Although Walt Disney once called Ub Iwerks 'the greatest animator in the world', I'm not a fan of his solo productions, made mainly in the 30's between periods with Disney. With this one I had to make an exception though, and give it a mention, simply because it is one of the most genuinely disturbing cartoons I've ever seen.
Despite the gay, colourful beginning, complete with balloon versions of Laurel and Hardy, and Charlie Chaplin, and the presence of plenty of gags, this film would give Tim Burton nightmares. In this world, people are manufactured out of latex, inflated with air and come to life. Two children disregard the warnings of one of the adults about how they're just air, and one little prick could destroy them, and they go outside into the forest. Here they meet the evil Pincushion Man, a macabre, sadistic figure whose waist area is composed of a pincushion filled with needles, which he uses to basically murder the balloon inhabitants of the forest, and eventually the town, once he finds hs way inside.
You know how fairy tales used to be actually scary? People being baked in ovens and things like that? This is the real deal, made 70 years ago. It was probably considered light entertainment in 1935. To me in 2005 it's up there with 'Evil Dead', despite the fact that all ends well.
Several others of Iwerks' 'ComiColor' cartoons have a similar unsettling effect on me, but this one takes the cake. I keep this DVD in the spare room. I don't want to think about it too much. As a piece of macabre surrealism this thing deserves three stars. Iwerks, BTW, is the guy who was mainly responsible for the first Mickey Mouse cartoon.
Three stars. An 'enjoyable romp'. Maybe for Hannibal Lector.