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Director: Roman Davidov
Release date:
1963
Rating:
 ★★★
Review:

‘The Shareholder’ is the third of three animated Soviet propaganda shorts aimed at American capitalism from 1963, the other two being ‘Mister Twister‘ and ‘The Millionaire‘.

Of the three this short is by far the most interesting visually. The short uses a strikingly graphic style and cel animation of the highest quality. The animators working on this short clearly have full command of the human and animal form, making this propaganda short a feast for the eye. The story, on the other hand, is not as attractive: at 24 minutes it is slow, meandering, repetitive and overlong.

‘The Shareholder’ is worker Michael Chase, who is made shareholder of the Pearson company. But when he gets fired, he soon discovers that this share is worth nothing, nor are his possessions, which were all bought on credit. Broken and without a job he wanders the streets.

The film’s highlight is the scene in which Michael Chase loses all his possessions: they change into cheaper and cheaper forms for his eye, before vanishing altogether. It’s also interesting to note that the film predicts how robotization leads to unemployment. However, the film’s message remains fuzzy, and its ending unclear.

Watch ‘The Shareholder’ yourself and tell me what you think:

‘The Shareholder’ is available on the DVD set ‘Animated Soviet Propaganda’

Director: Anatoly Karanovitch
Release date:
1963
Rating:
 ★★★★
Review:

After Fyodor Khitruk gave Soviet animation a huge update with ‘Story of One Crime’, the animated Soviet propaganda shorts also became more modern and interesting to look at. A good example is ‘Mister Twister’ from 1963.

Based on the poem of the same name by Samuel Marshak (1887-1964) ‘Mister Twister’ is a story in rhyme about Mr. Cook (alias ‘Mister Twister’), an American millionaire who visits the Soviet Union on request of his daughter Susie. When he arrives in Leningrad, he refuses to sleep in the appointed hotel, because a black man sleeps there, too. The doorman of the hotel calls all his colleagues from other hotels to tell the millionaire they’re full. After a tiring day of searching and a night in the doorman’s office, the millionaire and his family are completely humbled. Now, Mr. Cook will rent a room, even though he will be surrounded by colored people, all visiting Leningrad because an international conference.

This cartoon uses both cel animation and cut-out techniques and is conceived as a children’s book coming alive. The animation (e.g. by a young Yuri Norstein) is crude and emblematic, but shows modern influences in its unnatural depictions of movement.

‘Mister Twister’ is one of no less than three animated Soviet propaganda films from 1963 aimed at American capitalism. Despite the rather poor animation, it’s the best of the three, because of the charmingly little story, and because its anti-racist message, which is of a much more lasting quality than say the glory of communism.

Watch ‘Mister Twister’ yourself and tell me what you think:

‘Mister Twister’ is available on the DVD set ‘Animated Soviet Propaganda’

Directors: Vitold Bordzilovsky & Yuri Prytkov
Release date:
1963
Rating:
 ★★★
Review:

‘The Millionaire’ is an animated Soviet propaganda film, aimed at American capitalists, just like ‘Mister Twister‘ and ‘The Shareholder’ from the same year. Of the three its visuals are the most conventional: the simple cartoon style harks back to the 1930s and 1940s and is a little reminiscent of the work by Otto Soglow.

Like in ‘Mister Twister’, the story is narrated in rhyme, and this time tells about a bulldog which inherits a great fortune from an old lady. Now the dog is top of the bill, he behaves more and more human-like. He even manages to be elected into the senate, where, as a true capitalist (according to the narrator), he opposes peace. The short’s moral is a little unclear, but seems to be that money can even make the dumbest person mighty. Like in ‘Mister Twister’ the animation is emblematic, although there are some good takes on the dog.

Watch ‘The Millionaire’ yourself and tell me what you think:

‘The Millionaire’ is available on the DVD set ‘Animated Soviet Propaganda’

Director: Robert McKimson
Release date:
July 16, 1964
Stars:
Bugs Bunny
Rating:
 ★★★½
Review:

‘False Hare’ starts with two wolves, ‘Big Bad’ and his nephew, who unconvincingly pose as rabbits to make Bugs Bunny join their ‘club del conejo’ (or Rabbit Club). Bugs is way ahead of the duo, and only plays along because he is bored.

