Bright Lights (1928) Poster

(1928)

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6/10
A bit lite in plot but quite enjoyable.
planktonrules14 June 2021
Oswald is smitten with Mademoiselle Zulu, a Josephine Baker-type exotic dancer. He's so taken with her that he tries to sneak into the theater repeatedly, as he has no money and is desperate to see her. Eventually, a leopard and some lions escape and mayhem ensues.

There really isn't much more to the cartoon plot-wise, but the jokes are clever, Oswald very rubbery and flexible (as usual) and the cartoon never bores...even nearly 100 years later. Well worth seeing.
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7/10
Bright Lights was a pretty amusing Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoon by Walt Disney
tavm15 June 2009
Just watched this Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoon Walt Disney made for Universal on YouTube. The previous poster mentioned some of the pretty funny gags that happened in Bright Lights though there's a few others worth noting like when the guard pulled the rabbit ears, those ears suddenly come out of Oswald's body with his legs attached to them! And how about when the rabbit literally hides under some heavyset guy's shadow to get in, or when he locks himself in a boxed cage before finding out a cub tiger is in there as Oswald manages to escape by shrinking himself down to size! So on that note, I recommend Walt Disney's Bright Lights.
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7/10
City Lights.
morrison-dylan-fan7 September 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Originally confusing the movies title for Charlie Chaplin's City Lights(!),I was happy to discover that this was actually an Oswald film,which led to me getting ready to see the bright lights with Oswald.

The plot:

Seeing a poster of "shimmy queen" Mlle Zulu,Oswald gets a sudden urge to see her perform in the nightclub.Looking at the bottom of the poser,Oswald is horrified to find out that there is a charge for the event,which he can't afford due to being penniless.Spotting a guest entering the club,Oswald decides to "shadow" him,and enter the club,in the hope of catching a glimpse of Zulu.

View on the film:

For the setting director Walt Disney gives the club an excellent seedy appearance,thanks to Oswald rubbing shoulders with large gangsters and suggestive shimmy dancers.Running at a surprisingly long 7 minutes,Disney keeps the film moving at a lightning pace,by having Oswald go from hiding the bouncers nose,to turning the club into a circus,as the bright lights shine on Oswald.
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Funny and clever as most of the Oswalds
Damonfordham4 February 2008
"Bright Lights," featuring the legendary Oswald the Lucky Rabbit (Disney's silent-era precursor to Bugs Bunny and Mickey Mouse) is a truly delightful cartoon brimming over with clever and imaginative gags.

The cartoon captures your attention from the very first scene. A brilliantly animated neon sign advertising "Mlle. Zulu's Vodvil Show" (the Mademoiselle is clearly a spoof of the popular Black dancer Josephine Baker-although nothing in this 'toon is racially offensive) and we see an animal orchestra in the theater jazzing it up and the Mlle. putting down some serious moves on the stage. The humorous hare comes in and tries to figure out a way to meet the dancer of his dreams.

Some really howl-arious stuff. The Rabbit even "accidentally" squeezes the Mlle. Zulu's booty in one scene (pre-code humor abounds in these 'toons). In one gag presaging the Looney Tunes (some of whose originators worked on this series), a guard at the theater smacks Oswald and he breaks up into group of Little Oswalds. When a group of lions go after the beloved bunny, their mouths open up to cover the screen in black. This cartoon is filled with such inventive and thoughtful humor that may be taken for granted today, but was quite innovative for its era.

Ordinariily, I'm not fond of most silent animation, but Walt Disney tended to distinguish himself from his contemporaries even then. The Oswald cartoons have been the stuff of legend among cartoon fanatics who for years have only read about them in cartoon history books (my own father, who was born in 1922 and died in 1984, told me stories of seeing the Oswald cartoons as a child and the funny things he did with his ears). I'm glad to see they live up to the hype and I hope that more of the 12 (13 if you count "Sagebrush Sadie" which partially exists in pencil test form) lost Oswald cartoons may someday be found.
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6/10
This film opens with an eye-popping sequence involving . . .
pixrox119 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . a sideshow burlesque dancer billed as Mlle. Zulu. Said female character is able to orbit one of her chest glands in a clockwise direction, while the other is swirling away in a counterclockwise aptitude. This bit of animation provides compelling evidence as to where the Dizzy Studio guys hung out during their lunch breaks. Residents of this our Modern 21st Century must take our hats off, or at list tip them, toward these Progressive gentlemen, who provided the tykes of their day with far more redacted three-letter S-word education than our Children of Today have in the entire state of Texas, by shedding some BRIGHT LIGHTS on feminine attributes.
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4/10
Oswald meets show business
Horst_In_Translation13 August 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Or at least that's what he intends to in this 7.5 minute black-and-white silent film. Little Oswald has a crush on a famous dancer and gives it his best to sneak past the security guard and meet her. What he really ends up running into, however, turn out to be a bunch of prey cats who were coincidentally at the same place like the dancer. Walt Disney made this one over 85 years ago during the very early stages of his career before rising to fame with his Mickey Mouse works. It is probably not as weird as most of the other Oswald cartoons, but sadly it's not funnier than these either. The ways in which Oscar hides in the shadows (in the truest sense of the word) or turns into many little Oswalds were still the funniest sequences of this movie. But the ending was really not too great I thought with all these lions. Not recommended.
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8/10
One of Oswald's best
TheLittleSongbird18 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.

'Bright Lights' is one of Oswald's best, perhaps the best up to this point of the Oswald series and a staggering improvement over the previous cartoon 'All Wet' which was watchable but somewhat of a let down. The only real faults here are the very slight story and some rather hectic pacing at times.

The animation is good on the other hand, 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.

Gags work very well, always ranging between very amusing and at times hilarious, like 'The Mechanical Cow' the craziness and wit is even more amped up from 'Oh Teacher' and particularly 'Trolley Troubles' and a lot of them are very imaginative. Easily some of the most inventive and funniest gags of the Oswald cartoons up to this point and perhaps overall too. Oswald is endearing and likable.

All in all, very good and one of Oswald's best. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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8/10
Clever Effort
Hitchcoc2 August 2018
The principle plot is simple. Oswald needs to get into the theatre where Mlle. Zulu, the shimmy queen is performing. He, of course, does not the fifty cents he needs to get in. The whole effort involves his using every bit of his ingenuity to get by a guard who practically kills himself keeping the erstwhile rabbit out.
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