"A Silly Symphony"
Release Date August 22, 1929
Running Time 5:30
Synopsis
- A nightmarish graveyard provides the background for a quartet of
dancing bones.
Credits
- Director : Walt Disney
- Animation : Ub Iwerks
- Music : Carl Stalling
Music
- Edvard Grieg : March of the
Trolls
Videos
- United States
- Cartoon Classics : First Series : Volume 3 : Scary Tales
- Italy
-
Cartoons Disney 3
Laserdisc
- United States
- Cartoon Classics : First Series : Volume 3 : Scary Tales
DVD
- United States
- Disney Treasures : Silly Symphonies
- Disney Treasures : The Adventures of Oswald the Lucky Rabbit
Television
- The Ink and Paint Club : #4 : Disney Firsts
- The Ink and Paint Club : #55 : Oooh! Scary!
- Walt Disney Presents : The Story of the
Animated Drawing
Technical Specifications
- Color Type : Black and White
- Animation type : Standard
- Sound mix : Cinephone; mono
- Aspect ration : 1.33 : 1
- Negative format : 35mm
- Print format : 35mm
- Cinematographic process : Spherical
- Original language : English
Released by Columbia Pictures
Gallery
Click on the thumbnail for the full-sized picture
Comments
-
The
first Silly Symphony
- A short clip of this film was used in the 2007 movie "Ghost Rider" starring Nicholas Cage.
- From Jen Arko : I've grown up
watching Disney shorts, and I must say this classic remains forever the
epitome of the Silly Symphony and all subsequent incarnations! The
mixture of morbid and banal is marvelously done, and the animation
moves so naturally and so well to the music. My absolute favourite!
- From Jerry Edwards : Tom
Wilkins did such a good job describing the cartoon that there's no need
to add more description. This is one of my favorite Disney cartoons and
I consider it one of the all-time classics. The music and animation are
so strange - I can only imagine what the 1929 audience thought when
they first saw this cartoon, so very unusual and distinctive compared
to other cartoons of its time. I can't think of a better beginning for
a new cartoon series. I've always found the history of this cartoon
interesting. One reason for the wonderful animation is that Ub Iwerks,
Walt's main animator and minority partner at the time, animated the
entire cartoon almost completely by himself. This caused friction
between Walt and Ub, because Walt wanted to keep costs down by having
assistant animators do most of the animation. I'm glad Ub got his way
this time, since the animation probably would not have as wonderful.
- From Ryan : Here it is. The
very first of the "Silly Symphony" series. Now, I myself am not too big
a fan of the "Silly Symphonies", but this short wasn't too bad. I
remember first seeing it on "Walt Disney Presents: The Story of the
Animated Drawing." People must have been pretty fascinated to see
animation and music blended together in the early sound era. Some of
the animation was reused in a later Mickey Mouse short.
- From Laura McQueen : I saw
this cartoon when I was 5 years old and to this very day I still
remember it clearly. Ever since I was a kid I have searched all over to
try and find this awesome cartoon, but I always end up empty handed. I
am now in college and every Halloween I think back to when I would rent
this movie just for the occasion and be content in the little goofy
dances.Keep on with the great cartoons! It gets a perfect 10.
- From Amber Carrasco :
Whenever I think of Halloween, Disney's Scary Tale's immediately pops
into my head. My sisters and I used to watch this all the time, and it
got us in the Halloween mood! In fact, I don't think Halloween would be
complete without watching this short!
- From Carla Randle : I first
saw this little movie in the mid 1960s as a child with my younger
brother. We re-enacted it over and over again and still speak of it!
- From F. Alan Passmore :
"Skeleton Dance" my all-time favorite Silly Symphony! I am a fan of old
Halloween-themed cartoons, and this is the best. From the eerie
background of the graveyard to the funny choreography of 'dem dry
bones, it never fails to give me a thrill. A real treat!
- From Rich : Just take it from
me; Walt's story and direction, Ub's artwork (along with that of a few
other men), Stalling's music score. Pour into a mixing bowl (don't
forget to stir) , bake for five-and-a-half minutes, and you get the
combined talents of these young men (at least when they were young)
molded into this early Disney masterpiece. What makes this cartoon all
the more interesting, is that Walt Disney did in fact, do animation
work on this cartoon. It was the first cartoon he had done animation
work on in nearly half-a-decade, and this was because his ability to
draw was probably sometimes impaired by his dyslexia. Yes, Disney had
dyslexia. It's no wonder why his name was sometimes misspelled in the
credits of future films as Yensid Retlaw!
- From Melanie Ehrlich : My mom
taped this for me when I was five. I remember dancing around my living
room, imitating the skeletons, and getting frustrated when I realized I
couldn't sweep my feet like those skeletons. Now I'm fifteen, and I
have the same, maybe even more of an appreciation for The Skeleton
Dance now. I love it. What makes it so different from modern cartoons,
is that it's captivating without a definitive plot, or slapstick humor,
or even words. It's definitely a classic.
- From Angela : Absolutely
hilarious, I made my parents rent this so many times when I was younger
that I think I wore the tape out.
- From Baruch Weiss : This was
the first Silly Symphony and it was an instant success although one Los
Angeles theater declared "I can't recommend it. It's too gruesome!"
- From Jade : I love the
Skeleton Dance and could watch it year round. I give it a 10!
- From Chris Perdue : One of
the first Silly Symphonies I ever saw was The Skeleton Dance on the
Scary Tales video. I love the silly symphonies for the most part and
give this one a nine. I love the xylophone scenes and the ending scene
where the feet are out there by themselves and a skeleton arm reaches
out and pulls him in.
