Drip Dippy Donald

Drip Dippy Donald
Donald Duck series
Directed by Jack King
Produced by Walt Disney
Story by Nick George
Voices by Clarence Nash (uncredited)
Animation by Don Towsley
Ed Aardal
Paul Allen
Sandy Strother
Layouts by Don Griffith
Backgrounds by Howard Dunn
Studio Walt Disney Productions
Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures
Release date(s) March 5, 1948 (USA)
Color process Technicolor
Running time 7 min (one reel)
Language English
Preceded by Chip an' Dale (1947)
Followed by Blame It On The Samba (1948)

Drip Dippy Donald is a one-reel, seven-minute cartoon made by the Walt Disney Company in 1947 and released in March 1948.[1] The Technicolor cartoon was released by Walt Disney Productions, and distributed by RKO Radio Pictures. The cartoon features Donald Duck and was directed by the Disney animator Jack King.

Summary

A deeply sleeping Donald is kicked off the city bus he was riding in when it arrives at his house. Exhausted, he quickly hurries inside and heads straight to bed. The first sign of trouble is caused by a flashing neon sign outside his uncovered window. Donald begins a battle with his belligerent window blind, before he finally nails it to the wall. Feeling content, Donald heads back to bed and instantly falls asleep.

It is a short respite. The kitchen faucet begins dripping and seemingly with a mind of its own, it even makes melodies as it drips. Frustrated, Donald leaps out of bed and turns it off tightly and heads back to bedbleary eyedbut he is soon disrupted once again. The dripping faucet plays more melodies with a pile of dishes in the sink and then becomes magnified in Donald's delirious mind, first appearing as giant, booming drops of water falling from a great height into a much deeper sink. The drops turn into falling bombs with an even deeper louder sound, shaking Donald violently as he rolls up inside his mattress to try to escape the sound. His whole house then begins shaking off its foundations with each drop. Soon the whole earth is affected and shakes with each drop as the incessant drops are increasingly magnified in Donald's sleep-deprived mind.

A frazzled Donald tries every option from falling asleep with his tongue out under the faucet to a cork to a garden hose, but is continually thwarted by the inexorable drip. The cartoon concludes with Donald sitting with a sponge collecting the drips at the end of a long bizarre Rube Goldberg machine he has created. The telephone rings and it is the Water Board informing Donald that his water has been cut offeffective immediatelyfor non payment of his water bill. The drip stops. Donald, unhinged by the ordeal, begins laughing insanely.

References

  1. Catalog of copyright entries. Ser. 3, pt. 12-13, v. 28-30, 1974-1976, Motion Pictures. p. 153.
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