Strife with Father

April. 01,1950      NR
Rating:
6.1
Trailer Synopsis Cast

Foundling Beaky Buzzard is adopted by a couple of polite, English sparrows, named Monte and Gwendlyn. When Monte tries to teach lame-brained Beaky to catch a chicken, Beaky's ineptitude results in Monte being repeatedly struck with a mallet and caught in a grenade explosion.

Mel Blanc as  Beaky Buzzard / Narrator / Monte - shouting voice (voice)

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Reviews

Clevercell
1950/04/01

Very disappointing...

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Brendon Jones
1950/04/02

It’s fine. It's literally the definition of a fine movie. You’ve seen it before, you know every beat and outcome before the characters even do. Only question is how much escapism you’re looking for.

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Philippa
1950/04/03

All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.

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Roxie
1950/04/04

The thing I enjoyed most about the film is the fact that it doesn't shy away from being a super-sized-cliche;

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TheLittleSongbird
1950/04/05

Beaky Buzzard appeared in four cartoons, of which 'Strife for Father' (following on from 'Bugs Bunny Gets the Boid', 'The Bashful Buzzard' and 'The Lion's Busy') is his final one. That it is the weakest of the four, to me, and still manages to be quite good, makes it sad that the character and his series was so short lived.Robert McKimson did a fair share of cartoons that are regarded by me highly, and generally he was deserving of more credit in a career that was over-shadowed by those of Chuck Jones, Tex Avery and Friz Freleng at the height of their powers. 'Strife with Father' is not McKimson at his best but still has a lot to like about it and has all the numerous strengths and the few not so good things about all four Beaky Buzzard cartoons. Of which 'Bugs Bunny Gets the Boid' gets my vote as the best and funniest.The story is slight and fairly predictable, also slightly repetitive on occasions. The humour, while still executed fine, generally doesn't come close to the best gags in 'Bugs Bunny Gets the Boid', nor is there dialogue quite as memorable as the shoe leather insult in 'The Bashful Buzzard'. The supporting characters could have been stronger, not particularly memorable.However, Beaky himself is still a cute and amusing character, while never being too cloying, overly-dumb or annoying.Animation is bright in colour, fluid and rich in detail and smooth in movement and design. Ever demonstrating why he has always been my personal favourite of the Looney Tunes composers, Carl Stalling provides yet another energetically characterful, beautifully orchestrated and cleverly action-enhancing music score.Even though, as said, never hilarious, there is some very amusing dialogue. Same with the gags, fun and well animated but there are more hilarious and more inventive around. Mel Blanc's voice work is terrific as always.Overall, quite good but not great. 7/10 Bethany Cox

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Edgar Allan Pooh
1950/04/06

. . . Warner Bros. Division of Animated Shorts Prognostication actually quote the Real Life father of Donald J. Duck during this prophetic 1950s Looney Tune, STRIFE WITH FATHER. Beaky spends the bulk of this cartoon bedeviling his dad, just as Donald J. did in Real Life with his serial bankruptcies. Gaming experts contend that only incredibly stupid casino owners can LOSE billions in an industry wherein "the House ALWAYS wins." Father Rump is now cartwheeling in his Grave, knowing that the Secret Tax Returns of Junior merit the Hangman's Noose for High Treason, not only for rigging a phony baloney Game Show "Election" farce in which the "winner" loses by two million votes as his only way of avoiding the assassins of Russian and Chinese loan sharks drooling at the though of their upcoming Quid Pro Quos, but also for turning the White House into an International Pay-to-Play Prostitution Parlor even BEFORE a Pro Forma swearing-in ceremony as Strumpet-in-Chief can be held. Rump has used his Art of the Steal "skills" to "borrow" billions from America's Enemies, with the intention of selling America and its Allies down the River of No Return come Jan. 20, 2017. To quote RED DAWN, "Wolverines, Attack!!" (and you'd better, as Michigan was in the forefront of the Automaton March to the tune of this MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE Pied Piper).

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Lee Eisenberg
1950/04/07

Braindead avian Beaky Buzzard debuted in Bob Clampett's "Bugs Bunny Gets the Boid" in 1942. Clampett brought him back in "The Bashful Buzzard" in 1945. After a five year absence, Beaky reappeared in "The Lion's Busy" and "Strife with Father", after which he never appeared in another theatrical short.This one portrays Beaky getting left at the doorstep of husband and wife owls Monte and Gwendlyn. They try to raise him to be a gentleman, but...well, let's just say that Beaky belongs with his own kind! Long story short, never try to integrate a loopy oaf into decent society. Maybe Beaky should see a shrink.It's hard to say what I really think of Beaky Buzzard. He proved to be an interesting character in his few appearances. I don't know whether or not his shtick would have gotten tiresome had he starred in more cartoons. I guess that just his four roles created enough of a personality to last, even if he is only a second-tier character. This one's worth seeing, if only once. Included as an extra feature on the "Flame and the Arrow" DVD, so I wonder if it preceded that movie in the theater.

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