Dangerous Dan McFoo
Dangerous Dan McFoo
| 15 July 1939 (USA)
Dangerous Dan McFoo Trailers

An arctic saloon. The tiny dog, Dan McFoo, is playing a pinball-like marble game in the back. His girlfriend, Sue, sounding like Katharine Hepburn, stands by. A stranger comes in with eyes for Sue; he begins a boxing match with Dan. After Dan gets knocked down, he accuses the stranger of having something in the glove; the ref finds four horseshoes and a horse. After the fight goes on a while with no conclusion, the narrator tosses a couple of guns, the lights go out, and Dan is shot or is he?

Reviews
Edgar Allan Pooh

. . . but if I were fishing around for fodder for an animated "Merrie Melodies" poem, I might sooner draw on "The Raven" or "Annabelle Lee." After all, there's not much in the historical record to contradict any poetic license taken against those two ditties. On the other hand, the immortal Robert W. Service lived the Yukon Gold Rush of 1898, and newsreel footage of that historic event still was fresh in many minds when DANGEROUS DAN McFOO hit theaters in 1939. Like all Warner Bros. "Looney Tunes" and "Merrie Melodies," McFOO was at least partially aimed at children. No matter how you sanitize the pursuits of those "clean mad for the muck called gold," you're presenting material that may scare the Heck out of some kids (a case in point is MGM's remake of L. Frank Baum's anti-Gold Standard classic, THE WIZARD OF OZ, which came out the same year as McFOO). Many kids fled the theaters playing OZ in horror, and no doubt there were lots of tykes terrorized here when the tall character proclaims, "One of you is a Hound of Hell . . . and that one is Dan McFoo."

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MARIO GAUCI

I watched this – it was included among the extras on Warners' DVD of DODGE CITY (1939) – as part of a 5-cartoon marathon to commemorate the 100th Anniversary from the birth of one of the most important figures in animation history: Tex Avery. It was actually remade – and considerably improved upon – by THE SHOOTING OF DAN McGOO (1945), a Droopy 'vehicle'; while remarkably similar in many respects to the later classic, one of my favorite Averys, it is a minor (if still highly enjoyable) effort – for one thing, because of an anonymous i.e. less sympathetic protagonist, but also its more primitive quality (Avery's Fred Quimby-produced MGM efforts being generally superior to his stuff at Warners).

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ccthemovieman-1

We first see "Dangerous Dan" and it's not who except to see, but a meek little guy who sounds like Elmer Fudd. In fact, as Mr. Reynolds states in another review here, it IS the voice of Mr. Fudd (Arthur Q. Ryan). The barmaid at the "Malibu Bar" where the action takes place, also is a weird. She looks like Betty Boop, talks like Katharine Hepburn, but is supposed to be Bette Davis. What the.....? Whoever she is, she Dan's girl...but the wolf who just entered the bar doesn't care. He's the obvious villain.The rest of the cartoon is a boxing match between the two foes, complete with a referee and a very strange way to announce each new round. It was fairly interesting but the very end was lame. The cartoon was a feature in the DVD of the Errol Flynn film, "Dodge City."

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Robert Reynolds

This is a typical Tex Avery short: he takes an idea from anther source (here it's a poem by Robert W. Service, an idea he would use again at MGM), follow the basic concept and toss in every oddball sight gag or joke that could be shoehorned in in the 7 or 8 minute length. An interesting point here is that Arthur Q. Bryan does the voice for the title character, in the voice he would use as Elmer Fudd for a great many years. It really is strange hearing that voice from another character. Good cartoon, although the one Avery did at MGM was just a touch better than this one. Well worth seeking out. Recommended.

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