The Worm Turns (1937) Poster

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6/10
Kinda good
CuriosityKilledShawn21 February 2005
Mickey brews up potion, in his mad scientist lab, to give super-courage and strength (the secret ingredient is Bravo Pronto) to it's consumer. He tests it on a fly, which soon beats up the spider who's web it is caught in. To make sure the potion is a complete success Mickey gives it to a mouse to in turn beats up a cat (they look soooo much like Tom and Jerry btw, odd since they weren't invented yet), the cat beats up the dog (Pluto) who then beats up the Dog Warden.

With such an inventive and imaginative plot I would have expected more laughs and more complexity. I'm sorry to say that the cartoon is only mildly amusing and has an abrupt and rather senseless ending.
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7/10
Mickey the mad scientist.
OllieSuave-0076 November 2015
This is a pretty fun little cartoon starring Mickey Mouse in a mad scientist type of role, where he creates a potion that makes characters beat up on their enemies: fly vs. spider, mouse vs. cat, cat vs. Pluto and Pluto vs. dogcatcher. It's like the cycle of life running backwards.

Not much of a plot here, and not much of a story. It's just lots of crazy action.

The animation was great, though, and I like the classical number used for the music score soundtrack.

Overall, it's not a bad cartoon short. You might get a few laughs out of it.

Grade B-
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6/10
Wow...Mickey sure is a jerk in this one!
planktonrules28 March 2020
As was always the case during this era, the artwork in this Disney short is gorgeous...second to none. The backgrounds, quality of the animation and vivid colors are something to behold. That being said, this is not one of the better Mickey cartoons as it presents a rather mean-spirited Mickey Mouse.

The film starts with Mickey practicing alchemy. He creates a formula that causes creatures to instantly develop nerves of steel and great strength...and lots of aggression. He sprays it on a variety of subjects and you then see them become macho and angry! But often Mickey seems to do this just to torment the animals...and it's inexplicable why he would torment Pluto later in the cartoon. Weird....and a bit mean.
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6/10
Previous film depictions of mad scientists . . .
pixrox122 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
. . . had enough practical common sense, basic understanding of cause and effect, as well as a respect for the fundamental principles of sciences including biology and chemistry, NOT to show these witch doctors' magic potions effective upon inanimate objects such as rocks, anvils and fire hydrants. But THE WORM TURNS brazenly violates the Laws of Mad Scientists 101, as the title rodent concludes his story by illogically enlivening said water dispenser with a spritz of his pink stuff. For the second time in a couple minutes, this reckless action against his own so-called "pet" Pluto shows what a Machiavellian loose cannon this mini rat always was, is and will be. When a mutt is a mouse's "best friend," this is not necessarily a good thing for the canine.
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9/10
Quite enjoyable!
OrangeSequins8 March 2023
"The Worm Turns" is a thoroughly enjoyable, classic Mickey Mouse cartoon from 1937. The story focuses on chemist Mickey Mouse, who is trying out his newly invented potion.

The story is actually very great; there are a lot of imaginative and creative ideas in the plot.

The animation is especially fantastic; the cartoon has a very well-developed, hand-drawn, classic western animation.

The jokes in the cartoon are worth mentioning - all of them are really funny.

In conclusion, this is a very creative and imaginative Mickey Mouse cartoon (Although not the best of them, it is still pretty great.)
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10/10
A Classic Mouse Tale
Ron Oliver25 January 2003
A Walt Disney MICKEY MOUSE Cartoon.

THE WORM TURNS as Mickey's magic potion helps smaller creatures gain the aggressive advantage over their tormentors.

Lots of fun in this very well made little film, which begins as a spoof of the old mad scientist movies. The excellent animation bounces the swift moving story right along to its crescendo - a confrontation between Pluto and dogcatcher Pete. For the record, the ingredients necessary for the Courage Builder formula are Tigerus Marrow, Spiritu Bravado, Stimuli Valorus & Lionus Tonicio. Walt Disney provided Mickey with his voice.

