


First Television Showing First television showing : March 4, 2000
Synopsis
Characters
Credits
Television
DVD
Comments
I liked the continuity in the short. The same shadows and music that introduce the short are echoed again halfway through when the nephews begin to get ther revenge. (Note also the television show that Donald's dummy is watching.) Continuity issues seem to be important in a larger sense throughout the show as well; note the houses that each major character live in are the same from show to show (Mickey's suburban house, Donald's ship, Goofy's trailer.) They never had that kind of stability within the classic shorts and does allow a bit more developement. But let's hope they don't go too far with it as it could get old after a while (as in Mickey, Donald and Goofy's workplace which is always the same building with a different sign out front. That seems to be wearing a bit thin.)
Back to the short. There are a number of bits that recommend this one. The mouse ears of Mickey's coffin for one. Another hilarious bit concerned Goofy's holiday celebration which I won't reveal because it's too funny a surprise. The whole short hangs together pretty well. Put this one together with "How to Haunt a House" and "Hansel and Gretel" and you've got a pretty decent Halloween show.
The pacing weakened when the nephews got to Goofy's house and started talking. Oh, I still thought that scene was funny, and I also enjoyed the following scene of Donald's scare. But the scare was damaged by big continuity gaffes over Louie's torn costume. But the short got back its tone from the first scenes starting when the nephews' shadows reappeared. (A very spooky scene: You saw the shadows but you never saw just where the kids were.) I didn't expect to see Mickey, Minnie and Goofy again. So I had a lot of fun seeing them do their scares on Donald this time. (It also felt good to see them help out the nephews.) The makers then knew that the gag about Donald's glued costume had run its course and ended this part of the short by ditching the gag.
The last part was signalled by the background changing from purple to fire red. With slouchy walks, yellow eyes and oozing mud the "zombie" nephews did look gruesome. Taylor played the nastiest renditions of "Mountain King" yet, making for an adrenelin-rushing buildup to Donald's ultimate defeat. And finally the last scene was an inspired way to connect Donald's scare to Goofy's holiday confusion.
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