Rooty Toot Toot (1952)
Filed under: Animation, 1950s, Jazz, John Hubley, Racial representation, United Productions of America (UPA),
Rooty Toot Toot
Directed by: Producers:John Hubley
Animated by:Tom McDonald
Phil Monroe
Music by:Paul Moore
Studio:United Productions of America (UPA)
Columbia Pictures
Release date:24/06/1951
Running time:8 min
Color process:Technicolor
Synopsis
>This cartoon depicts with transfiguring lines and shapes a courtroom-style musical drama. Characters are called up to the stand, each telling their side of the story, flashing back to each scene punctuated by the musical script.
The opening sequence voice-over essentially sings the plot to us, a crime of passion, brilliantly using percussions and instrumentation to convey emotional tone. The scene of the crime is restaged in different colours repeatedly for the audience, the floating issue of race subtly expressed by the rough colour-block style.
In the lawyer’s rhetoric fiercely defending Frankie, the accused, the sexualized jealous woman previously dressed in red with brown colouring appears apparently bleached in his depiction as he tries to convince the jury of her innocence and purity. Frankie is saved by her lawyer with an implied romantic interest, but as she sees him leaving with Nelly Bligh, the original ‘other woman’, Frankie shoots the lawyer thrice and is subsequently punished. This transgression of sexual jealousy and passion transforms the character from a malignant, fiery red and brown figure, into a blackened shadow, as she is put into jail, tamed.
References:
IMDb. “Rooty Toot Toot”. IMDb, https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0043980/?ref_=ttfc_fc_tt.