Here's a
short and silent little underground animated treasure from the days of
yesteryear. As with our Sept 2013 Short Film of the Month Bambi Meets Godzilla
(1969) and our Oct 2016 Short Film of
the Month Bring Me the Head of Charlie Brown
(1986), copyright laws were
broken; and as with those films, no legal repercussions occurred. If Disney
even noticed the film when it came out, why give it the publicity of a lawsuit?
Made in
protest of the Vietnam War and originally on 16mm film stock, Mickey Mouse in Vietnam was considered
lost for years until it suddenly resurfaced on YouTube in 2013. (Just wait and see: If and when London at Midnight [1927 / surviving bits]
finally resurfaces, it'll be on YouTube.)
The one-minute short takes the famous slogan "Join the Army, see the world, kill
people" and redoes it as "Join the Army, see the world, die."
Originally
screened at the 1968 Angry Arts Festival, the creative force behind it
was [Whitney] Lee Savage (17 Dec 1928 – 6 Sept 1998), an American artist (see below) who went
on to do shorts for Sesame Street, and Milton Glaser, a designer best known for having created
the "iconic I ♥
NY logo". (As an "I ♥ Berlin" person, closer
to our heart is the less known fact that he designed DC's Bronze Age
"bullet logo" above.)
Two People (1964),
Painting by Whitney Lee Savage
Mickey Mouse in Vietnam isn't exactly
well drawn or masterfully animated, but then, it doesn't/didn't need to be to
get its anti-war sentiments across. As Milton Glaser
explains at Buzzfeed,
"Well, obviously
Mickey Mouse is a symbol of innocence, and of America, and of success, and of
idealism — and to have him killed, as a
soldier, is such a contradiction of your expectations."
As an added attraction, an old protest song
from Country Joe & The Fish:
from Country Joe & The Fish:
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