the watershed Mickey short. The Disney artists had tried to do something different with Mickey in every short they were involved in, doing little updates and tweaks until most feel it finally came completely together into a modern Mickey in this short. Most also point to the scene where Mickey is facing down a grizzly bear as the finest representation of Mickey's "acting" ability to this point.

I disagree because of one scene which took me by surprise in "The Barnyard Battle." Mickey is up against a Pete-like enemy unarmed when he grabs a gun off the wall and fires it at point blank range when he suddenly discovers that it's a popgun. The action (and the music) which has been very dramatic stops.

Mickey and Pete look at the popgun, the cork dangling from the barrel. They look at each other. Mickey picks up the cork and swings it as if in unbelief. Their meet eyes again, and Mickey points to the cork almost as if he's apologizing. He laughs, hoping Pete will join him in his joke. He throws the popgun away and throws up his hands as if saying "that's all I got!" Seeing Pete still there, tapping his foot in impatience, Mickey sticks his hands in his pockets and starts whistling like he's trying to kill time waiting for something to happen. He flaps his hands nervously like he wants to fly away and then gives Pete the "see ya!" sign as if it's just been good fun and it's time for him to go. Meanwhile Pete is getting madder as you can tell by his foaming at the mouth. Finally, Mickey jumps up and shoots himself down a mice hole he's been conveniently standing on and the chase is on again.

It's a nifty little sequence. It's only about 50 seconds long, but coming when it does it makes a nice counterpoint in the midst of all the frenetic action. And there's a sense of real danger as well. By the time "The Pointer" came along, Mickey had become such an icon that you knew Disney wouldn't really let him be eaten by the bear. In "The Barnyard Battle", with it's beginning sequences of Mickey being nearly rubber-hosed to death during his induction physical , you're not quite so sure.

What's your opinion on this cartoon?

Link to IAD entry with video link: The Barnyard Battle 

(Note: all comments here will be re-posted on the main IAD site.)
Justin Delbert
2015-01-19T05:26:46Z
Well, after rewatching the cartoon, it shouldn't be the way Disney could make a Mickey Mouse cartoon today (although in recent years it's been proven wrong). Did those laughs from Mickey Mouse...it's not at all high and squeaky.
When Disney started doing personality animation (the style used for The Three Little Pigs then later his full length features), that's where Disney becomes unfunny (where as WB cartoons are funny). This was still the crude style trying to make the next Mickey Mouse cartoon funnier than the last.
Also, looking at this and a couple more cartoons from that era, you can tell it came from some boys of Kansas City. Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse lived on a farm. Barnyard Battle, shows and dances in the barn, farm animals, and farming. New York cartoons like Fleischer had none of that simply because it was New York.
An excellent look back at a recognizable icon that we all know and love.
Mac
  • Mac
  • Advanced Member
2015-01-21T09:52:04Z
Good thoughts, Eutychus. Have you read 'Walt in Wonderland' by Merritt and Kaufmann? They mention that scene in their book citing it as a more polished version of a very similar scene in the Oswald short "Great Guns" which is contrasted with a comparable scene in "Alice Picks the Champ". They point out how the Alice scene is based more on slap stick and visual tricks (when Julius runs away from Pete he leaves his head behind) whereas in "Great Guns", "Barnyard Battle" and "The Pointer" the emphasis is much more on personality and character acting.

Another stand out scene in "The Barnyard Battle" for me is when an eager young Mickey enters the recruitment tent and immediately has his pants pulled down and is subjected to a rough physical examination by a tough officer. The cartoon is still early enough to utilise a bunch of crazy visual gags where Mickey's neck can be stretched, his body can be pulled inside out and he can have his heart pulled out, but we see how this rough, embarrassing treatment affects him. He goes from being full of confidence to an upset little guy who can barely hold his trousers up.