Katnip Kollege

Katnip Kollege

1938 ""
Katnip Kollege
Katnip Kollege

Katnip Kollege

5.8 | NR | en | Animation

At the Katnip Kollege, we see a roomful of cats taking a course in Swingology. Everyone swings except Johnny, who can't cut it and has to sit in the dunce chair. Miss Kitty Bright tells him to look her up when he learns how to swing. Finally, listening to the pendulum clock at night, Johnny gets the beat. He rushes out to where everyone is playing and sings "Easy As Rollin' Off a Log" to Kitty Bright. She joins in; he grabs a trumpet for an instrumental break, with the complete band. They both fall off a log; she covers him with kisses.

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5.8 | NR | en | Animation , Comedy , Music | More Info
Released: June. 11,1938 | Released Producted By: Warner Bros. Pictures , Leon Schlesinger Productions Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

At the Katnip Kollege, we see a roomful of cats taking a course in Swingology. Everyone swings except Johnny, who can't cut it and has to sit in the dunce chair. Miss Kitty Bright tells him to look her up when he learns how to swing. Finally, listening to the pendulum clock at night, Johnny gets the beat. He rushes out to where everyone is playing and sings "Easy As Rollin' Off a Log" to Kitty Bright. She joins in; he grabs a trumpet for an instrumental break, with the complete band. They both fall off a log; she covers him with kisses.

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Cast

Johnnie Davis , Mabel Todd

Director

Art Loomer

Producted By

Warner Bros. Pictures , Leon Schlesinger Productions

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Reviews

Vimacone By the late 1930s, the Schlesinger studio had phased out plugging popular tunes in favor of broad comedy. This short was probably one of the last of its kind to feature popular tunes as opposed to aiming for comedy.Like most musical cartoons, the featured songs were lifted from recent WB features. Let That Be A Lesson To You came from HOLLYWOOD HOTEL (1937), As Easy As Rolling Off A Log is briefly heard in OVER THE GOAL (1937). The trumpet solo is directly taken from the latter films soundtrack. Johnnie Davis, who sang and performed a trumpet solo in the aforementioned films, does the voice of the bespectacled cat. His meek design is in contrast to Davis' actual handsome appearance. The college setting of OVER THE GOAL was probably an inspiration. Maybel Todd, who sang a part in the Let That Be A Lesson To You number in HOLLYWOOD HOTEL, voices Kitty Bright.For a Cal Dalton short, this is a very handsome effort. A good quintessential late 1930s WB short with catchy jazz numbers. Be sure to check out the films where the musical numbers originated. Although I have yet to hear a full recording of As Easy As Rolling Off A Log.
Edgar Allan Pooh . . . KATNIP KOLLEGE KUTUPS, and you get to the three-letter title abbreviation that sums up this Jim Crow Era animated short's homogeneous student body: KKK. It's fascinating that the infamous Looney Tunes Forbidden Eleven consists entirely of cartoons black-marked for their Sins of Commission (that is, caricaturing racial stereotypes prevalent in their day), and NOT ONE of the blacklisted shorts is tarred with the same brush for a Sin of Omission (which KATNIP KOLLEGE, with its Groupspeaking Gathering of Suburban White Kids--I mean, Kits, would be a leading candidate for Prohibition by the Self-Appointed Thought Police). It's truly sad that some cerebral runt of the litter at Warner Bros. gets to play the God of Political Correctness, and no one's marching in the street toting "All Cartoons Matter!" picket signs protesting against this anonymous Czar of Good Taste. Since it's so well known that "one person's trash in another's treasure," exactly WHY is Warner Bros. suppressing the work of mostly dead people? (The few crew members still alive when the ban went into effect pointed out that they were so PC in Real Life none of them had ever paid a nickel to see a Clippers game!)
suchenwi I wouldn't call this a perfect film, or spend any effort to obtain it by itself, but if you get it anyway (in my case, as part of the Warner Night at the Movies extra suite on the Adventures of Robin Hood 1938), it provides decent, if somehow museum-like entertainment, and contributes to the viewer feeling like back in 1938 (the included newsreel reports that Hitler has annected Austria). Colors look a bit faded, humor is not worth mentioning, but the swing music was pleasant to me.And that Kitty girl moved nicely lasciviously, though Betty Boop was better at that :^)
slymusic "Katnip Kollege" is a delightful Warner Bros. musical cartoon. The plot involves a swingology class at Katnip Kollege, where all the "young cats" go to study one of my favorite subjects: how to swing! Every student in the class does a fine job of singing, clapping, dancing, and playing instruments to a tireless swinging jazz groove! That is, every student except one bespectacled cat named Johnny, who is so terrible at swinging that his classmates ridicule him, and his professor declares him to be a dunce. At the end of the school day, as all the other cats swing their way into the night, Johnny stays after school and listens to the ticking of a clock, which ultimately kicks off a tempo for him, and he finally understands how to swing! Showing off his newly-acquired skill, Johnny becomes the star of the evening as he wins the respect of his classmates and the affections of a spunky gal named Ms. Kitty Bright.My favorite moments from "Katnip Kollege" include the following. During the opening shot of the classroom before the professor arrives, Johnny quite humorously stands out from the rest of his classmates as he cannot even clap his hands in time to the beat. The professor has a Bing Crosby-type voice as he swings his rhymed speech while calling on different students to give their swinging recitations. And how could I not mention the wonderful jazz music that fills this entire cartoon? In closing, here is one final interesting observation that relates to "Katnip Kollege." Dave Brubeck, one of my favorite jazz pianists/composers, wrote a tune in 1955 titled "The Duke" as a homage to one of the greatest composers/bandleaders/pianists of the 20th Century: Edward Kennedy "Duke" Ellington. Decades later, when an interviewer asked Brubeck how he actually went about writing the tune, Brubeck replied, "Just think of windshield wipers." As Brubeck was driving his car on a rainy day, the motion of the wipers ultimately kicked off a tempo for him!