The Lumber Champ

The Lumber Champ
Pooch the Pup series
Pooch meets the girl coonhound for the 6th time.
Directed by Walter Lantz
Music by James Dietrich
Animation by Manuel Moreno
Lester Kline
Fred Kopietz
Charles Hastings
Studio Walter Lantz Productions
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) March 13, 1933
Color process Black and white
Running time 8:02
Country United States
Language English
Preceded by The Terrible Troubadour
Followed by Nature's Workshop

The Lumber Champ is an animated short film distributed by Universal Pictures. It is the eighth of the thirteen Pooch the Pup cartoons.

Plot

Pooch (now having black ears) is a wood cutter who chops trees for the logging business. His boss is a tall husky cracks a whip at slow-moving works. While looking for trees to cut, Pooch spots his girlfriend, a coonhound, painting some pictures of the scenery. Delighted to see her, Pooch greets his sweetheart. They then sing the song "The Cute Little Things You Do"[1] and walk around together. Looking from a distance, the husky sees them and develops an affinity for the female coonhound. The husky snatches her with his whip and shoots Pooch from a cannon in order to get away with the girl. Eventually, the husky attempts to run over the coonhound with a locomotive, but his attempt is foiled when Pooch redirects the railroad tracks. At the film's conclusion, Pooch and his girlfriend embrace.

Notes

  • Pooch still looks much like his original design, although his white ears have been replaced by long black ones.
  • The animated trees in the cartoon bear some resemblance to Groucho and Harpo of the Marx brothers.

References

  1. "The Lumber Champ". The Walter Lantz Cartune Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 2011-05-14. Retrieved 2011-06-03.
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