Pros: Historic and fun animated shorts
Cons: Donald occasionally becomes the aggressor
The Bottom Line:
Donald mean at times
But collection is still fun
For fans of the duck
Volume 2 Puts Donald in World War II
It's no surprise that The Chronological Donald Volume 2 picks up exactly where the first volume in the Walt Disney Treasures series
left off. This two disc set contains 32 cartoons from 1942 to 1946 starring the
excitable Donald Duck in all his glory.
Since Disney was so involved in the war effort, it's not too
surprising that a section of these cartoons are directly related to the war.
Disc one has 8 cartoons made as propaganda during the time. These shorts were
all originally released in the Disney at War set a few years ago, but it is
nice to have them again for Donald fans who may have missed that tin. The most
obviously political is "Der Fuehrer's Face," which finds Donald
dreaming he is living in Germany
under Hitler. Frankly, I find this one chilling even today. While that one and
"Commando Duck" do engage in stereotypes, most of the war shorts
don't. In fact, most of them find Donald dealing with every day life in the
Army. You know, such things as 100 mile marches in "Fall Out - Fall
In" and learning to parachute in "Sky Trooper." My favorite of
the war cartoons is "The Vanishing Private" which finds Donald
accidentally coated with vanishing paint and getting revenge on his commanding
officer.
Even though the rest of the cartoons here aren't related to
the war effort directly, a few are obvious products of their time.
"Donald's Tire Trouble" finds Donald complaining about the poor tires
of the day since rubber was being used for the war. Another such cartoon finds
Donald making a plane out of plastic. Unfortunately, "The Plastics
Inventor" discovers that plastic melts in the rain.
Most of these shorts just find Donald doing what he does
best, getting angry at exaggerated circumstances. His overactive imagination
scares him in "Duck Pimples." He's chased around his house in
"Donald Duck and the Gorilla." He gets angry at abusive customers in
"Bellboy Donald." A simple snowball fight with his nephews gets out
of hand in "Donald's Snow Fight." He deals with a frustrating and
boring job as a department story gift wrapper in "The Clock Watcher."
And he tries to save a historic tree in "Old Sequoia."
Most of the time, Donald is an innocent victim, which makes
his excessive temper tantrums at least sympathetic. Occasionally, he becomes
the aggressor. Then, I rarely find myself rooting for Donald. For example, I
actually side with the pelican he was tormenting with the light in
"Lighthouse Keeping." The best of these, however, is "Donald's
Crime," which finds our hero dealing with a guilty conscious after robbing
his nephews to pay for a date with Daisy.
Speaking of Daisy, she has a bit of a temper herself, as we
learn in "Donald's Double Trouble" when Donald hires someone to play
a sophisticated version of himself. And her temper makes the ending of
"Cured Duck" even funnier. In it, Donald uses a machine to learn to
control his temper.
The two disc set fits in perfectly with the others in the
Disney Treasures series. Leonard Maltin continues to host, introduction the
history of each disc as well as warning about any non-PC content in the
cartoons. The cartoons themselves look and sound great. There's the occasional
imperfection, but considering the shorts are 60 years old, it's minor. Disc one
features an episode of the TV show "Disneyland "
that used Donald to show how animation is done. The second disc contains an
interview with Donald's current voice, Tony Anselmo, and a tribute to Carl
Barks, the man who created the Donald comic books.
I'll admit that I love Mickey and Goofy more then Donald.
Yet I laughed my way through The Chronological Donald Volume 2. There are plenty of shorts here to
please any one. Recommended for kids of all ages.
Included Cartoons:
1942 - Bellboy Donald, The Village Smithy, Donald's Snow
Fight, Donald's Garden, Donald's Gold Mine, Donald Gets Drafted, The Vanishing
Private, Sky Trooper
1943 - Donald Tire Trouble, Flying Jalopy, Der Fuehrer's
Face, Fall Out - Fall In, The Old Army Game, Home Defense
1944 - Commando Duck, Trombone Trouble, The Plastics
Inventor, Donald's Off Day, Donald Duck and the Gorilla, Contrary Condor
1945 - The Eyes Have it, Donald's Crime, Duck Pimples, No
Sail, Cured Duck, The Clock Watcher, Old Sequoia
1946 - Donald's Double Trouble, Wet Paint, Dumb Bell of the
Yukon, Lighthouse Keeping, Frank Duck Brings 'Em Back Alive
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