The gags, which involve a falling safe, an iron maiden, a cannon and a lot of dynamite are surprisingly fine, and this makes ‘False Hare’ anything but a sad farewell to our hero. Sure, the short is no standout, but at least we can laugh with Bugs to the very end.

The wolf and his nephew [ who had been introduced in ‘Now Hare This’ from 1958 as Isla points out in the comments below] seem destined for a long series of cartoons, but in fact ‘False Hare’ was the very last Bugs Bunny cartoon of the classic era, and the second to last cartoon made at the original Warner Bros. studio (‘Señorella and the Glass Huarache‘ being the final one). Thus we would never see this comic duo again. Note the cameo of Foghorn Leghorn.

Watch ‘False Hare’ yourself and tell me what you think:

This is the 168th and last Bugs Bunny cartoon
To the previous Bugs Bunny cartoon: The Iceman Ducketh

‘False Hare’ is available on the Blu-Ray-set ‘Bugs Bunny 80th Anniversary Edition’

Director: Friz Freleng
Release date:
September 7, 1963
Stars:
Bugs Bunny
Rating:
 ★★★★★
Review:

In the 1960s the quality of the Warner Bros. Cartoons rarely reached the heights of the best of the 1940s and 1950s, but there were a few which did so.

‘The Unmentionables’ surely is one of them. The cartoon obviously parodies the television series ‘The Untouchables’, with Bugs Bunny as Elliott Ness (or Elegant Mess, as he’s called in the cartoon). Luckily, ‘The Unmentionables’ doesn’t rely much on the parody element, but has many gags of its own, like silly gangsters (a series of gags harking all the way back to ‘The Great Piggy Bank Robbery’ of 1946) and a great example of Friz Freleng’s timeless lightswitch routines.

The cartoon also sees the welcome return of that infamous gangster duo Rocksy and Mugsy, who make their final appearance here. And then there’s Bugs as a flapper girl! Even the opening shots are wonderful, with some nice 1920s scenes drawn in a retro-1920s art deco style. The whole cartoon is a delight and one of the studio’s final best moments.

Watch ‘The Unmentionables’ yourself and tell me what you think:

This is Bugs Bunny cartoon No. 162
To the previous Bugs Bunny cartoon: Hare-Breath Hurry
To the next Bugs Bunny cartoon: Mad as a Mars Hare

‘The Unmentionables’ is available on the Blu-Ray-set ‘Bugs Bunny 80th Anniversary Edition’

Director: Robert McKimson
Release date:
April 1, 1963
Stars:
Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck
Rating:
 ★★★
Review:

In ‘The Million-Hare’ Daffy Ducks spends his holiday at Bugs’s place, watching tv. The action only starts when their two names are mentioned on tv as contestants in a ‘buddy race’: whoever gets first to the studio, wins.

What follows is a series of rather Roadrunner-like gags, in which gravity often is as much Daffy’s enemy as it were the coyote’s in the Roadrunner films. The cartoon is very talkative, but some of the gags are good. I liked Bugs’s wonderings about Daffy’s abilities.

The staging on the other hand, is often rather odd. I especially thought that the characters were a little too big on the screen several times.

Watch two excerpts from ‘The Million-Hare’ yourself and tell me what you think:

This is Bugs Bunny cartoon No. 160
To the previous Bugs Bunny cartoon: Devil’s Feud Cake
To the next Bugs Bunny cartoon: Hare-Breath Hurry

This is Daffy Duck cartoon no. 92
To the previous Daffy Duck cartoon: Fast Buck Duck
To the next Daffy Duck cartoon: Aqua Duck

‘The Million-Hare’ is available on the Blu-Ray-set ‘Bugs Bunny 80th Anniversary Edition’

Director: Friz Freleng
Release date:
December 8, 1962
Stars:
Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam
Rating:
 ★
Review:

In one of his last appearances (only two would follow in the classic era) Yosemite Sam is a cook for a king (who’s, I guess, a caricature of Charles Laughton, an actor already dead at the time).

Despite Yosemite Sam’s efforts the king is bored with what he’s offered and demands Hasenpfeffer, a dish unknown to Sam. He soon finds out, and happily Bugs Bunny comes along to borrow some carrots. What follows are some terribly unfunny routines, with too much dialogue and rather poor animation for a Warner Bros. cartoon.

