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1 Plot  





2 References  





3 External links  














Billy Boy (1954 film)







 

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Billy Boy
Directed byCo-directed by:
Tex Avery
Dick Lundy (uncredited)
Story byCo-story by:
Heck Allen
Jack Cosgriff (uncredited)
Produced byFred Quimby
Co-producer:
William Hanna (unc.)
StarringFeaturing the voice talent of:
Daws Butler as Southern Wolf (unc.)
Music byMusic directed by:
Scott Bradley
Animation byCharacter animation:
Michael Lah
Walter Clinton
Grant Simmons
Ray Patterson
Robert Bentley
Layouts byCharacter layout and design:
Ed Benedict (unc.)
Backgrounds byBackground layout:
Ed Benedict (unc.)
Background paint:
Vera Ohman
Color processTechnicolor

Production
company

MGM Cartoons

Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Release date

  • May 8, 1954 (1954-05-08)

Running time

6:00
LanguageEnglish

Billy Boy is a 1954 Southern Wolf animated short cartoon in the MGM cartoon theatrical series released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, produced by Fred Quimby, and directed by Tex Avery.[1] It is a spin-off of Avery's previous creation, Droopy, and stars his unnamed Southern-accented wolf, who previously appeared opposite Droopy in The Three Little Pups and in Blackboard Jumble and Sheep-Wrecked. The copyright date on the actual cartoon is 1953 in Roman numerals.

It was originally going to be a Barney Bear cartoon until Tex Avery returned after a sabbatical.[2]

Plot

[edit]

The Southern-accented Wolf is having breakfast on his farm when there is a knock on his door. A letter is pushed under it, which reads:

Please take care of my little Billy goat. P.S. You will have no trouble feeding him — HE EATS ANYTHING.

True to the letter's contents, the wolf opens the door and finds a basket with a baby goat, Billy, who walks around inside the wolf's house, eating anything in his path, such as the carpet, part of the sofa, the wallpaper, the calendar, the globe, the curtains, and the wolf's trousers. The wolf, here presented with palilalia, addresses the audience: "You know? Now there's a pretty hungry little billy goat-goat-goat-goat-goat-goat." Oblivious to Billy's limitless hunger, the wolf gives him a bottle of milk, but Billy spills the milk and eats the bottle, the pacifier, the cutlery and crockery (like a sandwich), the coffeepot (along with all the coffee inside it), and the napkin.

Realizing that Billy will be more than a handful to deal with, the wolf tries to tie him in the garden to a hook hammered into the ground, but Billy eats the rope and comically eats the top part of the wolf's shoe when he tries to stop him. The wolf checks his foot and finds all ten of his toes still there, to his relief. Billy then tries to eat the wolf's spare tire, but is unable to chew the rubber and ends up shaped like the tire as soon as he swallows it whole.

The wolf then tries tying Billy to the windmill, but once again, Billy eats not only the rope, but the entire windmill, leaving the blades spinning at the top even with no support. He then attempts to take him away in a wheelbarrow and release him into the wild, but Billy eats the wheelbarrow and the wheel. The wolf ties Billy to a kite and releases him into the sky, but Billy eats the kite, the string and starts chewing on the wolf's arm. Unaffected, the wolf merely tells him to stop. He wraps Billy in chains and tries to tie him to a tree on a small island, but Billy proceeds to eat some of the film itself.

Next, the wolf places Billy in the trunk of his car and tries to drive him somewhere, but Billy somehow eats his way through the car and ends up devouring the motor. The wolf then ties Billy to a horse and hits it on the bottom to make it run away and take Billy with it. However, Billy eats the horse's hair, and the angry horse repeats the same tactic with the wolf, whose hair Billy eats as well. The wolf looks irritably at the horse and says "Copycat".

As a final attempt to rid himself of Billy for good, the wolf places pepper on a railroad track and has Billy eat the railway, following it all the way to California, which is 2360 miles away. With Billy gone, the wolf tucks himself into bed. That night, Billy returns, eating the other side of the railway and covered in stamps of all the States he crossed eating the railway. The wolf suddenly awakens to see that Billy has eaten his entire house. Feigning joy, the wolf welcomes Billy back but ties him to a rocket, which the wolf sends to the moon. Even this isn't enough to satisfy the little goat, as Billy then eats the moon, taking the moonlight along with it and leaving the Earth in darkness.

The wolf lights a match and says "Goodnight, y'all-y'all-y'all-y'all" as the cartoon closes.

The recurring melody played by woodwinds and/or whistled from 2:21 onward is the Civil War tune "Kingdom Coming" or "The Year of Jubilo".

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. pp. 146–147. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7.
  • ^ Billy Boy (1954) - IMDb, retrieved 2023-03-10
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Billy_Boy_(1954_film)&oldid=1222723516"

    Categories: 
    1954 films
    1950s American animated films
    1950s animated short films
    1954 animated films
    1954 short films
    Droopy
    Animated films about wolves
    Films directed by Tex Avery
    Films scored by Scott Bradley
    Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer animated short films
    Self-reflexive films
    Films with screenplays by Henry Wilson Allen
    Animated films about goats
    Films produced by Fred Quimby
    Tex Avery's Big Bad Wolf films
    Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio short films
    1950s English-language films
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Template film date with 1 release date
     



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