The Three Caballeros

by Norman Ferguson (Director)

Other authorsBill Peet (Author), Walt Disney (Producer), Paul J. Smith (Composer), Frank Graham (Actor), Roy Williams (Author), Bill Roberts (Director), Jack Kinney (Director), Sterling Holloway (Actor), Harold Young (Director), Clyde Geronimi (Director), Ralph Wright (Author)24 more, Ted Sears (Author), Norman Ferguson (Producer), Fred Shields (Actor), William Cottrell (Author), Aurora Miranda (Actor), Dora Luz (Actor), Carmen Molina (Actor), James Bodrero (Author), Del Connell (Author), José Oliveira (Actor), Manuel Esperón (Composer), Clarence Nash (Actor), Carlos Ramírez (Actor), Ernest Terrazas (Author), Edward H. Plumb (Composer), Joaquin Garay (Actor), Elmer Plummer (Author), Charles Wolcott (Composer), Homer Brightmen (Author), Francisco Frank Mayorga (Actor), Trío Calaveras (Actor), Trío Ascencio del Rio (Actor), Padua Hills Player (Actor), Nestor Amaral (Actor)
DVD, December 21, 1944

Description

When Donald receives a magical collection of gifts from his Latin American friends, they become his passport to a fantastic musical journey with Joe Carioca and Panchito, the charro rooster. With these experts to guide him, Donald hop, skips and jumps his way through every splash of local color.

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1944-12-21

Publication

Walt Disney Pictures (1944)

Local notes

A "package film" composite of seven segments tied together with a frame story of Donald Duck opening birthday presents from his Latin American friends. The segments are:
* The Cold-Blooded Penguin
* The Flying Gauchito
* Baía
* Las Posadas
* Mexico: Pátzcuaro, Veracruz and Acapulco
* You Belong to My Heart
* Donald's Surreal Reverie

Part of the Disney Classics Complete 55 Movie box set, but on DVD, not Blu-ray like the majority of the set.

Library's rating

Library's review

It would seem to me that the main quality of "The Three Caballeros" is making "Saludos Amigos" look a lot better. It starts out pretty great, with an actually animated framing that actually has some measure of plot (it's Donald's birthday and he's been sent gifts from his Latin-American friends),
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and a quite solid cartoon of Pablo the Penguin being shown. Then it starts slowly but surely deteriorating, and by the film's halfway point, it's just endless music numbers with either no story at all, or one single gag (usually Donald drooling over various girls) dragged out for way, way too long. There are still some minor decent occurrences to be found in there, like the titular song number, but they get fewer and fewer as the film goes on. Finally, the last third of the film is (on purpose) an ever-increasingly nightmarish contentless soup of surrealist animation. Maybe some of it has some artistic merit, but as it has no plot or story relevance, it gets frightfully dull for me very quickly. And I suspect unless you absolutely love stuff like the final few frames of "Alice in Wonderland" or the Pink Elephant Parade in "Dumbo" and wish there was a lot more of this, but done centred around Donald Duck pining for a singing live action woman, you would think the same.
All in all, the film is an amorphous mess despite the (compared to its immediate predecessor) stronger premise and frame story it started out with, and for a compilation movie, it actually only ever shows a single straight-up self-sufficient cartoon (Pablo, in the film's first ten minutes). The rest of just slow-paced Latin-American sightseeing to music, or Donald dancing with or running after live action girls.
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Similar in this library

Rating

½ (8 ratings; 2.7)

User reviews

LibraryThing member comfypants
Donald Duck learns about Mexico and South America, and suffers a libido-induced psychotic breakdown.

What were the folks at Disney smoking? Did they even bother storyboarding this? And didn't someone sober have to approve it?

Concept: D
Story: D
Characters: D
Dialog: C
Pacing: D
Cinematography: C
Special
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effects/design: C
Acting: C
Music: B

Enjoyment: C minus

GPA: 1.7/4
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