Worst is the scene in which Bugs talks while laying in a large oven tray: in an obvious and unconvincing cheat only his head is animated, while his body remains perfectly still. I would expect that in a Hanna-Barbera television cartoon, not in a theatrical Warner Bros. cartoon.

Better than anything moving in this cartoon is the background art by Hawley Pratt (layouts) and Tom O’Loughlin (paintings)

Watch ‘Shishkabugs’ yourself and tell me what you think:

This is Bugs Bunny cartoon No. 158
To the previous Bugs Bunny cartoon: Bill of Hare
To the next Bugs Bunny cartoon: Devil’s Feud Cake

‘Shishkabugs’ is available on the Blu-Ray-set ‘Bugs Bunny 80th Anniversary Edition’

Director: Ernest Pintoff
Release date
: May 20, 1963
Rating: 
★★★★
Review:

Conceived by Mel Brooks, and directed by UPA alumnus Ernest Pintoff, ‘The Critic’ is a short little unpretentious gem.

The film starts as an abstract animation film (designed and animated by Bob Heath), with several shapes appearing and moving to the baroque harpsichord music of Johann Sebastian Bach’s French Suite. But then suddenly a man starts commenting what he sees with us. The 71-year old Yiddish man of Russian decent certainly disapproves what he sees, but at the same time he seems immersed in the images on the screen, trying to make head and tale of the abstract forms.

Mel Brooks, who voices the critic, is in top form from the man’s first utterance “what the hell is this?” to his final verdict: “I don’t know much about psychoanalysis, but I’d say this is a dirty picture”. The animation seems to be a parody of the work of Norman McLaren of the time: the use of baroque music, choreography of shapes, monochrome background art. the sometimes organic forms, and the sense of narrative elements all point to that direction.Indeed, according to Wikipedia the short was inspired by a screening of a Norman McLaren film Mel Brooks attended, where he overheard a man mumbling to himself during the entire cartoon.

‘The Critic’ is an excellent bit of fun. More people must have thought so, because the short won the Academy Award for best animated short in 1964.

Watch ‘The Critic’ yourself and tell me what you think:

Director: Chuck Jones
Release date:
June 6, 1964
Stars:
Road Runner & Wile E. Coyote
Rating:
 ★★★
Review:

‘War and Pieces’ was the last Road Runner cartoon directed by Chuck Jones himself, although there would follow fourteen more by other directors.

It’s a nice, if not too outstanding entry, with seven attempts, including a bizarre ‘secrets of the harem’ kinetoscope gag as well as invisible paint. The most outlandish is the one in which the coyote shoots himself right through the earth only to meet a Chinese roadrunner at the other side.

The background art is gorgeous throughout this cartoon, but particularly noteworthy during these Chinese scenes, which apparently inspired Maurice Noble to some of the craziest designs. These make ‘War and Pieces’ more than just a nice watch.

Watch an excerpt from ‘War and Pieces’ yourself and tell me what you think:

‘War and Pieces’ is available on the Blu-Ray ‘Looney Tunes Collector’s Choice Vol. 3’

Director: Gerry Chiniquy
Release date:
January 18, 1964
Stars:
Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam, Porky Pig
Rating:
 ★★★
Review:

‘Dumb Patrol’ is the last of the Bugs Bunny vs. Yosemite Sam cartoons, being the last screen appearance by the hot-tempered little villain, after a career of nineteen years. Set in World War I the film is dedicated to an air battle between Bugs and Sam, here billed as Sam von Shpamm.

Gerry Chiniquy’s timing is all too relaxed, and unfortunately there’s way too much talking, but there are some fine gags, like Sam shooting his own plane to pieces. The short is no standout, but certainly no bad farewell to the little mustached character. Note Porky Pig’s short cameo as a French soldier.

Watch ‘Dumb Patrol’ yourself and tell me what you think:

This is Bugs Bunny cartoon No. 165
To the previous Bugs Bunny cartoon: Transylvania 6-5000
To the next Bugs Bunny cartoon: Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare

‘Dum Patrol’ is available on the Blu-Ray ‘Looney Tunes Collector’s Choice Vol. 3’

Director: Robert McKimson
Release date
: January 20, 1962
Stars: Bugs Bunny
Rating: 
★★★
Review:

In ‘Wet Hare’ Bugs Bunny battles one ‘Black Jack Shellac’ over a waterfall which the apparently French Canadian wants to dam (we’ll never know why).

