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8/10
Babes in the Woods(1932) Review
zebunker14 November 2019
One of the hallmarks of children's fairy tales is a wicked witch taking children, punishing them and society for moral and ethical issues. They can be looked at deeply or superficially, that's what makes a good fairy-tale. One thing modern kids stories starting in the 1990's has done is gutted the kids story genre into something so politically correct, tame and devoid of life that its a wonder society has not collapsed thus far.

What makes a great kids story is the same as what makes a great story for adults. The threat or danger needs to be there, your emotions go up and down. You win sometimes and you lose other-times, such as life. This short somehow displays that sentiment while still being charming, enduring and entertaining. The kids are left to their own devices to get passed the witch. The story is taken from a few other similar fairy-tales of which get really dark. This one still manages to be scary, but not gory or gruesome, which may affect the deeper meaning kids get from it. It would be interesting to hear what kids and parents thought of this film when it was released in the 1930's.

This is a fun short, that has a lot going on. The music is nice and the songs, but you suffer some listening to the scratchy vocals and often can't hear as sharp as you'd like. If only they could restore audio quality as they do with picture quality. This is an enjoyable short cartoon that's re-watchable, a nice edition to you Halloween lineup.

Best Scene: Turning Kids Into Animals

The end of the film the evil witch turns the boy into a spider and tries to turn the girl into a rat. The action picks up, the elves attack, there is excitement and danger at every turn ending in a thrilling conclusion.

Worst Scene: Opening Scene

The short opens by showing the old witch tree, essentially ruining the end of the film. The kids get lost in the woods somehow, there is a song playing but its almost too hard to hear the words the singer is telling us. I re-watched this segment with captions to see what she was singing.

Best Actor: The Witch

The witch steals the show, she is the only one that has voice lines. The elves make some noises and the kids, as far as I could remember dont say anything. Maybe because they are too in shock the whole time at what they are going through. The witch plays the classic witch style, kidnapping kids, being evil. Great fun.

Worst Actor: Too Many Elves

The kids find a village full of elves that all look the same, almost as if they are one character rather than individual people. The one that helps rescue the kids is nameless. It would've been nice to single out a few elves when the kids first come into town.

Improvements: The elves in the city all look and act the same, as if they are one being or clones. I would like to have seen the tone of the backgrounds get darker as the witch gets more and more evil. We have chase scenes where she's being pelted with harmless looking arrows for some reason and its a bright and colorful day. Color toning would go along way to make the witch seem darker and more evil without adding anything else. It would've been nice to give the two kids names and voices to better grab the audience into caring for them. The witch has a voice, so in some ways you want to cheer for her.

Hits
  • Great details in each scene.
  • Scary and exciting moments.
  • Nice pacing and ending.


Misses
  • Hard to hear some of the dialogue.
  • Two main kid characters look to simple in design.
  • Witches location too bright and colorful.


Final Grade: B
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8/10
Entertaining short marred by a curious characterization choice
llltdesq31 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
This is an early color short in the Silly Symphonies series produced by the Disney studio. There will be spoilers ahead:

This looks to be an early dry run to see if adaptations of fairy tales were possible. There are echoes of the future in here, most specifically Snow White. The witch in particular resonates with the feature film to come five years later.

The story is a spin on Hansel and Gretal. It would be much better but for a curious decision (and I can't imagine it was an accident, as only the children have this problem). Their eyes are purely pupils, smallish black dots, rather than proper eyes, as with the gnomes and the witch. It gives them dead eyes and hence little personality, which is a mistake when they are technically the leads. It's a pity, because the good animation and other qualities are lessened a bit by dead eyed leads with no character.

The short starts with the two leads finding a group of gnomes and the opening is cute is familiar. The entry of the witch on her broom ends the fun and the gnomes wisely scramble for the safety of their tree homes. Hansel and Gretal are too large to get in and foolishly get on the witch's broom for a ride. She shows them a cottage made of candy and gingerbread and the obvious happens, with a change.

Instead of eating children, the witch changes them into bugs or animals. She changes the boy into a spider, turns a cat into stone, but is interrupted by the gnomes on a rescue mission.

There follows a typical fight sequence found in a lot of Disney shorts from the early 1930s. There's a nice touch with the gnomes riding geese and throwing pumpkins which appear as if by magic in their hands. They basically rout the witch while the boy and the girl restore the other children and ultimately turn the witch into stone.

