Sh-h-h-h-h-h (1955) Poster

(1955)

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7/10
SH-H-H-H-H-H (Tex Avery, 1955) ***
Bunuel19763 March 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This one's a variation on the Oscar-winning Tom & Jerry cartoon classic QUIET PLEASE (1945) – with a premise that's a guarantee of sure-fire gags (in spite of its essential familiarity). A meek middle-aged man suffers a nervous breakdown; his psychiatrist recommends an isolated hotel as the place where he can find the peace-of-mind he covets so much. However, when he gets there, the man is harassed by his next door neighbor – entertaining a female guest and blowing noisily on his trombone! Every attempt by the hapless protagonist to stop the riot they're making rebounds disastrously on himself; eventually, he decides to confront them face to face – we had never seen their full figure up to this point – and, of all people, these turn out to be the psychiatrist himself and his aide!!
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6/10
Silence I kill you
Horst_In_Translation29 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
"Sh-h-h-h-h-h" is an American cartoon from 1955, so this one is already way over 60 years old and it is another collaboration by writer and director Tex Avery and voice actors Daws Butler for Walter Lantz. In the center of it all, we have a man who is sick from all the noice in his life and so he is sent to a facility where he is supposed to find silence and piece again. So far so good until he meets a pair of resilient neighbors who have no interest in adjusting to the silence. All our heroes attempt to fight back turn out useless. Sure you can wonder why he would join a band with his state or why nobody else hears the loud guys next door, but lets not overanalyze it. The twist who they were is not too interesting and in retrospective a bit expected as otherwise their inclusion early on would have served no purpose. Still I did not see it coming. Then again it is not too important. It is far more important and interesting to watch Avery's fast and witty shot at slapstick comedy. It may in effect always be the same, but the different items easily keep it from becoming repetitive. Then again, it's just a little over 6 minutes. Also the end of the man is something you won't find with WB let alone Disney really and fits Avery's style without compromise. He was the Tarantino of cartoon filmmakers if you wanna say so. The reason that this one here is not among his most known and hardly anybody remembers the main character anymore these days may have more to do with him being human than with the age of this cartoon as Avery made many others even earlier that are much more known today than this one. I had a fun time watching though. See it.
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8/10
Sh-h-h-h-h-h (1955) - a last major studio animated hurrah-and you'll Okeh, it,too!
gcarras12 November 2016
One of Universal's final good and great cartoons, due to Tex Avery, and Kurt Hahn, no offense, but your review is similar to Tex's 1952 Metro (by the *way*, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's famous aconym is (emphasis) not, shouting -Metro's cartoon"Rock-A-Bye Bear". This is the one with the 1920s famed Okeh Laughing record used as a soundtrack.

Unfortunately,Universal's "classic cartoons": afterwards became the Chilly Willy pity-tuggers, the cutesy Woody/nephew/niece/etc. cartoons and boring Beary Family shorts *all* directed by Paul Smith and written, almost always by Cal Howard (also responsible for the last several years of Warner Bros.cartoons, which did give us slightly better cartoons there..). If any of Universal's current releases, like "Almost Christmas","50 Shades" sequel, etc.etc.etc.etc.have a character watching a Lantz cartoon, the 1960s-70s ones shouldn't be it, (especially in a more mature Univ. movie!) ones going back from this true classic by Tex Avery to the 1930s should be the cultural references if Universal, a la WB with Bugs, Yogi,etc. or Disney with Mickey, Elsa, does an in-joke cultural reference. Now...Shhh.. I'm trying to sleep. lol Way to go ex (he did the *only* Chilly Willy cartoons where the penguin's not a character type used for Hanna-Barbera's Yakky Doodle duckling----where only pity is seemingly the only raison d'etre. (All of which is moot as Universal's movies thankfully overall have no Walter Lantz connections, which means no 1960s Paul J.Smith shorts..sadly it means no gems like these of Woody the Giant Killer,either.) By the way this board's stupid dis-allowing of shouting is total censorship and causes vast misinformation about a point.This censorship of so-called "shouting" as it is called is in reality mentioning Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's acronym, once again. Just like Warner Bros. or National Broadcasting Network. I am not shouting okay? Back to the review for the final line, "Shhhh" was the final great cartoon released by Universal Pictures. No other cartoons should, in my humble opinions, ever have been released after 1955 for Lantz. Then a whole blemish on the overall legal would not even exist....:)
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6/10
Sometimes certain people are just asking for . . .
cricket3026 June 2023
Warning: Spoilers
. . . trouble, and that goes double for the shrunk-wrapped shrink and his nurse wife in this animated short. It is not cricket to diagnose someone with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, send them to a quiet place and then barge into the room next door to trump out trombone blasts and guffaw at the top of one's lungs long after midnight. Only a quack Hell-bent upon driving patients into early graves would undertake such nefarious chicanery. This is the sort of thing one would expect if the federal government were funding health care for senior citizens, poor people or other select demographics, and devious politicians wanted to cook the books by cooking the patients on these entitlement rosters. That's why it is more important than ever to heed this film's warning, and support your local chapter of BANGS: Broke Americans Need Gun Stamps.
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10/10
Tex Avery's bizarre masterpiece
atomicpunk4011 January 2008
As we all know Tex Avery has made more than his share of great animated works. From "Symphony In Slang" to "Who Killed Who?" to one of the best of the Droopy cartoons "Three Little Pups". But those were all with MGM. Avery was canned after MGM's animation department was shut down, so he found employment for MGM rival Walter Lantz."Sh-h-h-h-h-h" is the undisputed Master of the Crazed Cartoon's brilliant masterpiece. It was also his last animated short.

