The Mechanical Cow (1927) Poster

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7/10
Oswald the Lucky Rabbit in The Mechanical Cow is amusing
tavm11 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
The Mechanical Cow is the first Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoon I've ever seen. If the plot seems familiar, maybe because it's done by Walt Disney before he lost Oswald to the character's copyright owners and started his own studio to create Mickey Mouse. The rabbit gets waken by an alarm clock who punches him in the face. He then tries to wake the title character who takes awhile. When they're both up they ride into town and come across a hippo mother and baby. Oswald feeds the baby with a giant bottle he takes from the mechanical cow's "body" and, with a tube attached, siphons it to the baby. Oswald then visits his rabbit girlfriend and he shoos the cow away so they can be alone together. Moments later, the girlfriend gets kidnapped by some dogs (I think) and the cow comes back to help Oswald rescue her. They find the kidnappers who chase after them after the girlfriend is rescued. Oswald, the girlfriend, and the cow stop at a cliff and wait for the kidnappers to fall into a pit of sharks below before the rabbit, his girlfriend, and cow ride off into the sunset. The end. Amusing from beginning to end. If you're interested in Disney's pre-Mickey creations, this Oswald short is highly recommended!
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6/10
early Disney
SnoopyStyle30 September 2023
Oswald Rabbit gets waken up by his loud alarm clock. Now, he has to wake up his Mechanical Cow. They roam the streets selling milk. Oswald meets a girl who gets kidnapped out of nowhere.

This is Walt Disney and his Oswald the Rabbit cartoon. The Mechanical Cow idea is a bit weird, but it grows on me. I can take the surreal. It's just weird to have to wake up the Mechanical Cow. I also want Oswald showing how he makes the milk. It could be something imaginative like milking the Milky Way. The kidnappers are another weird idea. I like the design, but I don't know where they come from. I like the weirdness, but they need more work.
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6/10
Mechanical Oswald.
morrison-dylan-fan23 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Taking part in a poll on ICM for the best movies of 1927 I decided to look at shorts from the year. Learning of Oswald the Lucky Rabbit from taking part in other polls,I was very lucky to find a 1927 title of this rabbit.

The plot:

Rolling out of bed angry,Oswald decides to take his anger out on the mechanical cow sleeping in the next bed. Dragging the cow round town to give milk to the customers,Oswald's day turns sour,when thugs kidnap his girlfriend.

View on the film:

For only being the third Oswald movie made,director Walt Disney gives the animation a superb fluid quality,with the chase scenes being smooth and the characters being cleanly detailed. For the script,Disney dips into the in-vogue surreal transformation scenes,with playful,off the wall sight-gags on Oswald changing the parts of the cow making this short a delight.
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7/10
Most modern criminologists believe that this film . . .
pixrox115 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . was the inspiration for the so-called "Crime of the Century" back in the 1900's. A total loser later nicknamed "Lucky Lindy" got an advance copy of THE MECHANICAL COW from a friend in Tinsel Town, and used repeated viewings to keep awake during a haphazard flight from New York to Paris, as he detailed in a later best-seller, WE. With the idea of daring airborne kidnappers lodged deeply within his highly suggestible noggin, Lindy dwelled upon this implausible tale to an unhealthy extent. After THE MECHANICAL COW had festered in his head for half a decade, Lindy was primed to blame foreign outsiders for skullduggery the instant he killed his own tiny tyke via Shaken Baby Syndrome. Due to Lindy's totally unwarranted and unearned public popularity at the time, he probably could have got EVERY immigrant in the U. S. framed for his own failure as a parent, but he settled for frying only one fall guy in a desperate attempt to keep the Truth from outing. However, it did not take many dinner dates between Lindy and The Fuhrer for the public to realize that they had been completely bamboozled, and likely would spend all Eternity in perpetual torment for cooking an innocent guy.
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8/10
Early Disney, with Oswald the Rabbit
llltdesq16 December 2002
No doubt, some people believe Walt Disney started with a certain mouse and, in one sense, they'd be right-Disney started working more or less as an independent in 1928 and Plane Crazy, the first Mickey, was his first effort. But Disney actually did shorts for a number of years under contract, until Charles Mintz basically offered Disney a deal he had to refuse, that Mintz probably intended he refuse from the beginning. The character of Oswald the Lucky Rabbit was the principal character and series Disney was doing for his contract with Mintz, but Disney didn't hold the rights to Oswald and lost him when the deal didn't renew. Had the deal renewed, while Mickey would likely have developed anyway, the attention would have continued to be with Waldo and Disney would have taken a different road. Of such things is history made. Exit rabbit enter mouse.