It's scary and charming by turns, apart from the one glaring flaw. The short is available on the Disney Treasures Silly Symphonies DVD set and it and the set are worth finding. Recommended
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7/10
A miniature fairytale.
OllieSuave-0077 June 2018
This is quite a thrilling little fairytale, where two children stumble upon a village of gnomes in the woods. While they are friendly to the children, a witch suddenly arrives and kidnaps them.

The scenes where the children attempt to escape the witch's lair were quite exciting, as were the magic spells the witch casted. But, the gnomes' attempts to rescue the children and shower the witch with arrows were cheesy.

You could hardly make out the witch's dialog, whom is voiced by the actress that eventually voices the Evil Queen in Show White and the Seven Dwarfs.

Overall, not a bad tale. Reminds you a little of those full-length animated movies from Disney.

Grade B-
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Beautiful Colors on Display
Michael_Elliott18 March 2015
Babes in the Woods (1932)

*** (out of 4)

Fun and great to look at Disney cartoon has a brother and sister wondering into the woods where they meet some elves but they're tempted by a house made out of candy and once inside they're kidnapped by the evil witch. This here is an alternate take on the Hansel and Gretal tale and for the most part it's highly entertaining. The film has some very charming moments but there's also some rather dark moments that I'm sure scared the heck out of kids back in 1932. There's a lot of great things about this short but the highlight has to be the actual animation and the colors used. I was really shocked at how wonderful the colors looked because you really could pass this off as a film that was made a decade ago let alone back in 1932. I really loved the look of the candy house and the various colors that are on full display. Another great use of color comes towards the end as the witch slowly begins to turn to stone. Speaking of the witch, she's quite creepy here and manages to be very memorable with her wicked spells. One highlight has the boy being turned into a spider and then it hits you that the various other creatures in the room were also children at one time.
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6/10
Disney threatens the entire Art World . . .
pixrox113 September 2017
Warning: Spoilers
. . . with this ironically portentous brief cartoon, BABES IN THE WOODS. The future Disney MegaCorp casts ITSELF as an evil, ugly witch, possessing a job-killing potion capable of turning the liveliest kid or cat into stone (as in "stone-cold dead"). This, of course, is exactly what Disney soon did to the entirety of Western Civilization, bribing the U.S. Congress to extend standard 28-year copyrights Ad Infinitum. This insures that Disney's Witching Hours will NEVER end; that Steamboat Willie and friends NEVER will be allowed to breathe free in the Public Domain. As an unintended and ever more grotesque side effect from this misuse of Disney's ill-gotten Wealth, all the Beloved Creatures of Real Artists--such as Gatsby, Bugs Bunny, Gilroy, Porky Pig, and Bogart--are similarly condemned to the static single dimension of Disney's Stone Cold Dungeons. The solution to this sorry state of affairs is embedded in the conclusion of BABES IN THE WOODS. Just as the tiny bearded gnomes liberate all the kiddies frozen by the Disney Witch, it is up to We the 99 Per Center Little People to make sure that imprisoned Disney Characters such as Goofer and Bluto FINALLY see the light of day by tagging them across America's municipal buildings and streets as often as possible!
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7/10
This cartoon is NOT titled SNOW WHITE AND THE 7 GNOMES . . .
cricket3012 October 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . but some viewers might get that impression as they're watching BABES IN THE WOODS. Apparently Mr. Dizzy could not corner the market on grim fairy tales, so he decided to mix up Hans, Greta and an army of cloned dwarfs inside his giant rodent blender to see what kind of sausage would ensue. Unfortunately, the main theme of Walt's apparent source material is isolation in a rugged haunted wilderness, so interjecting legions of gaily gyrating gnomes kind of pollutes this fairy tale's atmosphere.
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6/10
Variation on Hansel and Gretel
Hitchcoc1 March 2019
For some reason, two little Dutch kids are rambling through the woods. As time goes by, numerous frightening things happen. They come upon a village of gnomes who accept them immediately. But soon the witch with the candy house shows up and they are taken in by her. The colors and sets are excellent. The story is a little weak, but it's not terrible.
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10/10
Disney Tells A Grimm Tale
Ron Oliver11 October 2000
A Walt Disney SILLY SYMPHONY Cartoon Short.

A malignant old witch tricks the BABES IN THE WOODS into entering her house of horrors. Only their new friends, the little woodland dwarfs, can save them now...

A lot of colorful action is packed into this cartoon, which includes elements of stories from the Brothers Grimm. Charming opening, in which the story begins as a sung lullaby. The wicked witch, though now all but forgotten, is the first of Disney's great villainesses.