Our story tells us about a Mr. Twiddle, a little man who works in a VERY noisy nightclub playing percussion while the horn section blows their trumpets right in his ears, making him a nervous wreck. He goes to see psychiatrist, Dr. I.M. Jittery (get it?), who tells him that his nerves are shot and unless he goes away so he can get some quiet rest he'll just blow up. So Mr. Twiddle goes to The Hush-Hush Lodge in the Swiss Alps, a place that prides itself on absolutely no sounds made whatsoever. Not long after Twiddle hits the hay, the people in the next room start to badly play a trumpet while howling with laughter. Twiddle tries to get them to stop but no avail. Each effort he makes is met by an even ruder response from these pests who seem to be enjoying torturing him. For example: Twiddle slips a note under the door saying to please stop the noise. The people in return instantly slip a note under the door telling him to "Aww shutup". And it goes on. That's the source of the cartoon's gags and sure, you get the usual Avery-styled barrage of them. But the main thrust is that Twiddle - along with us the viewers - never see who these sadistic noisemakers are. They are kept a complete mystery until being reveled in the cartoon's ingenuous twist ending (which I downright refuse to tell you here). We also see the unfortunate fate that befalls poor Mr. Twiddle.

This is also one of the most downright bizarre and weirdest cartoons ever made. For starters the cartoon's underlying atmosphere concerning Twiddle's ordeal seems dark and the ending, while it is great, itself feels macabre. There is also little dialog spoken throughout - for the most part all we get are a sparse array of sound effects. But mostly it's that laughter that gets to you. It goes on and on and on. Even as the cartoon fades out in it's final seconds we hear absolutely nothing but that crazed laughter. You're left with a very strange, and even creepy, feeling after Sh-h-h-h-h-h is over. And this is what makes this cartoon brilliant. Only Avery could take something plain like a laugh recording and frame a cartoon around it in such a way that he not only makes us smile with his trademark sight gags but chills our blood at the same time with a vivid weirdness. And to me this is the genius of Tex Avery, of his being able to easily twist the viewer around, to make us laugh but instead of leaving us smiling we're creeped out. And this was the last cartoon Avery ever made. After Sh-h-h-h-h-h was finished it was semi-retirement with some occasional television work for him until his death in 1980. He definitely saved his best short for last.

For those of you who have been trying like hell to see this one (it used to play occasionally on television among the other Walter Lantz cartoons, but now it's seldom - if ever - played anymore) it is on the Woody Woodpecker and Friends Classic Cartoon Collection (Volume 1) DVD boxed set. So now you can watch Tex Avery's brilliantly comedic and macabre final film and see just what made this man the legend he has become.
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10/10
One of Tex Avery's last cartoons
llltdesq27 December 2000
Sh-h-h-h-h is one of Tex Avery's last cartoons and is an excellent effort. The plot here revolves around a Mr. Tweedle and his need for peace and quiet because of his nerves. His efforts to get some quiet-and their effect on him-offer the traditional complement of sight gags as well as verbal humor, something not always found in Avery cartoons. A wonderful piece of work done for Walter Lantz. Highly recommended.
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10/10
This took me years to track this down
LiLTORTYA5 August 2007
I have been asking around for simply years for this cartoon but I never knew how many H's were in the title to be able to search correctly.

Well, I will do my best to purchase it at whatever the cost.