As for this cartoon, it's a very good early Disney silent. Fairly good sight gags and good imagination from the animators to make the short funny even with no sound and the inherent limitations (and advantages) that lack caused. Good fun and you could see glimpses of the Disney touch. Well worth seeing. Recommended for animation fans.
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8/10
Yes, it is pretty weird...and fun
planktonrules24 May 2009
Warning: Spoilers
In THE MECHANICAL COW, Oswald has a robotic cow that gives milk. His rounds are disrupted when a gang of thugs kidnap Oswald's girlfriend and the cow and Oswald give chase. And, of course, there's a happy ending.

This is the third Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoon. During the first year the toons were made, Walt Disney directed the films. Later, when they became successful, Universal Studios rewarded Walt by threatening to cut his and the rest of the staff's salaries! No wonder Walt and his chief animator (Ub Iwerks) left and went on to make their own film character, Mickey Mouse.

This cartoon is pretty typical of the early Oswald cartoons in style--pretty simple black and white drawings, silly gags and a completely silent film. Later, sound effects and music were added to the films AFTER the success of Disney's STEAMBOAT WILLIE (1928). The version I saw did have the added sound. In many ways the film looks a lot like the early Mickey cartoons--the characters look and act a lot alike, have a girlfriend who is very similar and the gags are almost interchangeable. It's all very good for 1927.
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10/10
Creative and Hilarious
Damonfordham4 February 2008
For years, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit was an unseen legend known only to cartoon geeks who devoured animation history books (the fact that my father saw them as a child and regaled me with stories about them also helped). The rediscovery of these films prove that the acclaim about them is not merely the stuff of film folklore.

This episode tells the story of a robotic cow that serves as the heroic hare's "Cow Friday" (perhaps inspired by the sci-fi silent classic "Metropolis?"). The title character is quite sympathetic and the toon as a whole displays far greater character development and situation comedy than was typical of cartoons of that era. But this does not get in the way of the gags, which are quite plentiful and well done within six or seven minutes. Strongly recommended.
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8/10
Oswald the Lucky Rabbit and the Mechanical Cow
TheLittleSongbird14 March 2017
Despite Oswald the Lucky Rabbit and his cartoons being popular and well received at the time, they have been vastly overshadowed over time by succeeding Disney characters (like Mickey, Donald and Goofy) and those from Looney Tunes. It is a shame as, while not cartoon masterpieces, they are fascinating for anybody wanting to see what very old animation looked like and what Disney animation was like before Mickey arrived on the scene.

Following on from two good previous cartoons 'Trolley Troubles' and 'Oh Teacher', 'The Mechanical Cow' doesn't disappoint and in a way even better. Despite its very familiar and slight story, it has the craziness, wit and imagination of 'Oh Teacher' and amps it up even more.

Once again, the animation is not bad at all for a cartoon so old and techniques still in early days, it's crisp and fluid enough with some nice detail, sure there are some rough spots understandably especially with Disney animation becoming much more refined later. The added soundtrack and sound effects (the 1927-1928 Oswald cartoons being silent) add a lot rather than distract, actually improving the cartoon's impact and making things easier to understand.

The gags work very well, always ranging between very amusing and at times hilarious, the weirdness not being a turn off at all. Oswald is once more endearing and the title character is also fun.

All in all, another good Oswald cartoon. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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