Note : credits verified through opening screenshot
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From Taylor Kerekes : This was a wonderful short, and did a great job of being good and interesting. One part that liked was Donald and Daisy sitting at the dinner table, looking at each other lovingly. I think Daisy looked prettier in her red dress than in her blue dress. The narrator had a good voice while telling the story. I dislike the part when Donald opens Daisy door, someone squirts water at him.
From Danny Paulson : One of the all time best of Donald Duck. A Ten! Geared more to adults than kids...the story of Daisy "catching her man" and marrying Donald and Donald's nightmare of married life really begins! A great parody/spook/satire on married life.
From Kenneth : This is a great short. But, since this short was directed by Jack Kinney, It's not very hard to Imagine Goofy in place of Donald here. Donald does seem somewhat out of place here as a harried husband and Regular suburbanite, Kind of like Just about any Goofy Cartoon from the 50's. Jack Hannah was probably doing another project so he couldn't direct this cartoon. Also Donald's Last cartoons (How to Have an Accident at Work, Donald in Mathemagic Land, The Litterbug, Steel and America, Donald's Fire Survival Plan) seem to follow a Goofy-esque Mold too, But by then, Jack Hannah left Disney to go work for Walter Lantz (thus Ranger Willoughby). I especially like the end of this short.
From Candy : I love this cartoon. It's one of the last Donald Duck cartoons they made at the Studio. In this last cartoon, Donald finally marries Daisy. It's similar to an old Mickey Mouse cartoon where he dreams that he marries Minnie and they have a ton of kids. As a woman, I find it kind of funny that both of these cartoons portray marriage from the man's point of view, not from the woman's. There's a scene where Donald tries to sneak out of the house and Daisy grabs him by the neck and puts him in the stocks so he will do the dishes. He goes to read his paper and she takes his chair and tells him to take out the garbage. I don't know of any man alive who enjoys taking out the garbage. It's very interesting that Donald's experience of a bad marriage with Daisy involves being forced to do the housework like a slave. Who was the one who traditionally did all the housework? The wife, of course. When the man has to do the work he doesn't like it. He feels like he's being treated like a slave. But it's perfectly okay for him to expect his wife to do it. After all, housework is woman's work, isn't it? Yeah, I'm being sarcastic. This cartoon illustrates the classic double standard. Men were expected to go to work and women were expected to do housework and take care of the kids. There was a distinct division of labor.
I also liked the more adult-oriented humor of the cartoon. In one scene, Daisy notices that her engagement ring has made her finger turn green, a sign that it is a cheap ring. I didn't understand this part until I asked my mother about it. It's not something that a kid would understand. I was a teenager when I first saw the cartoon, and I didn't understand it then, either. Maybe teenage girls in the 50s would understand this joke. There's other grown-up jokes in it, like a group of sailors waving good-bye to Daisy as she leaves the church after her wedding. This was kind of racy for a Disney cartoon. It suggested that Daisy had been promiscuous in her youth. Daisy Duck had been a loose woman! How did that scene get past Walt?
From Baruch Weiss : I first saw this short on a home video called "Starring Donald and Daisy." Out of the 3 cartoons on that video this one was my favorite because of the music.
From Trae Robinson : Daisy's voice sounded really different in this cartoon. She sounds like one of those classic movie actresses. This is also her last appearance and Huey, Dewey and Louie's last appearance.