Cannibal Capers (1930) Poster

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6/10
Primitive rituals
ackstasis5 May 2009
Here's a little treasure that's rarely been allowed outside the Disney Vault. When watching 'Cannibal Capers (1930),' one is faced with two options: you can be angered by the cartoonish racial stereotypes, or you can simply laugh, as I did, at the silliness of it all. Nowadays, most viewers are willing to dismiss perceived racism as "a sign of the times," but I think, particularly in this case, to do so is to do both Walt Disney and 1930s audiences a disservice. The caricatures of African tribesmen in 'Cannibal Capers' are so outlandishly exaggerated that they could only have been intended as a spoof, perhaps satirising the xenophobic generalisations that were admittedly prevalent in the popular culture of the time (and they're still around today, so don't feel too vindicated). This cartoon, in line with many of the earliest Silly Symphonies, simply chooses a setting and devotes its inhabitants to a few minutes of dancing: 'The Skeleton Dance (1929)' had skeletons, 'Hell's Bells (1929)' had scary imps, 'Flowers and Trees (1932)' had plants… and so 'Cannibal Capers' has cannibals.

A major theme of the cartoon seems to be the perceived "primitiveness" of the cannibals, as they are frequently mistaken – both by the viewer and other characters – for lower forms of nature. Or perhaps, less cynically, it's more a commentary on how harmoniously the cannibals exist in their environment. For example, we first glimpse the dancers by their stick-thin legs, which are initially mistaken for trees swaying in the breeze. Later, a cannibal attempting to imitate a turtle is mistaken for one by his own villagers, and is promptly tossed into the boiling pot. But this gag can run both ways. An angry lion (introduced with a stunning zoom into his gaping jaws) loses his crown as King of the Jungle, humiliated so decisively by a cannibal that he winds up more closely resembling a (white) man in a lion suit, fleeing on his hind-limbs. Is this British Colonialism getting nipped in the bud by the locals? Also note how closely the cannibals resemble the title character in 'The Ugly Duckling (1931),' reinforcing that cartoon's status as a racial allegory.
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5/10
Not One of the Best
Hitchcoc13 April 2018
I guess I'd have to ask why someone would do a cartoon featuring cannibals. They are portrayed as skinny little black men with wide mouths. I'm sure it was good fodder for all the racists in the audience. After a good deal of frolicking, an enormous lion shows up and all the "natives" scurry away. Except for one guy who hides in an enormous cauldron. I assume it's the one these guys use to cook their friends. The lion does everything he can do to eat this guy, but there are complications. Anyway, these kinds of portrayals were just too common in the early Disney stuff.
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6/10
Interesting, but not everyone is going to like it
TheLittleSongbird17 May 2012
Cannibal Capers was an interesting cartoon from a historical perspective, but over time not everybody will be enthused by it I don't think. The basic story is rather simplistic, the characters are stereotypical and the character features are outlandishly over-sized(though I imagine this was purposeful perhaps). However the rest of the animation is good with striking black and white and fluid backgrounds, and the music is outstanding, the string orchestration is especially rousing. The pace is crisp, and the action forming the cartoon is not really hilarious but skips along nicely with some niftily choreographed dancing.

In conclusion, Cannibal Capers is not for everybody and I have seen better and funnier Silly Symphonies but for a cartoon of that time it is an interesting look. 6/10 Bethany Cox
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5/10
A frightfully weak and average Silly Symphony that's sadly only really notable trait is probably that it has some very minor negative stereotyping.
Foreverisacastironmess12325 October 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Ew! Oh this is definitely one of those butt-ugly crude work in progress type Symphonies that has the ear-grating scratchy sound and dull as dishwater tone that's severely lacking in a cartoon's most vital ingredient, fun! Very rough work, not too much thinking outside the box with this one, by which I mean there's simply nothing to it beyond the meagre action on display moving in time to the music. And that's fine you know, the animators at this time were still honing their craft and getting it all together, and as the old saying goes you can't make an omelette.. The animation still is not very good at all though, that's my biggest issue with shorts like this. Calling it lush is just not true.. So the cannibals have black skin and big floppy plated lips, I still don't completely get why they must automatically get classed as racist creations, the logic of that seems a little backward and ignorant somewhere to me..Just what the hell were cannibals supposed to look like by the standards of 1930? I didn't like them either by the way, but it was only because they weren't either cute or funny. It did make me chuckle a few times when they introduced a touch of the macabre and bizarre into the plot, like when they mistake one of their own tribe for a tasty turtle, and when that one cannibal is playing the two skulls in his hands like maracas or whatever, and mostly when what must have been a very elderly lion enters the fray and disturbs the feast and scatters the cannibals, including a skull on a totem-like pole, and then when the lion is chasing the cannibal who was going to be eaten and he turns the tables by stealing the lion's teeth and chasing him right back, right into the boiling pot in some versions! So this short isn't a favourite of mine in this series, no sirree Bob, I find it dull as charcoal and it kind of looks the same too. Shorts like these are what I consider mere speed bumps on the road to the real quality lasting animated magic that this wondrous vintage series was truly capable of. Eegah! Back to the pot with thee!!
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7/10
Cannibal Capers
chefz223 March 2009
An interesting note from the audio commentary for this cartoon; as Leonard Maltin states, the cartoon is not so much of a racist joke again African natives, but perhaps a caricature of the Hollywood caricature of African natives.