The SILLY SYMPHONIES, which Walt Disney produced for a ten year period beginning in 1929, are among the most fascinating of all animated series. Unlike the Mickey Mouse cartoons in which action was paramount, with the Symphonies the action was made to fit the music. There was little plot in the early Symphonies, which featured lively inanimate objects and anthropomorphic plants & animals, all moving frantically to the soundtrack. Gradually, however, the Symphonies became the school where Walt's animators learned to work with color and began to experiment with plot, characterization & photographic special effects. The pages of Fable & Fairy Tale, Myth & Mother Goose were all mined to provide story lines and even Hollywood's musicals & celebrities were effectively spoofed. It was from this rich soil that Disney's feature-length animation was to spring. In 1939, with SNOW WHITE successfully behind him and PINOCCHIO & FANTASIA on the near horizon, Walt phased out the SILLY SYMPHONIES; they had run their course & served their purpose.
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2/10
Not everything Disney made turned out to be golden.
planktonrules10 January 2014
In the 1930s, Disney was the top studio for animation. The quality of their work was without equal and the public adored them. So, I have no animosity against Disney cartoons of this era. However, I must admit that a few of their cartoons were NOT so wonderful and a small number were, despite GREAT animation, still very bad cartoons. This is the case with "Babes in the Woods"--a completely sub-par and creepy cartoon indeed.

This short begins with two Dutch-looking children with hollow, soul-less eyes running about--lost in the woods. They happen upon a group of gnomes that look like little Santas. However, after all their cavorting about, an evil witch arrives. She kidnaps the kids and tries to eat them and the kids respond by murdering her--but it's in self-defense! Then, all the forest creatures celebrate and the film ends. On top of everything, the music in this bizarre mess is terrible. Apart from nice animation, there really is nothing worth seeing in this weird and uber-creepy short film.
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10/10
Manages to be both charming and scary
TheLittleSongbird27 March 2010
I thoroughly enjoyed this Silly Symphony. I wouldn't necessarily deem it as a favourite, like I would Flowers and Trees and The Old Mill, but it manages to be both scary and charming. With nice colourful animation, particularly on the outside of the gingerbread house, a beautiful lullaby-like title song and dramatic and whimsical incidental music it is a delight visually and musically. The pace is secure and the cartoon eventful enough to be enjoyable, with some elements of other Grimm fairy tales and sticking to the overall structure of the original Hansel and Gretel tale. The characters are engaging, the two children are likable enough and look cute in the Dutch traditional dress, while the gnomes are friendly and jovial. I remember this though chiefly for the Witch, who is very scary not only how she is animated but how she speaks too. Concluded with a fun climax, in which the Witch is finally turned into stone, this is a lovely, charming Silly Symphony. 10/10 Bethany Cox
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5/10
I didn't like it
CuriosityKilledShawn22 November 2010
Two horribly animated children are skipping through the woods until they become frightened of everything from branches to bunnies. They discover an elf village and end up playing with them before an evil witch lures them to her candy cane house where she has other kids in captivity, only they're turned into various nasty creatures.

The kids break free, rescue the other victims and encase the witch in concrete or something, which ends up in the creation of "The Witch Stone".

I wasn't charmed by Disney's version of this Brothers Grimm tale. The animation wasn't that good and without the Disney trademark of anthropomorphic animals it just felt awkward.
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3/10
Interesting
kaicesbr16 July 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Continuing my marathon of Disney short films but as they are almost always not available on Disney plus and I have to hunt on YouTube since they are not available on Disney plus. First time watching. Here in Brazil, this story is called João e Maria, it was interesting to see it from the mind of the Disney gang. I even found it interesting, the Evil Queen's voice actress also dubbed this witch and the dwarfs in this short can be considered a test to make Snow White's seven dwarfs... Conclusion: Not the best but I found it interesting. Will be better Silly Symphony?

Short Watched July 15, 2023...
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Hansel and Gretel and some gnomes
jlgrosbeck5 February 2002
An early attempt at the Brothers Grimm world to which Disney would soon lay claim. But more awkward and with much sloppier animation. The Hansel and Gretel stand-ins ("whose names I don't know") are shockingly devoid of personality - they've got weird little blank faces that even I could draw. When the boy is turned into a spider, it's both icky and somewhat of a relief, because at least now he's got some personality. Turned into a spider, not fattened up to be eaten. This witch just imprisons and transforms kids...the standard cannibalism was apparently too edgy.

The whole thing is also dated by the utterly inane song.

Is it just me, or is there something unearthly and horrific about the witch's final moments, after which the ring of laughing children just seems bizarre? And is the fact that the rock's 'arms' seem to have disappeared with the passage of time suppose to be a hint that this is all just the stuff of myth? So many questions.
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