Swooner Crooner

1944
7.2| 0h7m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 06 May 1944 Released
Producted By: Warner Bros. Pictures
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Porky Pig's egg faces production problems when a crooning rooster distracts the hens from their jobs.

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Director

Frank Tashlin

Production Companies

Warner Bros. Pictures

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Swooner Crooner Audience Reviews

Actuakers One of my all time favorites.
Beystiman It's fun, it's light, [but] it has a hard time when its tries to get heavy.
Senteur As somebody who had not heard any of this before, it became a curious phenomenon to sit and watch a film and slowly have the realities begin to click into place.
Jenni Devyn Worth seeing just to witness how winsome it is.
TheLittleSongbird I have loved Looney Tunes cartoons for as long as I can remember, and I could watch them all day if I wanted to. Swooner Crooner is just wonderful, and one of Porky's best for me. Porky is great value here, he can be bland when he is partnered with stronger characters but he is always endearing regardless. The animation is beautiful to watch, very crisp and vibrant in colour, while the music has so much character and nostalgic value. The songs are a treasure trove of old favourites, and are just a joy to the ear. Maybe the story is not the strongest one in the world, though it is an original one, but that doesn't matter in the slightest to me as there is never a dull moment and the whole of Swooner Crooner is relentlessly entertaining. The dialogue has freshness and wit, the gags are clever and imaginatively timed- the auditions especially are an absolute riot- and the caricatures of Frank Sinatra(the best one for me), Bing Crosby, Cab Calloway, Jimmy Durante, Nelson Eddy and Al Jolson are really fun to spot. Mel Blanc's vocal characterisations never disappoint, always a large part of why Looney Tunes cartoons work so well as a majority whole, and Swooner Crooner is no exception. All in all, wonderful and recommended with no hesitation. 10/10 Bethany Cox
Walt Mitchell I agree with most of the above reviews, but the one that appears just prior to mine (at least as I am writing this) has a glaring error! It was written by a man in England who seems not to have been paying attention to the plot, which he scorns! No, Sir, the hens are not laying piles of eggs because they are aroused by Frankie's singing! They are DISTRACTED by his singing and are NOT laying eggs! THAT's why Porky is auditioning other caricature roosters: To get the hens back to work! The auditions are a riot! Sorry that you, Sir, are offended by what happens in this cartoon. Wake up, Man--this is not deep Orson Welles stuff! Take it as the funny send-up that it is!
Lee Eisenberg In the only Porky Pig cartoon to receive an Oscar nomination, filmdom's most famous swine owns a farm and has the hens lay eggs all day - to the tune of (what else?) Raymond Scott's "Powerhouse" - but the hens get distracted by a crooning rooster. But when Porky hires another rooster to woo the hens back, the whole ordeal really turns into a battle of wits.An obvious aspect of "Swooner Crooner" is that it's truly a product of WWII, what with the clear allusion to Rosie the Riveter. But of course, they parody singers like Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra. Yeah, those guys may have been really popular in those days, but I just bet that most people in my generation believe that BC and FS deserved to get mocked as brutally as possible.OK, so I don't know whether or not I can speak for every member of my generation. But I can say that this is a really funny cartoon. It got included in Leonard Maltin's "Bugs and Daffy: Wartime Cartoons".
slymusic Directed by Frank Tashlin, "Swooner Crooner" is an excellent Warner Bros. cartoon that takes place at a chicken farm/factory. The proprietor is Porky Pig, but he's not really the star of the picture. All of his hens are defense workers doing their part for the war effort; they show up to work every morning with their badges & lunch pails and punch in their time cards. Their job is simple: to lay eggs while being transported on a conveyor belt. But when a debonair popular-singing chicken arrives, the "young ladies" all leave their posts in order to become entranced by this one-of-a-kind hypnotist ("It's Frankie!!!"). The hens' "absenteeism" stops the whole operation, and Porky panics...until another vocalizing chicken named Bing shows up.My favorite moments from "Swooner Crooner" include the following. Aside from the excellent caricature of the Bing Crosby chicken (Hawaiian shirt, hat, pipe, & voice), there are several well-made caricatures of other chickens that Porky auditions before he meets Bing: Nelson Eddy (singing "Mommy's Little Baby Loves Shortening Bread"), Al Jolson (singing "September in the Rain"), Jimmy Durante (singing "Lullaby of Broadway"), and Cab Calloway (singing "Blues in the Night"). Frankie's emaciated body disappears behind the microphone stand as the hens all scream in ecstasy, and the popular standard "As Time Goes By" causes all the hens to happily faint. Upon hearing Bing's vocalizations, one hen lays such a gigantic mountain of eggs that her henhouse actually rises upward on top of the egg structure! "Swooner Crooner" may not exactly be the quintessential Hollywood caricature cartoon, but no matter; the chicken caricatures are quite good, and the songs are memorable. This cartoon is on Disc 2 of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 3, and for an added bonus, treat yourself to a very interesting audio commentary by music historian Daniel Goldmark.