Abdul the Bulbul Ameer (1941) Poster

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5/10
Though this is visually interesting, there isn't much else here
llltdesq12 August 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I must confess I wasn't terribly impressed by this one. It's bright and colorful, nice to look at and sort of like biting into cotton candy. Not very substantive. Though it would be difficult to "spoil" this, as there really isn't much going on here, mild spoiler warning:

This is about a fight between two arrogant blow-hards, one of them the titular character. That's it, that's the sum and substance of this one. There's a quasi subplot with a comic relief newsreel film crew, one of whom resembles Groucho Marx a bit, but even that just kind of stands around dragging its toe in the dirt. The bulk of this is a fight which isn't compelling between two characters who are wholly unappealing. The originating poem/song is decent enough, but the cartoon isn't up to the source. Your mileage may vary. Worth watching once, but nothing special.
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6/10
Songs My Father Sang
boblipton3 December 2022
Robert Allen and Hugh Harman direct this cartoon, based on a musical version of the poem about Ivan Sklavinsky Sklavar and Abdul the Bulbul Emir duking it out.

It was one of the comic songs my father sang to us when I were a lad, although he was fonder of "The Walloping Wind o' Blind". This one had a more risque version about the sultan's harem, but I didn't find out about that until I googled it in preparation for this review. Live and learn.

Harman & Ising had lost a lot of their status at MGM, which now had an active cartoon division, under the supervision of Fred Quimby; soon he would hire Tex Avery, and make it a powerhouse in the animation field. For the moment, here's a rare funny Hugh Harman cartoon, thanks, no doubt, to Mr. Allen.
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6/10
MGM cartoon
SnoopyStyle3 December 2022
Abdul the Bulbul Ameer is the bravest in the ranks of the Shah. Ivan Skavinsky Scavar is the bravest of the troops led by the Czar. Abdul is blocking the path and Ivan steps on his toe. The two men quickly challenge to a fight.

This is an MGM cartoon. I don't know anything about the song. I'm not sure if this is better or worst. I can only judge it on its own merit. It's a lot of cartoon fighting, but I could imagine some wackier ideas. This needs a small guy who comes out on top when both men go down. This is mildly humorous. It doesn't have much bite other than it uses other cultures. It's fine.
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3/10
Abdul and Ivan the Terrible
genekim22 December 2014
Watching this 1941 MGM cartoon is pretty pointless unless you're familiar with the Percy French-Frank Crumit song, "Abdul Abulbul Amir." And if you know the song, then what's the point of seeing this cartoon? I suppose the intent was to provide a comical illustration of what's described in the lyrics, but we only get fragments of the original text. Perhaps the animators would have done better to have done a more faithful visual accompaniment, one that stuck more closely to the song.

Said to have been a favorite of President Dwight D. Eisenhower's, the French-Crumit song "Abdul Abulbul Amir" is a very humorous if (by today's standards) politically incorrect ballad that tells the tale of two mighty warriors: Ivan from Russia, and Abdul, who is either an Arab, a Persian or a Turk. They get into the fight of their lives, and don't know when to quit (or how). My introduction to it was a tuneful rendition by country singer Hank Thompson. It made me chuckle a few times, and I actually laughed aloud the first time I heard the closing line, which provided a perfect ending.

Nothing about this cartoon (titled "Abdul the Bulbul-Ameer") made me chuckle; not the way the main characters are portrayed, not the standard animated slapstick, and certainly not the three-man American newsreel crew thrown in for added comic relief (one of them, a Groucho Marx lookalike, keeps pointlessly shouting, "What a fight!"). The whole thing makes for a Technicolorful, pointless mess. You'd do better to listen to the Thompson recording, which actually tells you a story.

(I saw an excellent quality copy of this cartoon uploaded onto YouTube - who knows how long it will remain there.)
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