Plane Dippy
Plane Dippy | |
---|---|
Looney Tunes (Porky Pig) series | |
Directed by | Fred Avery |
Produced by | Leon Schlesinger |
Voices by |
Billy Bletcher Joe Dougherty Jack Carr |
Music by |
Norman Spencer Bernard Brown |
Animation by |
Sid Sutherland Virgil Ross |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date(s) | April 30, 1936 (USA) |
Color process | Black-and-white (later colorized in 1995) |
Running time | 8 minutes |
Language | English |
Plane Dippy is a 1936 Looney Tunes cartoon directed by Tex Avery and produced by Leon Schlesinger. In this cartoon, Porky Pig has joined the army air corps. Beans makes a cameo drawing a line on the floor during the "Spinning Test" sequence. Beans previous appearance was in Westward Whoa.
It is the last cartoon featuring Little Kitty. This is also the first cartoon in the Porky Pig series.
Plot
Porky is looking to join the military. He briefly considers the Army's infantry division and the Navy before deciding to join the Air Corps; when the recruiter asks Porky for his name, he responds, "Porky Cornelius Washington Otis Lincoln Abner Aloysius Casper Jefferson Philbert Horatius Narcissus Pig," a full name unused before or since. He applied to one of the jobs. The sergeant (similar to MGM's Spike) sends Porky through a series of tests, which he fails disastrously. When the other soldiers are being issued rifles, Porky is issued a feather duster and ordered to clean a voice-activated robot plane. Meanwhile, Little Kitty is playing with a puppy, and the plane's control unit picks up her voice. The plane takes Porky on an incredibly wild ride. It destroys a military balloon (the crew parachute to safety). It levels a building except for the clock tower. It crashes through a circus tent, causing trapeze performers to do tricks on his plane. It goes through the ocean, chasing a fish and getting chased in turn by a whale. It even crashes into a wagon load of hay, turning the cargo into straw hats. It nearly destroys several other planes, but they nimbly escape. Finally, a number of other children show up and shout constant commands at the puppy, causing the plane to go totally berserk. Finally, the exhausted puppy's owner tells him to come home, and the plane does so, crashing into the hangar. Porky goes racing from the building and dashes into the office of the infantry division, proclaiming that he wants to "l-l-learn to m-m-march". The cartoon ends with Porky carrying a rifle and marching in formation with a number of other soldiers.