The gags are not as they could have been due to McKimson’s all to relaxed timing and the talkative characters. Nevertheless, Bugs’ final scheme is a fine one, as are his Al Jolson-impersonations when singing under the waterfall, which mean that Mel Blanc manages to make Bugs Bunny sound like himself and like Al Jolson at the same time!

Watch ‘Wet Hare’ yourself and tell me what you think:

This is Bugs Bunny cartoon No. 156
To the previous Bugs Bunny cartoon: Prince Violent
To the next Bugs Bunny cartoon: Bill of Hare

‘Wet Hare’ is available on the Blu-Ray ‘Looney Tunes Collector’s Choice Vol. 3’

Director: Chuck Jones
Release date
: February 25, 1961
Rating: 
★★½
Review:

This short starts with a mouse eating his way through the largest uncut rum cake and getting drunk.

For a while we watch some fine silent comedy, but when the mouse mistakes a diamond for ice, the cartoon turns into an ordinary chase cartoon starring two talkative cops, with one being a late addition to a plethora of characters inspired by Lon Chaney jr.’s Lennie in the 1939 film ‘Of Mice and Men’.

These sequences are more tiresome than funny, but give the viewer ample time to watch the gorgeous background art, with its beautiful cityscapes. The animation, too, is top notch, but these elements cannot rescue the rather uninspired story.

Watch an excerpt from ‘The Mouse on 57th Street’ yourself and tell me what you think:

‘The Mouse on 57th Street’ is available on the Blu-Ray ‘Looney Tunes Collector’s Choice Vol. 3’

Directors: William Hanna & Joseph Barbera
Airing date
:
April 5, 1963
Stars:
The Flintstones
Rating: 
★★
Review:

In ‘The Birthday Party’ Wilma organizes a surprise party for Fred at Barney’s and Betty’s house. Barney is to stall Fred until everything is ready, but he does his job a little too good.

‘The Birthday Party’ wraps off the third season of ‘The Flintstones’. Unfortunately, this last episode feels like a letdown after the great continuity of the coming of Pebbles. Small Pebbles isn’t even in sight. But worse, ‘The Birthday Party’ belongs to the more cartoony Flintstones episodes, high on slapstick and low on more sophisticated types of comedy.

After Fred returns home, the episode starts to drag considerably, and the end scene is anything but funny. Particularly annoying are no less than five talking tool animals, all having incredibly lame lines: a kitchen knife lizard, a shaving brush bird, a car horn bird, a golf cart Ceratopsian and a balloon pump bird.

Despite all the slapstick mayhem, the episode’s most enjoyable scene is that of all Fred’s friends waiting in the dark at Barney’s and Betty’s house.

Watch an excerpt from ‘The Birthday Party’ yourself and tell me what you think:

This is the 28th and last episode of The Flintstones Season Three
To the previous The Flintstones episode: Swedish Visitors

‘The Birthday Party’ is available on the Blu-Ray ‘The Flintstones – The Complete Series’ and the DVD-box ‘The Flintstones Season 3’

Directors: William Hanna & Joseph Barbera
Airing date
:
March 29, 1963
Stars:
The Flintstones, Yogi Bear & Boo-Boo
Rating: 
★★★★
Review:

‘Swedish Visitors’ is the first episode since ‘The Surprise‘ that is not connected to (the coming of) young Pebbles. Instead, we follow Fred’s fruitless attempts to have some rest on his well-earned vacation.

The episode knows quite some plot twists, so I won’t reveal more, but the episode is noteworthy for Wilma’s dishonesty, a character trait mostly reserved for Fred, and it is a bit unsettling to see it in Fred’s normally so faithful wife.

‘Swedish Visitors’ also knows a great comedy routine at a bank, in which an unfortunate employee has to roll away three humongous stones to get into a vault. Yogi Bear and Boo-Boo also make a cameo appearance, but it’s the Swedes who make this episode special. Now, the very idea of ‘Swedes’ in prehistory is as preposterous as the yankee-hating colonel was in ‘Fred’s New Job‘, but one particular dumb one forms the direct inspiration for Cousin Svën in the Ren & Stimpy episode ‘Svën Høek’, with his repeated rendering of ‘he is Ole, you are Sven’, which was given to Svën as his opening line in the Ren & Stimpy episode.

