Biography - Betty Boop: The Queen of Cartoons
B**L
Fun Info
Nearly 70 years after making her debut, Betty Boop is still going strong especially in the area of collectibles. To prove this ongoing popularity, the Biography Channel, which mostly chronicles human celebrities and historical figures, traced the origins of this cartoon character. Clips include the spicy early black & white toons and the classic spooky thriller with Cab Callowy singing "St. James Infirmary Blues."
R**C
ALL ABOUT BETTY BOOP BY THE BEST
I HAVE READ BITS AND PIECES ABOUT BETTY BOOP BUT NEVER GOTTEN THE FULL STORY. I AM AN AVID COLLECTOR OF VINTAGE CARTOONS AND HAVE, I BELEIVE EVERY BETTY BOOP CARTOON AVAILABLE. THIS WAS A MAGNIFICENT ADDITION TO THAT COLLECTION . KIND OF TIED IT ALL TOGETHER. VERY INFORMATIVE. VERY WELL MADE. A+
L**S
A WONDERFUL DVD
THIS IS A GREAT DVD FOR ANYBODY WHO WANTS TO KNOW SOMETHING ABOUT BETTY BOOP.I REALLY ENJOY THIS VERY MUCH AND LEARNED MANY THINGS ABOUT THIS CLASSIC CARTOON.I TELL YOU,WITHOUT DOUBTS,BUY IT NOW.YOU WILL ENJOY IT WITH ALL YOUR FAMILY. IF YOU WANT TO KNOW A PART OF AMERICAN CULTURE,THE AGE OF FLAPPER,PLEASE OBTAIN IT NOW
S**.
BETTY BOOP BIOGRAPHY
I REALLY ENJOYED WATCHING BETTY'S BIO. I HAD SEEN IT ON TV, BUT I MISSED SOME OF IT. IT WAS VERY INTERESTING SEEING HOW SHE STARTED AND HOW POPULAR SHE STILL IS AFTER 60+ YEARS. IF YOU ARE A TURE BETTY FAN THIS BIOGRAPHY IS A MUST. S.ALLEN
J**R
For the fans
Bought it for the wife. She saw it years ago on VHS, was ecstatic to find it on DVD. She's a happy camper now.
C**E
Betty Boop on Biography
This was a Christmas gift for my mother-in-law. She enjoys everything Betty Boop! Great service. Gift arrived in time for Christmas!
R**E
An interesting and solid introduction to the great Betty Boop
I want to start off by taking issue with the one-star review of this documentary. If you look carefully, the errors that are noted are not all that important and some are not errors at all, but merely conflicts with the subjective evaluation of the reviewer. The brute fact is that for the documentary is reliable and interesting. The accuracy is no worse than the other Biography shows. A one-star review is simply absurd. I will concede that it is not a great documentary, but it is also certainly not a bad one. If you want to know about Betty Boop, this will serve as an excellent introduction. I would normally have given it four stars (rounding up a 3.5 star rating), but the one-star rating is so silly that I'm going to engage in a bit of correction.What is astonishing these days is how often Betty Boop pops up. A Thai restaurant in Lakeview in Chicago that I used to visit constantly features, in addition to a life size statue of Elvis, a four and a half foot tall statue of Betty Boop dressed as a waitress. Checking out of a newsstand the other day I noticed that there were some lottery tickets emblazoned with Betty's visage. A woman I work with decorates her cubicle with images of Betty Boop, and there are a lot of them.While this DVD does an adequate job of introducing the viewer to the career of Betty Boop, it doesn't come close to substituting for watching the actual cartoons. The problem is that we still don't have a definitive DVD edition of Betty Boop as there was on VHS. I am not aware of what efforts are currently underway. Current DVDs announce themselves as "Definitive" or "Ultimate" but really are reworkings of public domain cartoons. All hint at how great Betty Boop was (and remains). Qualification: I have not yet seen the new two-disc Collector's Edition, which maintains (like some of the others) that it has remastered the original prints. Maybe. There have been so many mediocre versions of Betty Boop that one does well to be hesitant in accepting such claims. But maybe this one is the exception, but until I hear some great reviews or can watch it via Netflix (it is not currently available), I'm going to hold off.I noticed that the documentary left out clips from the Louis Armstrong short. I can understand why. Cab Calloway's appearances in the Betty Boop cartoons were not racially embarrassing, but Louis Armstrong's was. I once ran a film society and would often order cartoons from distributors to show before the main feature (usually trying to get something from approximately the same time). I showed both "Minnie the Moocher" with Cab Calloway and "I'll Be Glad When You're Dead You Rascal You" with Louis Armstrong. The latter shows Armstrong transforming from an apelike African native into a disembodied head and back again. It is rather hard to watch. The documentary also sloughs over other more controversial aspects of Betty Boop. For instance, the cartoon "Ha! Ha! Ha!" was banned because everyone in the cartoon got high on laughing gas.So watch this, but be sure to follow it up with a DVD or two or three of Betty Boop cartoons.
J**O
Betty Boop: Technique-Focused
The usual Biography installment has approximately 5 interviewees and you can see the narrator at the beginning and end of the work. This work on Betty Boop had two interviewees and the narrator is never seen. I really think this work was intended to focus on the technical aspects of this cartoon, rather than anything else.You learn stuff here. Betty Boop was originally a dog-like cartoon. Cartoons were meant for all ages, not just children, and thus they had many double entendres. Cartoons were made by young, American men. In the autobiography of Bart's voice, she said the Simpsons are drawn and painted in Korea. So much has changed in animation.This film had modern people raving about Betty Boop. However, her popularity could have been proven by showing some famous person from the 1930 raving about her. The narrator says, "Betty Boop offered a female lead character at a time when feminism was unheard-of." WRONG! First-wave feminists organized to get women the right to vote 10 years before Betty's creation. Further, Betty's depiction takes from the 1920s New Woman and a bit from flappers. This work really could have benefited from an interviewee with a academic knowledgeable about feminism and media studies. They say she launched Popeye's career, but I wonder if Olive Oyl were drawn in response/opposite to her.This work says Betty is still popular. However, it says nothing of her guest appearance in "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" It says nothing about the 1990s dance song "Betty Boo just doin' the doo." It seem truncated and incomplete at times.
M**D
Five Stars
C'ÉTAIT UN CADEAU POUR MA FILLE & ELLE A BEAUCOUP APPRÉCIÉE.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
2 weeks ago