- From Twiggy : I have watched
this cartoon since I was just a little one, and to me, it represents
the sign of Halloween. Though I am not a huge fan of the newer Disney,
I love all the old spooky shorts what my father would show me and my
brother, such as The Skeleton Dance, The
Haunted House, Trick or Treat,
and many others that my dad recorded long ago. So I give it a 10, the
animation is great, the music is great, and it is a lovely toon.
- From Joulin : This is a great
short film. Ever since I was a baby I loved watching it! When I was
around 1 or 2 I use to dance around and pretend I was the skeletons.
Now I'm 16 and I still love watching it ... and sometimes dancing to it
too.
- From Happy : I love this
animated short! Every Halloween, as a little girl, my sister, my
cousins and myself ALWAYS entertained my family and relatives by doing
the dances. We'd do the dance like the skeletons did. I was always the
skeleton who becomes the xylophone and gets crumbled into pieces. My
favorite scene and part to act out was when the skeleton skips, ducks
and throws his head at the owl. The last time I saw this animated short
was some years ago on the Disney Channel over the summer.
- From Debby DePriest : I bought this for my daughter when she was 6 or 7, and as soon as I saw it I remembered it from when I was a kid. It's such a classic and just so cute, we'll always love it!
- From beajerry : I think this is the very thing that made Halloween my favorite holiday!
-
From Gijs Grob : The first of the Silly Symphonies and easily one of the best. Skeleton Dance deservedly even ranks among the best cartoons of all time. It starts spectacularly to begin with: we first see an extreme close up of huge eyes, which only after the camera zooms out appear to belong to an owl. The complete film is simple, yet perfect in its timing and its peculiar mix of eerie atmosphere and silly jokes. The animation is extraordinary fluent and the skeletons are convincing throughout the picture. More than in the earlier cartoons the animation and music are a perfect match. This cartoon singlehandedly puts Walt Disney, Ub Iwerks and Carl Stalling to the eternal hall of fame. A masterpiece.
- From Sam : I thought it was a great short. The first time I saw it was in the opening sequence of "Disney's Halloween Treat". Later, when I was younger, I saw it on the Disney Channel. Wonderfully animated and great music!
- From Julie Arsenault : It's amazing! I love it! Another great cartoon Halloween (my favorite holiday!) It'll give the creeps & the shivers and also a very chilling musical score by Looney Tunes' musical director Carl Stalling including "The March of the Trolls" by Edvard Grieg that'll keep you up 'til midnight.
I love when the two black cats fight on two gravestones; 'til they're scare out of their skins by the first skeleton to appear in the cartoon.
- From Mandi Licious : I absolutely adore this cartoon! It is amazing and brings back fond memories.
- From Christian : I remember that I used to dance along with the skeletons when watching it. I don't know how I got along with the impossible movements from the arms and legs, though.
Referenced Comments
- Little Red Riding Hood (1922)
- El Terrible Toreador (1929)
- Haunted House (1929)
- Monkey Melodies (1930)
- Mother Goose Melodies (1931)
- The Cat's Out (1931)
This cartoon is not as scary as many would think, all because this
was the first attempt of a cartoon not featuring a big-named character
(of course Mickey would be the first to come to mind.)
Start with some lightning, an owl's eyes close up, and a full moon
and you have the mood setting. After that, it's tons of repetitions.
The owl howls a couple of times in the wind while a branch, shaped like
skeletal bones of a hand, reached out to grab the owl. The clock
strikes twelve and bats come flying from the tower to your own living
room, then a spider pops out of nowhere. A dog howls (which could have
been the first sign to the creation of Pluto), cats tug on each other's
noses, and the first skeleton scares the fur off them. Of course the
first skeleton adds humor by covering the rest of his body in the
shadow except for his skull and crossbones, yet he flies through your
screen, lands on his little head and rearranges his bones in the
process.
The skeleton tiptoes through the cemetery, sees the noisy owl
(which actually scares him at first), then uses his head--literally, to
knock the fur off the owl. After he is done, four more skeletons appear
from behind the tombstone and proceed to pull off a pathetic version of
dancing paralleled only by Radio City Music Hall's Rockettes. (Some
animation of the skeletons dancing was reused in Mickey Mouse's "The
Haunted House" later that year.)
Two skeletons then take turns in pulling off a couple of totally
ridiculous gags. One stretches out while the other goes real short and
vice-versa, then one hippity-hops the other. After that, one skeleton
decides to take unannounced xylophone lessons by pulling the upper
legbones off the other skeleton and proceeds to play his bones quite
well.
The third skeleton, meanwhile, decides to do his best in scaring
the audience by moving his skull very close to the screen a couple of
times, then detaches his entire body numerous times without messing his
boney order up! The fourth skeleton then provides no assistance to
animal rights' activists by grabbing a cat and playing the violin with
the cat's tail playing the role of the string. Back in the cemetery,
the third skeleton continues his corny dancing by crossing his boney
legs numerous times, while the other two skeletons were still playing
xylophone tag, but the skeleton taking the beating was about to
reshuffle his bones, which the first eventually did after throwing him
to the ground as damaged goods.
Then, the first plot, albeit only 25 seconds worth. The rooster
crows at dawn, which scares the living daylights out of the four
skeletons. In the process, they crash and form a four-headed battering
boneram which led them to their casket, and all of them dived
in...leaving a pair of feet behind. Of course the feet were eventually
dragged in.
70 years of Silly Symphonies have gone ... yet this cartoon and the
series still live on, but in so doing brought the Happy Harmonies (MGM)
and Fractured Fairy Tales (Bullwinkle) and of course my sometimes
misdirected commentaries. But hey ... not a bad first try, Walt!
- Tom Watkins