Springtime for Pluto
Studio: Disney Release Date : July 23, 1944 Series: Pluto Cartoon

Cumulative rating:
(1 rating submitted)

Synopsis

Pluto gets spring fever! But too much fever can be a bad thing as nature begins to intrude on his pastoral romp.

Characters

Pluto

Credits

Director

Charles A. Nichols

Animator

George Nicholas
Norman Tate
Marvin Woodward
Sanford "Sandy" Strother

Story

Nick George
Eric Gurney

Music

Oliver Wallace

Backgrounds

Leonard Kester

Layout

Charles Philippi

Producer

Walter Elias "Walt" Disney


Distributor(s)

RKO Radio Pictures

Clips Used In:

The Coyote's Lament

Television

The Mickey Mouse Club (Season 1, Episode 17)
The Mickey Mouse Club (Season 2, Episode 13)

VHS

United States

Here's Pluto!

Germany

Hier ist Pluto

France

Les Aventures de Pluto

Italy

Le Avventure di Pluto

Laserdisc (CLV)

United States

Here's Mickey / Here's Pluto

DVD

United States

The Complete Pluto - Volume 1

Germany

Disney Treasures : The Complete Pluto Volume 1

Technical Specifications

Running Time: 7:11
Production No.: 2295
MPAA No.: 8500
Animation Type: Standard (Hand-drawn-Cel) Animation
Aspect Ratio: 1.37 : 1
Cinematographic Format: Spherical
Color Type: Technicolor
Negative Type: 35mm
Original Country: United States
Original Language: English
Print Type: 35mm
Sound Type: Mono: RCA Sound Recording

Reviews and Comments

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From much ado about insects :

This is by far my favorite Disney short of all time. It’s colorful and fun, the music is great, and the gags are clever and funny. The most memorable scene for me (as well as for many others as it turns out) is the part when the caterpillar metamorphoses into a butterfly. The caterpillar is voiced by Thurl Ravenscroft whose signature bass during the short song about transformation, the caterpillar’s generally funny-looking appearance, as well as his behaviors all work together to mislead the audience into making assumptions about the caterpillar’s gender, so that, like Pluto, the audience is (pleasantly) surprised when the caterpillar pops out of his cocoon and reveals the fact that he has turned into a stunningly gorgeous, exotic raven-haired hispanic-looking butterfly woman who then proceeds to dance provocatively for Pluto and the audience’s entertainment. In fact, this singing caterpillar/dancing butterfly woman character seems to actually have something of a small cult fanbase on the internet who seem to wish s/he would feature in more shorts. I’m wondering if the Internet Animation Database could give the singing caterpillar/dancing butterfly woman his/her own character page?

From Ryan :

This is one of those Disney cartoons that I have not seen in a long time. I liked it when I first saw it and probably would now. One part I liked was the caterpillar scene where he spins a cocoon on Pluto's muzzle. He then turns into an attractive female butterfly.

From Baruch Weiss :

I just like this cartoon. My favorite part is where the caterpillar makes a cocoon on Pluto's muzzle and after the song (where I don't understand one single word) he comes out and turns into a female butterfly. But what really won me over was the music done by Oliver Wallace and believe you me he does a very good job. I hope one day I see this short again.

From Candy :

I've always liked this cartoon because of the female butterfly that dances for Pluto. She was drawn as a sexy Latino dancer. The music that she dances to has a Latin beat, and she was drawn with Hispanic features. I think that the Disney artists drew her that way because they wanted to depict her as a sexy, exotic creature that would fascinate Pluto, who was depicted in this as an all-American male. They might have been thinking of the way real dogs are mesmerized by watching butterflies float through the air. When she comes out of the cocoon, she gives him a knowing look, and he turns away and blushes, as if she's some kind of seductress. Then she flies on his nose and does a little dance, swinging her hips. She's very curvaceous and is wearing a short dress. This was an example of a Disney cartoon that had sexual elements, though it was done in a cute, Disney-like way.

From Michelle I. :

I love this joyful cartoon, though it wasn't one of my favorites when I was younger. I now have a huge appreciation for it. Everyone seems to like the bit with the caterpillar turning into a sexy butterfly, and indeed that is a highlight of the short. Overall though, I really like the entire thing and all the small details, from the narrator's great voiceover to the little mushroom that pops up under Pluto's chin. As usual, the ending is clever and humorous.

From Trae Robinson :

Here's a little known fact: This is the first Disney cartoon with credits. I think the narrator caught Pluto's cold at the end cause I heard him sneeze.

From Matthew Cooper :

Although I don't normally watch Pluto cartoons (I myself am a Donald Duck fan,) I have seen this one but after seeing it at a young age, I nearly forgot it. Whoever is reading this right now, don't you think it's a bit bizarre that after the male caterpillar comes out of his cocoon, he's a female butterfly.

From Sydney Simmonds :

One of my favorite scenes in this cartoon was the caterpillar turning into a butterfly woman. She kind of looks like Nani from Lilo and Stitch.

From Much ado about insects :

This site has changed a lot since my last visit! I'm glad to see that the butterfly everyone talks about has her own character page. Although I'm wondering if the caterpillar should also have a character page, since it's even voiced and everything, or should the caterpillar and butterfly technically be the same character? I'm also starting to wonder if there are different versions of this short, since some people say that the cocoon was spun on Pluto's muzzle, but versions I'm familiar with have the cocoon on his tail like in the screenshots on this page. I've have also heard that the butterfly may also have been voiced, but I don't recall her every speaking at all, just the bouncy music playing in the background.

From Ryan Kilpatrick at The Disney Film Project :

Pluto has always been a different character for the Disney animators. He was not like Mickey or Donald or Goofy, because he did not speak, and there had to be a good reason for Pluto to do what he did, because otherwise he would just sleep all day. In Springtime for Pluto, that motivation seems very lacking, and the short suffers because of it.

Springtime for Pluto is sort of a disconnected short, as it attempts to merge Pluto with the “How To” narration model and the old Silly Symphonies and come up with something new. That’s not exactly a formula for success. While the concept of Pluto frolicking through the freshness of a Spring day makes sense, it lacks the true comedy of seeing Donald’s frustration or Goofy’s smiling silliness.

Pluto wakes up from his slumber and sees that Spring has sprung all around him, and proceeds to get involved with the various creatures that are taking in the new day. He chases birds and fights with caterpillars, smiling all the way. This part of the short is very much a call back to the old “seasons” shorts of the Silly Symphonies. It’s quiet, pastoral scenes that show some of the inherent beauty of nature.

The real question is if Disney wanted to make that sort of short again, why not just do another Silly Symphony? Instead, we are treated to Pluto crashing through the scene, and not in a comedic and fun way. Pluto is a disruptive part of the scenery instead of adding to the beauty or comedy.

Things get a little weird when a deep voiced caterpillar climbs up Pluto’s tail to spin a cocoon, only to transform into a buxom female butterfly. As the butterfly was dancing around and Pluto was reacting like a Tex Avery cartoon, I just wondered what the point was. Although the animation of the butterfly was fantastic, it didn’t seem to fit in the spot.

After that we get more of the narrator going on and on about how wonderful spring is, all while Pluto gets rained on and half the countryside is destroyed by rain and hail. Sure, this formula works fine in the Goofy shorts, but outside of that, it’s not as effective. We saw this device used in Contrary Condor, and it was no better there. It seems Disney fell in love with the narrator at this time, but it wasn’t necessarily a good thing. I think Springtime for Pluto is an attempt to merge all these things into something better, but it’s an attempt that fell flat.