Watch an excerpt from ‘Swedish Visitors’ yourself and tell me what you think:

This is The Flintstones Season Three episode 27
To the previous The Flintstones episode: The Big Move
To the next Flintstones episode: The Birthday Party

‘Swedish Visitors’ is available on the Blu-Ray ‘The Flintstones – The Complete Series’ and the DVD-box ‘The Flintstones Season 3’

Directors: William Hanna & Joseph Barbera
Airing date
: March 22, 1963
Stars: The Flintstones
Rating: 
★★★
Review:

In ‘The Big Move’ young Pebbles triggers the action. When her first words turn out to be ‘scooby dooby doo’, ‘shoot pool’ and ‘play poker’, thanks to Barney, Fred wants to move to a more upper class neighborhood, so Pebbles can get a proper influence.

Soon he and Wilma move upon hill to a land leased house in the snubbiest neighborhood imaginable. Fred immediately starts lying about his car, his ‘personnel’ and his work, much to Wilma’s chagrin. But of course he misses Barney before soon, and with an unlikely scheme (with Barney and Betty posing as some hillbilly family) things are soon back to normal.

‘The Big Move’ is very predictable, and Fred behaves absolutely detestably in this episode. Most interesting is his bedtime story to Pebbles, with which the episode starts and the expression ‘scooby dooby doo’ six years before Hanna-Barbera launched the series featuring the famous hound and mystery solving team.

Watch an excerpt from ‘The Big Move’ yourself and tell me what you think:

This is The Flintstones Season Three episode 26
To the previous The Flintstones episode: Ventriloquist Barney
To the next Flintstones episode: Swedish Visitors

‘The Big Move’ is available on the Blu-Ray ‘The Flintstones – The Complete Series’ and the DVD-box ‘The Flintstones Season 3’

Directors: William Hanna & Joseph Barbera
Airing date
: March 8, 1963
Stars: The Flintstones
Rating: 

Review:

‘Ventriloquist Barney’ starts with Barney practicing and immediately mastering ventriloquism. He first fools Betty with his act, then Fred.

But the episode only really gains momentum when Barney has two tickets to a wrestling match, while Fred has to babysit Pebbles. Unfortunately, little is done with either idea, and the whole episode drags on, with the few gags falling flat after one other. Pebbles herself is cute, but little else, and this episode is so appallingly boring that one wonders if bringing her in was such a good idea in the first place.

Highlight may be the unexpected feminist message Barney delivers Fred to get him taking Pebbles with him to the wrestling match.

Watch an excerpt from ‘Ventriloquist Barney’ yourself and tell me what you think:

This is The Flintstones Season Three episode 25
To the previous The Flintstones episode: Carry on, Nurse Fred
To the next Flintstones episode: The Big Move

‘Ventriloquist Barney’ is available on the Blu-Ray ‘The Flintstones – The Complete Series’ and the DVD-box ‘The Flintstones Season

Directors: William Hanna & Joseph Barbera
Airing date
: March 1, 1963
Stars: The Flintstones
Rating: 
★★½
Review:

‘Carry on, Nurse Fred’ is the first Flintstones episode with the Flintstones as parents. The episode opens with Wilma and Fred going home from the hospital.

Fred has read a book by one Dr. Rock (an obvious nod to Dr. Spock, the most famous pediatrician of the post-war years) and he is over-concerned. Nevertheless, he fires the all too strict and stout nurse at home to take care of little Pebbles himself.

‘Carry on, Nurse Fred’ is a sweet little episode on what it means to be a young parent, but it’s also low on gags, and corroborates the sexist trope that men are unfit for housework. Highlight of this episode is Fred practicing his baby caring skills on Barney. I also like the military music accompanying the nurse.

Watch an excerpt from ‘Carry on, Nurse Fred’ yourself and tell me what you think:

This is The Flintstones Season Three episode 24
To the previous The Flintstones episode: The Dress Rehearsal
To the next Flintstones episode: Ventriloquist Barney

‘Carry on, Nurse Fred’ is available on the Blu-Ray ‘The Flintstones – The Complete Series’ and the DVD-box ‘The Flintstones Season 3’

Directors: William Hanna & Joseph Barbera
Airing date
: February 22, 1963
Stars: The Flintstones
Rating: 
★★★★★ ♕
Review:

‘The Dress Rehearsal’ forms the pinnacle of the continuity that had started with ‘The Surprise‘ a month earlier. In fact, the episode is the best of the whole third season, and perhaps of the whole Flintstones series.

