The Mice Will Play (1938) Poster

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7/10
Cute playfulness
TheLittleSongbird23 April 2022
'The Mice Will Play' is the third of the trilogy of the cute little mice cartoons animation genius Tex Avery made in the late 30s. The other two being 'Ain't We Got Fun' and 'A Sunbonet Blue', both good worthwhile cartoons while not among Avery's best and quite tame by his standards. Am a big fan of Avery and of animation in general (as one can tell from reading other reviews of mine) and even when he was not at his best his work was still watchable and better than the worst output of most.

When talking about the three cute little mice trilogy, all three are worth watching and about equal in quality for the same reasons. Neither of them see Avery at his best, and 'The Mice Will Play' like the previous two is quite tame in comparison to much of the master's other work. That tend to be more daring, livelier in pace and more imaginative in reactions and expressions. That is not saying that 'The Mice Will Play' is bad, it's not. Just slightly disappointing by overall Avery standards.

It is slightly on the bland side, with no surprises in the story, very slight plotting and the gags are more amusing than hilarious or inventive.

Pacing could have been tighter, as the usual wonderfully frantic pace is pretty subdued here and it does feel on the safe side whereas Avery at his best was pretty ahead of his time. Then again this is early Avery and before he hit his peak in the 40s.

However, there are a lot of great things despite how all that sounds. The animation ranges from good to excellent. It's fluid in movement, vibrant in colour and very meticulous in detail. Most of the pace is lively and the content is charming, amusing and well-timed if with not quite enough to go the extra mile.

Carl Stalling's music is typically superb. It is as always lushly orchestrated, full of lively energy and characterful in rhythm, not only adding to the action but also enhancing it. The characters are likeable and their personalities work well individually and together. The voice acting is without complaint, it doesn't get much better than Mel Blanc when it comes/came to voice acting and he doesn't disappoint. Bernice Hansen has the most characters to voice and she excels without sounding too cute.

Overall, decent if unexceptional. 7/10.
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6/10
What's a Warnologist to make of THE MICE WILL PLAY . . .
oscaralbert24 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
. . . with its patient predator, rodent wedding, and mouse orchestra? Hidden deep in the bonus feature menu of Disc Two of the "Looney Tunes Mouse Chronicles," this Warner Bros. animated short tries to deflect casual analysis by opening in the "Experimental Laboratory" of "Dr. I.M. Nutts," who apparently turns out to be a Black Cat. For most of this seven-minute piece, the mice have the run of this lab, playing with a stethoscope, the X-Ray Machine, microscopes, liquid neon (?!), and so forth. However, early on there's a hint about the underlying serious content of this short, as a group of mice gnaw out the book title GONE WITH THE WIND in the Lab's baseboards. After "Johnny" Mouse rescues "Susie" Mouse ("Experimental Subject #12") from a cage, a Rodent Wedding is followed by an orchestral rendition of some obscure Warner Sheet Music song. Then the feline Dr. Nutts overhears Susie predicting a litter of fat mice, and he defers his plans for an immediate wedding couple snack in favor of a later Mouseketeer Feast. Putting two and two together, Warner is predicting that shortly after the release of TWELVE YEARS A SLAVE (Susie's number in captivity, remember?) President Cruz will appoint Supreme Court Justices even more Originalist than Justice Scalia, and America will be forced to revert to the Good Ol' GONE WITH THE WIND Racist Slavery Days, as mandated in the Original U.S. Constitution, complete with Dr. Nutts' Foodstock Breeding Program.
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3/10
Too schmaltzy for my taste.
planktonrules26 December 2021
In the 1930s, many of Looney Tunes' shorts tended to be cute and filled with schmaltz. This is why I didn't particularly enjoy "The Mice Will Play". It's not a terrible cartoon but has musical numbers and schmaltz in spades!

A group of VERY cutesy mice invade a doctor's office after hours and they run amok. Eventually, one of them discovers a girl mouse in a cage in an adjoining room...and he helps her escape. Then, the singing and cutesiness goes into overdrive.

There aren't a whole lotta laughs in this one...just cute mice, singing and a hero mouse. It looks great, with excellent animation, but really left me flat.
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5/10
Not Tex Avery at his best!
JohnHowardReid7 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Director: TEX AVERY. Story: Jack Miller. Animation: Sid Sutherland. Music director: Carl W. Stalling. Color by Technicolor. Producer: Leon Schlesinger. Copyright 18 December 1938 by The Vitaphone Corp. A Warner Bros. "Merrie Melodies" cartoon. U.S. release: 31 December 1938. 7 minutes.

COMMENT: Hungry, fun-loving mice break into an experimental laboratory where Dr I.M. Nutts (not seen) has caged a beautiful white mouse. After a number of mediocre spot gags (a mouse lights up intermittently after drinking neon fluid) intercut with shots of the prisoner and a ravenous cat on the prowl, the white mouse is rescued and marries her rescuer.

In an ironic fade-out twist, just as the drooling cat is about to pounce on the happy couple, they remind him they intend to raise lots of fat little mice. The cat decides to wait. This bizarre, somewhat unpleasant iris out is the only indication that Tex Avery had anything to do with this one, which is otherwise rather ordinary and lacks Avery's characteristic touches such as the bulging-eyed double takes and the frantic pace. However, he does make time for a Song: "Two Happy Mice".
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8/10
The cute mouse cartoon as done by Tex Avery
llltdesq7 February 2002
Tex Avery did a triptych of "cute little mouse" cartoons, but not to worry, gang, they have the Avery backspin, particularly this one. The three, Ain't We Got Fun, A Sunbonnet Blue and this one, were all quite recognizable as Avery shorts and the end gag on this one is prototypical Avery. This one has a fair amount of singing and is more cutesy than usual, but is definitely an Avery short, without a doubt! Well worth looking for. Recommended.
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