Barney Bear's 'Polar Pest' (1944) Poster

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7/10
Not the best Barney Bear, but fun in its own way.
llltdesq1 September 2003
Barney Bear was a fairly prominent character paterned after the on-screen persona developed by actor Wallace Beery. He was craggy, cranky and cantankerous with a secret soft spot that showed occasionally. At its best, the series was often excellent. The gruff Barney was a lot more interesting and entertaining than the "nice" Barney. He was certainly more in character. Here, Barney is visited by his nephew just when he is trying to settle into hibernation and scarcely in the mood for a visitor. The results are roughly akin to a convention of drunken Shriners on mopeds run amok in a glassmaker's factory-not at all pretty. Has many good moments and is a decent, though hardly stellar, effort. Worth watching and recommended.
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7/10
simple Barney Bear
SnoopyStyle21 May 2022
Barney Bear's hibernation is interrupted by his polar bear nephew from the North Pole. It's too warm for the nephew to go the sleep. It's a very simple Barney Bear premise and execution. It's a standard Barney Bear problem. Someone is keeping him from hibernation. It's interesting to have a polar bear nephew although they should definitely give him a name. He needs a name in case he could be a recurring character. This is generally fine.
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7/10
Barney and nephew
TheLittleSongbird4 November 2017
While not one of my favourite cartoon characters, Barney Bear was a very funny and likable character where his sluggishness was a huge part of his charm. He was also interesting for being modelled on both his creator Rudolf Ising (who also was his first voice actor until 1941) and the mannerisms of Wallace Beery.

After the previous cartoon 'Bear Raid Warden' was the first Barney Bear cartoon to not be directed by Ising, 'Barney Bear's Polar Pest' is George Gordon's second of three outings and while there's much better in the series it's pretty good. It's slight, even for a Barney cartoon, and if you are familiar with the concept of many of the previous cartoons you'll know where the cartoon is heading from the outset. While his nephew has his cute moments, Barney has had "pest" characters that are funnier and more interesting.

However, as to be expected, Barney is fun and adorable, with his personality yet to be simplified, and is easy to root for. The animation is colourful and beautifully drawn with fluid movements and meticulous attention to detail. The amount of detail given to Barney's character design was incredibly nuanced and it was a shame that it became simplified later on and lost its special uniqueness.

Music, courtesy of Scott Bradley, is lushly and cleverly orchestrated, with lively and energetic rhythms and fits very well indeed, even enhancing the impact of actions and gestures.

'Barney Bear's Polar Pest' may not be hilarious or original, more the odd sprinkling of amusing silly chuckles kind, but it has a lot of simple charm, is nicely paced and is all round pleasant to watch.

In conclusion, pretty decent but not one of the better Barney cartoons. 7/10 Bethany Cox
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7/10
What message does this brief cartoon offer . . .
oscaralbert6 February 2019
Warning: Spoilers
. . . to We Citizens of the 21st Century? In Today's Sad Reality, America is being looted by the Billionaires' Boys Club. Fire sales, bribery, self-dealing, and fraud are running rampant, as each new day brings another dozen attacks upon the USA. The most important fact to note about BARNEY BEAR'S POLAR PEST is that it emanates from the BBC, as noted above. This is the sorry lot that invented the Fake News, Revisionist History, and the "All the Lies that Fit--and then Cram in a Lot More!" approach to propaganda passing for "entertainment" with the deplorable misinformation feature, GWTW. So how does POLAR PEST fit into the BBC Big Picture? "Barney," the beleaguered brown bruin here, certainly evokes The Russian Bear, hunkering down behind that walls of the Red Commie KGB Kremlin hideout. His tiny-pawed "nephew" immediately brings to mind the Kremlin Bear's White House pawn. Since our once-great nation was founded, our national motto has proclaimed "Honesty is the Best Policy." However, is these dire days of governmental dysfunction queued up by the Reds, the slogan has been rewritten as "Nepotism is always Best," in keeping with the themes of BARNEY BEAR'S POLAR PEST.
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