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Mr. Bug Goes to Town
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Two years after the release of Gulliver's Travels, the Fleischer brothers produced Hoppity Goes to Town, their second feature-length cartoon. The film is based in Bugtown, an insect community, and the insects that populate the picture are a sort of melting pot of the bug world. There is Hoppity the grasshopper, who is the dreamer of the bunch; Mr. Bumble the bee, who operates the honey shop, and his daughter Honey Bee, who loves Hoppity; C. Bagley Beetle, the ruthless businessman who plots against his own community for his personal greed; Smack the mosquito and Swat the fly, Mr. Beetle's comic-relief henchmen; and little Buzz, a young bee and a member of the Bee Scouts. The insects live in their isolated world, forever in dread of the increasing encroachment of the humans, but their world is shattered when their protective fence is knocked down and the humans begin making more and more excursions into their area and destroying their homes. Mr. Beetle sees this as his opportunity. He lives in what he believes to be a safe zone and wants Honey for his wife, so he continually pressures Mr. Bumble to let him marry Honey in exchange for moving Bumble into the safer area. But Hoppity has his own plans. Convinced that there are greener pastures elsewhere, he embarks on a journey with Bumble to the big house on the hill, the home of a struggling young songwriter named Dick Dickens and his wife, Mary. Hoppity and Bumble decide that the Dickens' garden is an insect utopia, and try to convince their community to abandon their homes and start fresh. Ultimately, Hoppity and Mr. Beetle must battle not only for control of Bugtown, but also for Honey's heart, and there are some songs by Hoagy Carmichael and Frank Loesser along the way. Hoppity Goes to Town was originally released under the title Mr. Bug Goes to Town. ~ Bob Mastrangelo, All Movie Guide
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All Movie Guide
lost interest.
More than 50 years before either Antz or A Bug's Life, the Fleischer brothers made Hoppity Goes to Town, an animated feature that imagines a sophisticated community of insects. A significant improvement over the Fleischer's first feature, Gulliver's Travels, Hoppity Goes to Town still falls short of its potential, but largely succeeds because it tosses aside the literary pretensions of its predecessor and goes for laughs. Hoppity Goes to Town covers the sort of ground that one would expect from its premise, re-creating the human world on a smaller scale, with the bugs improvising in ingenious ways. The film's low-budget is obvious at times, and the sloppy writing does not help matters. But Hoppity Goes to Town shows that the studio learned from the mistakes it made on Gulliver's Travels. The animation is much more consistent, there is more comedy and fewer songs, the characters are more interesting, and there is less of a feeling of trying to mimic Disney and more of a sense of creating an animated feature in the Fleischer mold. While not as creative as it should have been, the film stays true to its central theme: the devastating impact of human expansion on the insect world (and, by inference, on the animal kingdom and nature). To top things off, there are also two stirring sequences: the disruption of Honey and Mr. Beetle's wedding by the arrival of the construction crew, and the insects' scaling of the skyscraper, avoiding death at the hands of the oblivious construction crew all along the way. Hoppity Goes to Town illustrates that a little studio without the resources or, frankly, the extensive talent of the Disney studio, was still able to turn out a cartoon feature that succeeds on its own terms. ~ Bob Mastrangelo, All Movie Guide
 

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