As for the music for this cartoon, it was Carl Stalling who did the score for this cartoon. Carl went to Celebrity in 1933 to do the music for this cartoon. He went to do music for all of the Ub Iwerks cartoons from ComiColor until 1936 when he left the studio and went to WB to do the music for all of the cartoons for the next 22 years. Carl Stalling was a great music director and you don't see his name in the credits.
Such beautiful painting. The music and singing, character design, colors and painting, etc all remind me of the work being done over at the Fleischers, although this particular toon, depends more on narrative, at least after Jack plants the seeds, than on cartoonal values (except the look of the characters). My favorite part was the beginning, in the household. Except the fate of the cow, whew, out of the butcher's frying pan into the fire of god knows what at the hands of that weird guy.
Ahhh, yes. Nothing beats the old-fashioned painstaking animation that UB Iwerks played a strong role in dishing out. How they made so many cartoons with such fine quality still remains a mystery to me.
ohhhhhhhh shit, i totally forgot about this!!! saw it first in 1991, but the tape has since become utterly destroyed. thanks so much for uploading a classic of my kiddiehood :-D
This cartoon was the first of 26 shorts for Ub Iwerks' Comi-Color series and it was released in November 1933. It was later released in home movie form in both 8mm and 16mm silent and 16mm sound, and it was distributed by Castle Films back in the 1940's. The version appears to be black & white and color depending on which version. If I might get an 8mm version of this on eBay, I might give it a watch. I wonder if the Castle Films version might exist somewhere if they have the Castle Films logo on there plastering the Comi-Color titles. The Castle Films version with titles is completely rare.
After Castle Films distributed this cartoon, it was later distributed by Blackhawk Films in the 1970's when it was released in Super 8 and 16mm sound with the original titles restored.
Me too. I got this in the mail yesterday. I watched it and it had the Castle Films titles which is kinda rare except the 1945 copyright screen in the end title, but you don't see these anywhere in this version. It's now uploaded on my other channel.
Lançamento nos EUA: 30 de novembro de 1933. Produção executiva: Pat A. Powers. Produção e direção: Ub Iwerks. Co-direção e layout: Shamus Culhane Co-direção: Al Eugster. Animação: Grim Natwick. Música; Carl Stalling.
Gosh, last time I saw this cartoon I didn't understand English and there weren't any subtitles, either. Not that I could've read them, anyway, since I was just 3 or 4 or something like that. Feels odd...
The thing that bothers me about the story of Jack and the beanstalk, is that hero got his happy ending by stealing private property. I means that's a terrible message for children. Because most people use fairy tales lecture kids about important life lesson, the kind that actually considered useful in the real world. The message I see, is that you deal with financial problems, the answer is to steal someone else's money. As a matter of fact, I take back that statement of Jack being a hero, a true hero never steals for himself, and the way Jack kept his spoils for himself doesn't make a hero, just a common theif.
+Andy Slaughter if you read the actual story and not this bastardization, which incidentally is totally un-PC, then you would know that the Giant stole all from Jack's father leaving Jack and his mother penniless. eye for an eye etc etc....
As for the music for this cartoon, it was Carl Stalling who did the score for this cartoon. Carl went to Celebrity in 1933 to do the music for this cartoon. He went to do music for all of the Ub Iwerks cartoons from ComiColor until 1936 when he left the studio and went to WB to do the music for all of the cartoons for the next 22 years. Carl Stalling was a great music director and you don't see his name in the credits.
I'm 20 and I remember these cartoons! I loved them as a child.
Such beautiful painting. The music and singing, character design, colors and painting, etc all remind me of the work being done over at the Fleischers, although this particular toon, depends more on narrative, at least after Jack plants the seeds, than on cartoonal values (except the look of the characters). My favorite part was the beginning, in the household. Except the fate of the cow, whew, out of the butcher's frying pan into the fire of god knows what at the hands of that weird guy.
Thanks for uploading this. I used to have this on VHS has a kid. I still remember it very well!
Sean Ó Briain me too
i can watch those all day
thank you
Aww hahaha ... This takes me back a few years ... Loved them an still do thanks 4 the share.