Walt Disney (1901-1966) was always intrigued by drawings. As a lad in Marceline, Missouri, he sketched farm animals on scraps of paper; later, as an ambulance driver in France during the First World War, he drew figures on the sides of his vehicle. Back in Kansas City, along with artist Ub Iwerks, Walt developed a primitive animation studio that provided animated commercials and tiny cartoons for the local movie theaters. Always the innovator, his ALICE IN CARTOONLAND series broke ground in placing a live figure in a cartoon universe. Business reversals sent Disney & Iwerks to Hollywood in 1923, where Walt's older brother Roy became his lifelong business manager & counselor. When a mildly successful series with Oswald The Lucky Rabbit was snatched away by the distributor, the character of Mickey Mouse sprung into Walt's imagination, ensuring Disney's immortality. The happy arrival of sound technology made Mickey's screen debut, STEAMBOAT WILLIE (1928), a tremendous audience success with its use of synchronized music. The SILLY SYMPHONIES soon appeared, and Walt's growing crew of marvelously talented animators were quickly conquering new territory with full color, illusions of depth and radical advancements in personality development, an arena in which Walt's genius was unbeatable. Mickey's feisty, naughty behavior had captured millions of fans, but he was soon to be joined by other animated companions: temperamental Donald Duck, intellectually-challenged Goofy and energetic Pluto. All this was in preparation for Walt's grandest dream - feature length animated films. Against a blizzard of doomsayers, Walt persevered and over the next decades delighted children of all ages with the adventures of Snow White, Pinocchio, Dumbo, Bambi & Peter Pan. Walt never forgot that his fortunes were all started by a mouse, or that simplicity of message and lots of hard work will always pay off.
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10/10
One revenger at a time
Starfiremyst9 March 2008
"The Worm Turns" is one of the best Disney cartoons I ever loved. It all begins with Mickey Mouse, dressed up as a mad scientist, puts the few finishing touches to the Weak Made Strong Courage Builder, a super strength potion that makes a smaller animal turn the tables on a larger animal. Now for a test, as Mickey says, he squirts the super strength potion on a fly, and the fly beats up on a sneaky spider for trapping him in his web. Mickey then squirts the super strength potion on a Jerry-like mouse, and after that the mouse chases a Tom-like cat and wrestles him (just like in a similar scene from a "Tom and Jerry" cartoon called, "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Mouse") for chasing him, and throws him out of the house, where Pluto is standing out there. Pluto then chases the cat into the tool shed. The cat gets scared of Pluto's digging, and his 8 lives went for cover in the roof. Mickey squirts the super strength potion on the cat's ninth life, then all of the cat's other lives went back into the cat's body, and the cat chases (and scares) Pluto out into the street after giving him quite a scare, where Pluto calms himself. But before he makes another move, Pluto gets caught by Kron (from the Disney movie "Dinosaur"), who, in Pete's role (!), is seen here as a dog catcher. After disposing of the dinosaur dog catcher, even with the help of Mickey's super strength potion, Pluto gets sprayed by a fire hydrant that Mickey squirts the super strength potion at it when he sniffs at the fire hydrant. This Mickey Mouse cartoon is available on the Walt Disney Treasures 2-Disc DVD, "Mickey Mouse in Living Color", along with the other Mickey Mouse cartoons from 1935 to 1938 including "The Band Concert", "The Brave Little Talior", and such.
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5/10
When this vintage "Mickey Mouse" cartoon finally reached . . .
oscaralbert21 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
. . . "Mother Russia," it clearly inspired a young "Mad Vlad Rasputin" to launch that weak failed backwater's fiendish serial attacks upon the far stronger nations of Western Civilization. Throughout THE WORM TURNS, a sadistic Mickey leers menacingly as he sprays a poison gas to inverse Nature's Way. The misguided WORM TURNS animators score their perverse jollies by brazenly defying God's Plan for our Natural Order. Mickey's spray is used at least three times against the Heroes of Modern Man to prevent them from keeping potentially deadly vermin such as insects and rodents in check. (Certainly Mickey, a rodent himself, seems to be modeling the perfidious Red Commie tactic of using internationally-outlawed Bio-Warfare to assassinate whistle-blowers and out-of-favor close relatives in quiet English villages or crowded Asian airports--no matter how many innocent bystanders suffer "collateral damage.") Rasputin is now a stink-crusted tail wagging the dog of Polite Society. Thanks to Mickey's ill-advised WORM TURNS outing, Rasputin's riled-up terrified base of U.S. "core supporters" is currently on the verge of quashing Prosperity, Well-Being, and Freedom forever in our American Homeland.