The episode starts inconspicuous enough, with Fred and Barney practicing at a gym, owned by a phony character, but when red and Barney decide to practice the day Wilma goes into labor some really fine comedy starts, with the writers pulling all comic registers, from slapstick, via lame jokes to a great comedy of errors.

Barney looks particularly silly posing as Fred’s wife, more looking like Little Red Riding Hood. But all this is topped by a remarkable speedy sequence of rushing back and forth to the hospital. The episode ends with the coming of Fred and Wilma’s baby Pebbles. Unfortunately, her arrival also heralds a sudden drop of quality of the series, as the subsequent episodes will show.

Note that ‘The Dress Rehearsal’ knows a rare appearance of the saber-tooth cat of the title sequences. In the hospital we also see two clear caricatures. These appear to be Vince Edwards and Sam Jaffe from the television series ‘Ben Casey’ (961-1966), which is set in a hospital.

Watch an excerpt from ‘The Dress Rehearsal’ yourself and tell me what you think:

This is The Flintstones Season Three episode 23
To the previous The Flintstones episode: Fred’s New Job
To the next Flintstones episode: Carry on, Nurse Fred

‘The Dress Rehearsal’ is available on the Blu-Ray ‘The Flintstones – The Complete Series’ and the DVD-box ‘The Flintstones Season

Directors: William Hanna & Joseph Barbera
Airing date
: February 15, 1963
Stars: The Flintstones
Rating: 
★★½
Review:

In ‘Fred’s New Job’ Fred would love to get a raise, now he is going to have support a family. Barney conceives a plan that backfires, and soon Fred is looking for another job, e.g. in a drive-in restaurant, partly reprising the ‘The Drive-in‘ episode from season one.

‘Fred’s New Job’ seems to have been made by a B-team: the designs are often off, and the story contains a lot of silly and nonsensical elements. For starters, the episode starts with a silly boink bird, then there’s a corny steamed clam gag, and a Southern colonel who dislikes ‘yankees’ (in prehistory?!), one in a long line of Southern colonels swarming Warner bros. cartoons. But most absurd is watching Fred flying like a bird.

When compared to such episodes like the earlier ‘Dial S for Suspicion‘ or the following ‘The Dress Rehearsal’ this episode is just subpar, relying more on silly gags than on clever comedy.

Watch an excerpt from ‘Fred’s New Job’ yourself and tell me what you think:

This is The Flintstones Season Three episode 22
To the previous The Flintstones episode: Foxy Grandma
To the next Flintstones episode: The Dress Rehearsal

‘Fred’s New Job’ is available on the Blu-Ray ‘The Flintstones – The Complete Series’ and the DVD-box ‘The Flintstones Season 3’

Directors: William Hanna & Joseph Barbera
Airing date
: February 8, 1963
Stars: The Flintstones
Rating: 

Review:

‘Foxy Grandma’is the third episode of the ‘Flintstones are getting a baby’ continuum. It’s easily the weakest of the lot. Little is done with the pregnancy idea, even though the whole plot is based on the fact that Fred doesn’t want Wilma to do housework in her condition.

Wilma naturally wants to ring her mother to help her, but Fred insists on getting a housekeeper, which turns out to be a more difficult task than imagined. The episode takes a particularly silly turn when one ‘Grandma Dynamite ‘ turns up. There’s even a surreal road gag straight from a Tex Avery cartoon.

Unfortunately, all the antics are more tiresome than funny, and the slapstick feels tried and uninspired when compared with episodes focusing on the relationship between the four main protagonists. In this episode the Rubbles hardly have a role.

The stone age gags, too, are familiar: a lawnmower dino, a hedge trimmer bird, an intercom parrot, and a saw-billed bread knife bird. The water tap mammoth can be credited with being given the lamest gag of the whole episode.

Watch an excerpt from ‘Foxy Grandma’ yourself and tell me what you think:

This is The Flintstones Season Three episode 21
To the previous The Flintstones episode: Mother-in-Law’s Visit
To the next Flintstones episode: Fred’s New Job

‘Foxy Grandma’ is available on the Blu-Ray ‘The Flintstones – The Complete Series’ and the DVD-box ‘The Flintstones Season 3’

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