Alice and the Three Bears
Studio: Disney Release Date : December 1, 1924 Series: Alice Comedy
Cumulative rating:
(2 ratings submitted)

Synopsis

In a twist on the traditional story, Alice comes across three bears operating a still, and she and Julius have to fight their way free.

Characters

Alice and Julius

Credits

Director

Walter Elias "Walt" Disney

Animator

Ub Iwerks
Rollin "Ham" Hamilton

Live Action Actor

Virginia Davis


DVD

United States

Disney's Alice Comedies, Volume 1

Technical Specifications

Running Time: 7:13
Animation Type: Combined Live-Action and Standard Animation
Aspect Ratio: 1.37 : 1
Cinematographic Format: Spherical
Color Type: Black and White
Negative Type: 35mm
Original Country: United States
Original Language: English
Print Type: 35mm
Sound Type: Silent

Reviews and Comments

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From Jerry Edwards :

My copy has no live action. The three bears are making home brew, each with their own still. The baby bear tastes his brew - it's missing HOPS. He goes to a local swimming hole to try to capture frogs. After no success, he finally decides to use a butterfly net to capture the "HOP" sound effects as he chases the frog. Alice and Julius the cat have a flat tire on a scooter. Julius blows a smoke ring from his pipe to replace the flat tire. They enter the bears' house and are chased by the baby bear. Julius and the bear fight, with Julius winning - until Mom and Dad show up. They chase off Julius and toss Alice in a sack. They throw the sack on a sawmill track - with the sack moving towards a saw blade. Julius sends his 9 lives to fight the bears. The bears clobber all the 9 lives, but Julius uses home brew to bring back #9. Strengthened by the brew, #9 clobbers the bears. #9 merges with Julius and Julius rescues Alice. Alice shouts "My Hero!" and kisses Julius.

From Ryan Kilpatrick at The Disney Film Project :

It would be very hard to find two shorts that are more opposites than Alice Hunting in Africa, which I reviewed earlier today, and Alice and the Three Bears. One is horrifically bad, not entertaining, and has no form or story, and the other has all of those things, and is great fun.

Alice and the Three Bears is the best animated short of the Alice Comedies so far. It’s no coincidence to me that it’s also one where Ub Iwerks was involved. The quality of the animation, the inventive gags, and the superb storytelling all speak to the work of a superior mind.

The short starts with three bears making beer in a still, quite a departure from the traditional fairy tale. That’s what you find with Iwerks films, though, is a rough and tumble approach to animation, where no niceties are observed. This is quite different from the later Disney films, so its interesting to see this in these early shorts.

Something is not right with the brewing, though, and baby bear decides that it needs more hops. So, the baby bear chases a frog around a pond, in an inventive sequence taking place above and below the water. Finally, though, as the frog leaps away on land, the baby bear takes out a net and captures the word “Hop” as it floats in the air behind the frog. It’s a great gag and out of the ordinary for these early films.

Soon, though, along comes Alice and her cat, the still not named Julius. The bear takes notice of the two, offering a rather lewd assessment of Alice, sizing her up with a direct line from his eyes, looking her up and down. This, too, is a little out of the ordinary, and somewhat shocking. It’s not what you expect from a Disney film.

Julius attempts to defend Alice, and succeeds against the baby bear, but the baby soon calls Mommy and Daddy to help. The three bears manage to incapacitate Julius and capture Alice. So, Julius calls in the reserves, summoning his other nine lives to attack the bears. Again, a great idea, well executed here.

Finally, the ninth life about to expire, Julius feeds it some of the bears’ moonshine, which allows the ninth life to attack and defeat the bears. Then Julius rescues Alice, who had been tied up in a sack about to be split like a log. The short closes with Alice praising him as “My hero!”

This is a great short, especially when compared to the other Alice Comedies. The gags are extremely inventive, and it seems as though Walt turned the animators, especially Ub, loose to create new and exciting ideas. Capturing the words in a net, calling in the nine lives and even the lewd look from the baby bear are all great inventions. This is the kind of product you expect from Disney, and it’s very cool to see it develop slowly through the creation of these Alice films. Only time will tell if the quality continues to build, as it has from the first three Ub Iwerks films, or if the inconsistency that plagued the first few Alice Comedies will return.