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10/10
Fantastic
TheLittleSongbird6 November 2012
I do have many favourites from the Disney shorts, and The Worm Turns is almost certainly among them. Here is some of the most inventive animation of any Disney short from the late 30s. It is colourful and fluid, and I loved most of all the facial expressions(cat's faces splitting in two, eyes bulging out until longer than body and heads getting squashed into the neck) and reactions of the characters especially with Pete when he is attacked by Pluto. The setting change from the barnyard is interesting too. The music, as I've said so many times that I'm starting to sound like a broken record, has always been a large part of the success of these shorts, and the music is really excellent in The Worm Turns. The gags are simply great, some are the same gag but done in clever variations right from what happens between the fly and spider, the cat and Pluto and Pluto and Pete(which is classic). The gag is simple, but not overly-so, and always involving. The characters are wonderful and each and every one of them show their comedic chops in some way or another. Mickey is more the bystander than the hero, but due to the fact that he is made into a mad scientist sort of character he is far from bland either. Pluto is the hero here strictly speaking and he is still the cute and energetic dog that we know and love and he also provides the funniest moments. Pete is as ever the antagonist, and the part where he got his well-deserved comeuppance from Pluto is the highlight of The Worm Turns. All in all, fantastic, though for a while I wasn't sure about the meaning of the title. 10/10 Bethany Cox
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4/10
Solid David Goliath tale, but eventually a bit repetitive
Horst_In_Translation26 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
"The Worm Turns" is an American cartoon from 1937, so this one had its 80th anniversary last year already. The director is 2-time Academy Award winner Ben Sharpsteen, then not yet an Oscar winner though, and don't worry if this name doesn't say too much to you, but if you read the names of Colvig, Bletcher and eventually Disney, then you will certainly know that what we have here is another Disney cartoon. This one's in color and runs for slightly under 8 minutes and it features Micky and finally Pluto too at the center of it. Seeing Mickey as a slightly mad perhaps scientist was a bit unusual for sure but as his potion works he is a bit of a genius. You could divide this short film in several very short films I guess depending on who takes the David and Goliath path in these segments before the next segment starts and usually we see some Mickey in these intermissions. Nonetheless, it did never feel really funny and the wit is also hurt by this one having a bit of a repetitive tendency fairly quickly. The hydrant ending was nothing special either. Looks-wise, it is of course once more top-notch for its time, but that is almost the only positive thing I can say here. This one does not really need to be seen and there is a lot of better cartoon material from that time. Watch one of the others instead.
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A tremendous effort went into these Mouse cartoons of the 1930s
Spleen30 March 2002
Look at the effects animation. Mickey pours just a drop of "bravo pronto" into his test tube, and it fizzes, bubbles, explodes, sputters, changes from one vivid colour to another - with each drop of the potion separately drawn and travelling in a convincing arc. Or look at the scenes in which the background moves and (in effect) EVERYTHING within the frame is animated - all without computers or even, in this case, rotoscoping.

Mickey plays a small part in this cartoon: he's just the brewer of a courage potion, which enables a fly to turn the tables on a spider, a mouse on a cat, the cat on Pluto, and Pluto on a dog catcher. His lack of screen time might strike the uninformed as good news. It IS, for this particular story, good news, since it means that Disney was quite content to assign his star character a supporting role without artificially expanding it - but remember that this cartoon dates from the days when Mickey was vital and energetic, rather than insipid.

The charm of this cartoons others like it is hard to explain. It's amusing at times, but certainly not laugh-out-loud hilarious; it's cute, but not particularly sentimental or deeply moving; the art direction is detailed and convincing, but shaky here and there; the story has a pleasing shape ... but it's not THAT great, is it? Yet the overall result is undeniably the equal of later cartoons that ARE hilarious, moving, exquisitely designed, brilliantly plotted. What does this have that so many other cartoons (including a number of Disney cartoons from the 1930s, although if you search you'll also find many that are just as inspired as this one) lack? Thoroughness? Sincerity? Something else I'm missing? Probably all three.
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