Southern Fried Hospitality

1960
6.2| 0h6m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 28 November 1960 Released
Producted By: Walter Lantz Productions
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Gabby Gator, voiced in Kentucky Colonel mode by Daws Butler, is starving. He comes upon a recipe for southern-fried woodpecker and writes Woody a fan letter. Woody shows up to perform an act and about the three-quarter mark, realizes what is going on, and proceeds to take his revenge.

Genre

Animation

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Director

Jack Hannah

Production Companies

Walter Lantz Productions

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Southern Fried Hospitality Audience Reviews

VividSimon Simply Perfect
Catangro After playing with our expectations, this turns out to be a very different sort of film.
Kaydan Christian A terrific literary drama and character piece that shows how the process of creating art can be seen differently by those doing it and those looking at it from the outside.
Tymon Sutton The acting is good, and the firecracker script has some excellent ideas.
TheLittleSongbird Was very fond of Woody Woodpecker and his cartoons as a child. Still get much enjoyment out of them now as a young adult, even if there are more interesting in personality cartoon characters and better overall cartoons.That is in no way knocking Woody, because many of his cartoons (primarily the earlier ones of the 40s to the early 50s, once Paul J. Smith took over in the late 50s onwards the cartoons became very hit and miss) are a lot of fun to watch and more and also still like him a lot as a character. He's fun and is a pest without being too obnoxious, and while he is not the insanely manic character of the 40s-early 50s efforts he is closer to that to the toned down subdued persona of most of the later cartoons.Gabby Gator doesn't always work for me, he has not always been interesting and his dumbness can be overdone, but here he's funny and his less-than-clever personality is endearing this time and doesn't go overboard with the silliness. He works really well with Woody and one of Woody's better conflicts for a while, and distinctively and reliably voiced by Daws Butler. Grace Stafford as always does a great job.Jack Hannah's involvement has something to do with it perhaps. He does such a great job with making the characters as strong as possible, while providing some of the funniest and most imaginatively gags of any Woody Woodpecker cartoons in a long time. While the animation is still a bit simple and rushed-looking in the drawings, the colours and attention to detail are vastly improved from most Woody Woodpecker cartoons from this period being much more vibrant and meticulous.The story is very predictable and could have done with a little more variety but the energetic pacing helps make it involving. The music is bouncy, energetic and very lushly orchestrated, not only synchronising and fitting with the action very well but enhancing it.Overall, surprisingly good later Woody Woodpecker cartoon. 8/10 Bethany Cox
boblipton This is an exceedingly strong late Woody Woodpecker, directed by Jack Hannah -- producer Walter Lantz had a habit of picking up talent on the run from other cartoon factories, and Disney was out of regular short cartoon production by this time. With a well-timed series of gags, good, simplified animation style and choice of bright colors, this shows what could still be done with a decent script and good talent.The story is fairly simple: Gabby Gator, voiced in Kentucky Colonel mode by Daws Butler, is starving. He comes upon a recipe for southern-fried woodpecker and writes Woody a fan letter. Woody shows up to perform an act and about the three-quarter mark, realizes what is going on, and proceeds to take his revenge.Although nowhere near the inspired insanity of the 1940s Woody Woodpecker cartoons, this is a good entry for the series at this stage.