This cartoon is by far of my dear favorites of all time. The hilarity of beyond funny. True comedic situations that is leaps and bounds in the same direction but way ahead of its time of the great Simpsons cartoons. Having realistic themes with outlandish results is what makes this cartoon fantastic. I cannot stop laugh when I see this or even think of it. On www.youtube.com I can only find this cartoon in french I believe it is in. If only I can find it in English, I'll be one grateful camper.

The horns, the laughing nurse, the signs at the resort ...everything is over the top genius.
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10/10
Funny,Dark Humor
Seamus282915 August 2008
This is one of Tex Avery's later animated shorts that he produced for Walter Lanz, after M-G-M closed down it's animation department. This short features some of the usual deranged,kinetic humor that he was famous for (but also touches on some dark humor,too). The plot concerns a Jazz musician (Mr.Twiddle)who has a nervous breakdown being constantly exposed to loud horns. He is prescribed by his doctor to get some rest & quiet. He books a room in a Swiss hotel that is supposed to be super quiet. No sooner than he sacks in for the night, when the room next door is taken by a couple who spends the night laughing non stop & honking on a trombone (supplied here by 'The Okeh Laughing Record---a novelty record released in the 1920's). The rest of the short is Twiddle trying to get this barrage of noise stopped so he can get some peace & quiet. The surprise ending is a corker that will floor you. This was apparently,Avery's last animated short produced for theaters,as he would eventually move to television (as would most other animators of the era). Sadly,this animated short is rarely ever shown on TV,much less re-released in cinemas (why is Universal sitting on these screen treasures?)
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5/10
Swiss brains are holier than . . .
pixrox126 June 2023
. . . Swiss cheese, as they literally lack the capacity to ever comprehend the big picture, SH-H-H-H-H-H confirms in a roundabout fashion. Leave it to the Swiss to doodle around on trombones and loudly cackle maniacally in the wee hours of a morning at a misleadingly named "Hush-Hush Lodge." Switzerland was founded upon arterial spray, as the Fuhrer filled his anti-American coffers with box cars and entire train loads of stolen gold bars, gold watches, gold teeth and purloined masterpiece paintings destined for "secret bank accounts" run by these Swiss fences. As a person caught with so much ill-gotten loot would be subject to summary judgment by a firing squad against the nearest wall, how is it that ANY of these Swiss Big Cheeses are free to roam about above ground Today?
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9/10
Poor Mr. Twiddle
Hitchcoc11 January 2019
A little man works as a percussionist in a nightclub. He sits in the middle of the horn section and gets blasted over and over. His doctor tells him to go somewhere quiet. He checks into a hotel where quiet is followed to the letter. Just as he is about to go to sleep, a hornblowing, laughing couple get the room next to him. As he tries to get them to be quiet, he is tormented by them. It's like those Droopy/Spike cartoons where everything he does backfires. This is dark but quite funny.
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10/10
Mr Twiddle's battle for quiet
TheLittleSongbird24 October 2017
Love animation, it was a big part of my life as a child, particularly Disney, Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry, and still love it whether it's film, television or cartoons.

Also have much admiration for Tex Avery, an animation genius whose best cartoons are animated masterpieces and some of the best he ever did. 'Sh-h-h-h-h-h' may not be one of his very best, only because his masterpieces were so many, more so than most other animation directors. Occasionally, limitations show in some of the backgrounds (in comparison to his cartoons from the 40s), but this doesn't matter quite so much because everywhere else in the animation it's colourful and expressive.

Many times it has been said by me that when Avery was not at his best he still fared much better than most other animation directors at their worst, some can only dream of having their best work on the same level as the masterpieces from Avery. Still think that.

Have not seen all Avery's work, though that's my goal as of now, but as of now have yet to see anything "bad" from him, even if there are perhaps a few very early efforts that are not at his usual top standard.

Clarence Wheeler is no Scott Bradley, but his music scoring proves him to be a more than worthy replacement. It's lively, lush and fits very well, if not quite action-enhancing as with Bradley.

'Sh-h-h-h-h-h' is one of those cartoons that is very funny, with plenty of clever, imaginatively timed gags that really deliver on the humour and makes the most of a very clever and brilliantly constructed story that is pure insanity and deliciously so. Nobody does insanity like Tex Avery.

Direction as to be expected is impeccable as is Daws Butler's bravura voice-work. One does feel sorry for poor Mr Twiddle, especially if you've been in a similar situation to him.