Jack, You are our hero.
bring back the classic cartoons!!! Cartoons nowadays suck in comparison to these
Ahhh, yes. Nothing beats the old-fashioned painstaking animation that UB Iwerks played a strong role in dishing out. How they made so many cartoons with such fine quality still remains a mystery to me.
Miss My Childhood!
ohhhhhhhh shit, i totally forgot about this!!! saw it first in 1991, but the tape has since become utterly destroyed. thanks so much for uploading a classic of my kiddiehood :-D
This cartoon was the first of 26 shorts for Ub Iwerks' Comi-Color series and it was released in November 1933. It was later released in home movie form in both 8mm and 16mm silent and 16mm sound, and it was distributed by Castle Films back in the 1940's. The version appears to be black & white and color depending on which version. If I might get an 8mm version of this on eBay, I might give it a watch. I wonder if the Castle Films version might exist somewhere if they have the Castle Films logo on there plastering the Comi-Color titles. The Castle Films version with titles is completely rare.
The best carton . I love it . Jack and the benstalk . Hahahahaha.
right in the childhood :')
After Castle Films distributed this cartoon, it was later distributed by Blackhawk Films in the 1970's when it was released in Super 8 and 16mm sound with the original titles restored.
neat cartoon, Walt Disney's one with Mickey was always my favorite
i used to worry my grandpa for this all day wen i was a kid... :)
Had this cartoon in 8mm black and white back in the '40s.
Me too. I got this in the mail yesterday. I watched it and it had the Castle Films titles which is kinda rare except the 1945 copyright screen in the end title, but you don't see these anywhere in this version. It's now uploaded on my other channel.
I still have that too.
long long ago indeed. back when cartoons didn't suck.
2:29
Special kid...
I'm such a sap for happy endings! :)
i have this on vcr somewhere
I have a version of this somewhere, but it isn't a talkie.
Did you know that this was the very first Comicolor Cartoon?
Lançamento nos EUA: 30 de novembro de 1933. Produção executiva: Pat A. Powers. Produção e direção: Ub Iwerks. Co-direção e layout: Shamus Culhane Co-direção: Al Eugster. Animação: Grim Natwick. Música; Carl Stalling.
I love cartoons 💋
اكيد هيك احلى من حكايتي..حبيتك تشوفيها...وحشتيني
تدوم المحبة ان شاالله 😊😊😊
Good.
What happened to all the good shows in Disney Channel?
7:37 Whats the song called ?
its alright
Gosh, last time I saw this cartoon I didn't understand English and there weren't any subtitles, either. Not that I could've read them, anyway, since I was just 3 or 4 or something like that. Feels odd...
مدري ايش تقولون لكنالله يسقي ايام زمان
Sultan Sheye منقول ولا شي 😊😊😊
@duncangray2011 it spells: faith.
stop at 5:29 and look at harp
LOL thankyou,i didn't see that at first
thats theft and murder jack is a criminal.
I watched it in sch
ool
LOOOL @4:00
Ok
The thing that bothers me about the story of Jack and the beanstalk, is that hero got his happy ending by stealing private property. I means that's a terrible message for children. Because most people use fairy tales lecture kids about important life lesson, the kind that actually considered useful in the real world. The message I see, is that you deal with financial problems, the answer is to steal someone else's money. As a matter of fact, I take back that statement of Jack being a hero, a true hero never steals for himself, and the way Jack kept his spoils for himself doesn't make a hero, just a common theif.
+Andy Slaughter if you read the actual story and not this bastardization, which incidentally is totally un-PC, then you would know that the Giant stole all from Jack's father leaving Jack and his mother penniless. eye for an eye etc etc....
3:55 "I like little boys" uhhmm..
Didn't really help that I thought the Giant's wife was a guy, at first glance.
The giant is a dick. Jack ftw!
poor giant. minding his own business when some thug burst in and robbed all his shit, and then gets him killed.
wtf at 4:00
👰🏼👼😇🌿
😈👨👩👦👦👨👨👦👦👨👨👧👩👩👧👩👩👦👩👩👧👦 👧🏿😦😸😲
que bosta
I DONT LIKE THE MICKEY MOUSE VERSION.
jjh';0