Dumb Like a Fox
Dumb Like a Fox
| 07 January 1964 (USA)
Dumb Like a Fox Trailers

Woody and Fink Fox are teamed up as buddies roaming the Western Plains.

Reviews
ThedevilChoose

When a movie has you begging for it to end not even half way through it's pure crap. We've all seen this movie and this characters millions of times, nothing new in it. Don't waste your time.

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Frances Chung

Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable

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Beulah Bram

A film of deceptively outspoken contemporary relevance, this is cinema at its most alert, alarming and alive.

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Celia

A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.

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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 are a lot of fun to watch and more and also still like him a lot as a character. The good news is that 'Dumb Like a Fox' is one of the better 1963 Sid Marcus-directed Woody Woodpecker cartoons. The not so good news is that it's still a not particularly good cartoon. It does prove to me that Woody at this point was well past his glory days and that Walter Lantz Studios had run out of ideas long before, evidenced in tired and repetitive situations, toning Woody's personality down, animation limitations, very variable opponents and even more hit and miss humour. The music and voice work were pretty much the only things that were near-consistently good.Starting with the good things, the music is bouncy, energetic and very lushly orchestrated, not only synchronising and fitting with the action very well but enhancing it. There is the occasional bout of energy and amusing moment, and the vagabonds are amusingly dumb.Voice acting is solid. Grace Stafford in particular continues to prove why she was the best voice actor for the character and the one that understood him the most.However, more could have been done with the fox character, has moments but not one of Woody's most interesting or funniest supporting characters overall and seemed underused. Woody's personality once again is dulled down and nothing like when he was in his prime in the 40s all the way through to the mid-50s, his material isn't fun enough being too derivative and he doesn't even have enough to him to be a pest let alone manic.Generally there is a lack of energy once again, this is fairly routine as far as Woody Woodpecker cartoons go rather than the original manic energy and it all feels very safe when early and prime Woody Woodpecker took risks.Laughs are too far and between, being lacklustre in timing, lacking wit and that there aren't enough (the most amusing, and they're only mild really, are with the vagabonds) of them. Very little is done to give freshness to a very formulaic story heavy in repetition.Just as problematic is the animation quality. Time and budget constraints shows in a lot of the animation, which is very rushed looking in the drawing and detail wise it's on the simplistic and careless side like many of Woody's cartoons from this period continuing through to the 60s.To conclude, one of Marcus' better 1963 Woody Woodpecker cartoons but not great. 5/10 Bethany Cox

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