Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1930


The Cactus Kid (1930 film)

Buy The Cactus Kid (1930 film) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




{{Infobox film

| image = The Cactus Kid title card.jpg

| caption =

| director = Walt Disney

| producer = Walt Disney

| story =

| narrator =

| starring = Walt Disney
Marcellite Garner
Count Cutelli

| music =

| animator = Norm Ferguson

| layout_artist =

| background_artist =

| studio = Walt Disney Studios

| distributor = Columbia Pictures

| released =

| color_process =

| runtime = 7 minutes 25 seconds

| country = United States

| language = English

}}

'The Cactus Kid' is a Mickey Mouse short animated film first released on May 10, 1930, as part of the 'Mickey Mouse' film series. It was the eighteenth Mickey Mouse short to be produced, the third of that year.

The cartoon's cast includes Mickey, Minnie Mouse as a cantina waitress, Peg-Leg Pete as the villain Peg-Leg Pedro, and Horace Horsecollar as Mickey's horse.

This short features a number of notable firsts and lasts: it is the first short with Marcellite Garner as the voice of Minnie Mouse; it is also the first time in a 'Mickey Mouse' cartoon that Pete has a peg-leg. It is also the last short animated by Ub Iwerks before he left the Disney Studio, and the last directed by Walt Disney for the next five years.

Plot



Mickey rides his horse up to a Mexican cantina, where he finds Minnie working as a waitress. He dances and plays the spoons to amuse her, but when he cheekily tweaks her nose, she becomes enraged, upbraiding him in Spanish and then pelting him with lamps and bottles. He earns her favor again by doing a silly dance and playing the piano. Peg-Leg Pete, an ugly ruffian, dances into the cantina and grabs Minnie's arm, taking some beer and asking her for a kiss. Mickey stands up to the bully, and they both draw their guns.

The lights go out, and Mickey and Pete engage in a spirited gunfight. Pete emerges from the cantina with his hands around Minnie; he jumps on his donkey, and rides away. Mickey tries to follow on his horse, but ends up dragged behind the animal, poked with cactus needles. Mickey finally catches up with Pete and jumps onto his moving donkey, then punches him in the face. Pete falls off a cliff and is squashed flat by a boulder. Mickey, Minnie and the horse wave goodbye to a two-dimensional Pete.

Production



This cartoon is the first to feature Marcellite Garner as the voice of Minnie Mouse. She says in 'Working with Walt: Interviews with Disney Artists':

Garner continued with the role until 1941, when she left the studio.

Peg-Leg Pete, who had been seen with two legs in 1928's 'Steamboat Willie' and 'The Gallopin' Gaucho', is seen with a peg-leg here for the first time in a Mickey Mouse cartoon. In this short, he takes the name Peg-Leg Pedro. Pete speaks for the first time in this cartoon, voiced by Pinto Colvig.

Horace Horsecollar appears in this cartoon, wearing his characteristic bowler hat, but he's still acting like a horse, and hasn't reached his final anthropomorphized form. He'll become fully humanized in two cartoons' time, in 'The Shindig'.

The is the last Disney short animated by Ub Iwerks before he left the Disney studio. It's also the last film directed by Walt Disney until his ill-judged return five years later with the Silly Symphony short 'The Golden Touch'.

On 'The Cactus Kid', animators worked for the first time to match the action to a prerecorded soundtrack, which allowed for greater synchronization than in previous cartoons.

The short used music from 'Espaa, rhapsody for orchestra' by Emmanuel Chabrier, and the chase scene was scored to Jacques Offenbach's can-can.

Mickey and Horace's chase scene reuses some animation from 'Sagebrush Sadie', a 1928 Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoon.

Voice actors



* Mickey Mouse: Walt Disney

* Minnie Mouse: Marcellite Garner

* Pete, Horace Horsecollar and Donkey: Count Cutelli

Reception



According to Ryan Kilpatrick of 'The Disney Film Project', "'The Cactus Kid' is really just a remake of 'The Gallopin' Gaucho', but it has some distinct differences that make this short very memorable... In 'Gaucho', Mickey is a swaggering bundle of bravado, who enters the cantina through the window, drinks a beer and smokes a cigarette. He's rough around the edges and grabs Minnie to dance, not asking permission. In 'Cactus Kid', however, Mickey enters through the door, after riding in on Horace Horsecollar. He meekly enters and joins Minnie in a song, not joining in the revelry with a drink or cigarette like last time. He plays music with her, and when he gets a little fresh, tweaking her nose, Minnie fires back, throwing plates at him. The old Mickey would have been more forceful, but this version of Mickey instead takes a couple of mugs that Minnie threw at him and uses them to do a Mexican dance, using the mugs as castanets. It's quite the change from the mouse who grabs the girl and forces a kiss like he did in 'Plane Crazy' and 'Gallopin' Gaucho'."

'Variety' (June 18, 1930) said: "For any house that wants to add novelty, comedy and a sure-fire audience-pleaser here's a pip rolled into six minutes. They don't get into the Paramount by mistake and Walt Disney and associates have combined pen and sound effects for beaucoup laughs."

'The Film Daily' (June 22, 1930) said: "Another of the first-grade cartoon comedies turned out by Walt Disney, and it's a pippin of the front rank. Sound effects are blended into the pen-and-ink creations in such a way that the result is sure-fire for laughs, to say nothing of the unique and unusual nature of the performance."

'Motion Picture News' (August 23, 1930) said: "Mickey is a cowboy in this and rides to a saloon to make love to a rodent senorita. The villain enters and there is considerable fun. It averages well with others of this popular series, and has a sufficient number of laughs to please most audiences."

Home media



The short was released on December 7, 2004 on 'Walt Disney Treasures: Mickey Mouse in Black and White, Volume Two: 1929-1935'.

Television



The short was shown on several Disney Channel compilation shows.

* 'Mickey's Mouse Tracks' (Season 1, Episode 31)

* 'Donald's Quack Attack' (Season 1, Episode 22)

* 'The Mickey Mouse Club' (Season 1, Episode 39)

See also



*Mickey Mouse (film series)

References






Buy The Cactus Kid (1930 film) now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1930



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1106325645.