Overall, another brilliant work from a master. 10/10 Bethany Cox
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10/10
Search Key Words
anon_lynx29 June 2009
Warning: Spoilers
(It took me 20 minutes to find this site. Please accept this tag to aid in searches. For some reason I thought it was a tuba.)

A man goes to see the psychiatrist. The psychiatrist tells the man that he has trombonitis trombonosis, that his nerves are shot, that he needs a quiet vacation, and sends the man on vacation to calm his nerves. The man checks into a quiet hotel in the Swiss Alps. The man goes to his room. The man is disturbed by noise from the room next door: he hears a man playing a tuba trombone horn and a woman laughs laughing. He tries to knock on the door, call the phone in the next room, send a note, throw a bucket pail of water, drill a hole and insert a hose, pull the rug, deliver a bomb, drop a safe, all to no avail. He finally goes to the front desk and tells the concierge that he needs to see a doctor. The concierge takes him to the room next door and sees that it is his psychiatrist and his wife that were making the noise. The psychiatrist warns the man about his nerves. The man blow up blows up explodes.
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10/10
Droopy at his best
Kurt-3216 July 1999
Plot: Droopy is supposed to play watchdog over a bear hibernating for the winter, and is competing with another dog for the job.

My brother and I saw this some Saturday morning 30 years ago and we still giggle about it today. Too bad it's not on video; maybe someone can give me a shout it you hear otherwise.
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2/10
Avery's last...and certainly not among his best.
planktonrules21 March 2020
Late in his career, Tex Avery somehow left MGM (where he made his best cartoon shorts) and moved to Universal Studios. Like you'd expect, when you mess with a successful formula, the results are less than stellar.

When the cartoon begins, you will immediately notice a HUGE quality difference over Avery's earlier output. The animation style is very cheap and ugly. Part of it was because of a trend in the 1950s to make cheaper and cheaper films--with lower cel counts, simpler drawings and even cheaper backgrounds. But even compared to most other studios of the day, this is a very ugly looking cartoon.

The story is about an over-stressed guy who is just trying to get some sleep...but the folks in neighboring apartments are driving him crazy with their noise. To provide a cheap way of doing this, they used the novelty Okeh Laughing Record to provide non-stop laughter during the film.

So is it any good? No. It's ugly, not particularly funny and represents the worst period in Avery's career. Only of interest to folks who are die-hard Avery fans and want to see all of his work.
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5/10
Kind of a downer, really...
apelieuproar-693895 September 2023
Warning: Spoilers
I'm not a fan of cartoons where some poor slob, be they a cat, dog, mouse or man, who's just minding his own business, gets abused for the entirety of the cartoon, and their abuser never receives any kind of comeuppance.

In the case of 'Sh-h-h-h-h-h' it's a man, Mr. Twiddle, one who can't take the noise from his job as a percussionist at a jazz night club where horns are blown into his face all night. He seeks advice from his psychiatrist (and his nurse wife), whose prescription is rest in a quiet place or else he'll lose his temper and literally blow up.

Mr. Twiddle checks into the Hush Hush Hotel, which seems to pride itself on its keeping its premises completely quiet. When Twiddle he is taken to a soundproof booth and whispered instructions about how he is to be completely silent. Even sounds are manifested as written words on cards.

Twiddle, glad of the quiet, settles in for a peaceful night's sleep. Until rude reality intrudes and he hears the sounds of a horn and the obnoxious laughter of both man and woman in the next room. He attempts to get them to stop, first politely, but then resorting to extreme measures when the neighbors fail to listen. He is thwarted every time.

Finally, exasperated, he opens the door to the neighbors' room only to find it's his psychiatrist and his nurse wife. Twiddle is about to go into a rage when the psychiatrist warns him to keep his temper. But it's too late. Twiddle explodes, prompting the psychiatrist to say that some patients don't listen to their doctor's advice. He and his wife then go back to laughing obnoxiously while he blows his horn.

Okay, so I found this more annoying than funny. And I was actually kind of appalled by it, especially the ending. Why can only Mr. Twiddle hear the horn-blower and his wife. Why doesn't Twiddle complain to the management? What the bloody hell is so funny about blowing a horn in the wee hours of the morning? This is only a short film so it's perhaps this is nitpicking. Still, it's annoying. And, overall, I'm not a fan of this cartoon.

That said, I can recognize that there's a sort of brilliance to it and not just because of the skill of legendary animation director Tex Avery (none other than the man who directed 'A Wild Hare' the first official Bugs Bunny short). It kind of comes off as a eerie horror short that I almost feel merits another view just so I can, er, analyze it further.
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