Any number of movies and shorts from that time showed those from Africa as vicious savages in extreme forms. While offensive today, audiences at that time would have had a good laugh on such an obvious spoof.

All in all, remember that all of the studios at that time used these same gags and stereotypes. Disney's use of them is just more obvious since the studio is one of the few major long-term companies from this era that we can use as a reference.
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5/10
Exercise in Stereotypes
boblipton20 December 2006
The sort of line-drawing animation that is used in this Silly Symphony about cannibals in Africa is interesting.... a sort of animated line drawing, eked out a bit -- arms and legs thin lines, hands and feet big. But the modern viewer will be offended. The extreme stereotype of Blacks will offend the modern viewer, just as, doubtless, some of the modern images we hold to be normative will offend people three quarters of a century hence .... or indeed, now. All comedy, after all, is transgressive behavior at some level, but the line between amusingly transgressive and offensively so depends on viewpoint. Consider the Jew of Malta, Shylock and Fagin or the comedy act of Stepin Fetchitt. One of his stage acts was to sit in a chair and read a paper while one of his comedy recordings was playing.

But this one is offensive to the modern viewer and should be viewed purely as a product of its time. And should be watched and commented on if only to keep the reality that 'Uncle Walt' was an artificial construct, just as much as his cartoons.
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Hmmmm....
planktonrules18 August 2011
Before you can get to see "Cannibal Capers" and a few other 'special' cartoons on the "Walt Disney Treasures: More Silly Symphonies" DVD set, you are forced to watch an introduction by Leonard Maltin. He talks about the times in which they were made and how politically incorrect the films are. I am not against this, but hate how once you view it, you must ALWAYS view Maltin's speech again if you come back to any of the offensive cartoons. The same thing happens in some of the other Treasures DVDS--such as the second Donald Duck set.

When you see "Cannibal Capers", it's immediately clear why the cartoon was considered bad. The characters are all big-lipped Ubangis--and very stereotypical ones. My wife, oddly, thought they were ducks--though she might not have thought that if she'd seen the title first.

Yes, this one is offensive but it's also charming if you can totally divorce yourself from what you are seeing (huh?!).
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7/10
Good animation and some decent gags, but a marginal cartoon for the most part
llltdesq22 September 2014
Warning: Spoilers
This is an early Silly Symphony released by Disney, with elements which might be offensive to many. There will be spoilers ahead:

In some ways, there isn't much to say with this short, which is the case with quite a few early Disney shorts. The studio was still finding its way and a lot of the staff was basically learning on the job. If it weren't for the stereotypical elements, this would be quite forgettable. Apart from a few funny short bits and the best part of the short toward the end, involving a lion, this one's rather boring.

The characters are all natives, with the typical rubber limbs found in early 1930s shorts. The best bit other than the lion is one of the natives interacting with a turtle, using a shield to make himself resemble the turtle, which gets him into hot water (literally).

This short is available on the Disney Treasures More Silly Symphonies DVD set, in a separate section because of racial images which will undoubtedly offend some people. The set is worth getting.
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3/10
Weird and unfunny.
OllieSuave-00713 July 2018
This is a weird and humorless Silly Symphony featuring a bunch of dancing cannibals, who were about to cook one of its own, but then was interrupted by a lion.

An unorthodox and weird, plotless cartoon here that may not be suitable for all children. Not entertaining and not amusing.

Grade D--
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5/10
This film has gained a lot of notoriety recently . . .
pixrox17 October 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . with its inclusion with the Texas Elementary School Core Curriculum Syllabus. The single star (out of a possible ten) state also has lately adopted laws saying that teachers can be arrested for Felonious Accuracy IF they refer to Joe B. As U. S. President, mention that the Earth is not flat or state that the Sun rises in the East (obvious Chinese propaganda). Fare such as this kids' flick makes the Eyes of Texas smile with approval, because it allows the people that count to feel superior.
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1/10
Offensive
kaicesbr14 July 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Continuing my marathon of Disney shorts and again they are not available on Disney plus and I have to look for them on YouTube. Again watching for the first time. My God, what a poorly done and offensive thing, I am in doubt which was worse El Terrible Toreador or this one, both were mega offensive and poorly done. Just horrible, there's no excuse, "yeah, but it was another time, they had another mentality" even so it's horrible and if you defend yourself you're as bad as they are. Conclusion: infinitely bad. It becomes painful to marathon Silly Symphony when we come across something like this, I swore that the short films were much better that's why it was successful but that was exactly why it was successful.
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Values Dissonance Warning: Spoilers
To modern viewers, "Cannibal Capers" could be easily seen as something very insensitive and stereotypical. Personally, I consider it a product of its time. I'm sure that back then, this wasn't considered as something racist at all, and it was probably conceived as a harmless slapstick cartoon for children.

That being said, this short wasn't particularly memorable: The animation was way too simple (specially compared with the incredibly beautiful animated shorts which were produced by the Disney company just a few years later) and the gags weren't as clever nor original as the surreal shorts from the Fleischer Studios.

It wasn't something bad, but it wasn't anything great either. I guess that it could considered just watchable at best, but there are plenty of much better Silly Symphonies than this.
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